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Angioplasty or bypass surgery? | Philstar.com
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Health And Family

Angioplasty or bypass surgery?

AN APPLE A DAY - Tyrone M. Reyes M.D. -

Angioplasty or bypass surgery?

Which is best when cholesterol-laden plaque narrows a coronary artery and chokes off blood flow to part of the heart muscle? There’s no simple answer. It depends on your situation: how many arteries are blocked, where the blockages are, your overall health, and your preferences. It also depends on how you define “best” — most durable, shortest recovery, fewest complications, or longest survival.

At first glance, angioplasty with stent placement seems to be a clear winner. It requires a small nick in the groin, local anesthesia, an overnight hospital stay, and a relatively rapid recovery. In comparison, bypass surgery requires opening the chest, general anesthesia, a several-day hospital stay, and weeks of sometimes painful recovery. These differences are one reason why in the US alone, nearly 1.3 million angioplasties were performed last year compared with 470,000 bypass surgeries. On the other hand, surgery is the king of the hill when it comes to durability and freedom from chest pain. Far fewer people need a repeat procedure after bypass surgery than angioplasty.

Simplest Cases

For an uncomplicated blockage in a single coronary artery, angioplasty is becoming the first choice of most cardiologists and their patients. It is quick, relatively painless, and has you back to your usual activities in a few days. A number of large studies show that survival after angioplasty is as good as after bypass surgery.

The convenience of angioplasty comes with a price. Up to one-quarter of people who have angioplasty must have it repeated, or have bypass surgery, within a few years. And anyone who gets a drug-eluting stent must take medicine for at least a year to prevent the formation of potentially deadly clots around the stent.

More Complicated Problems

Bypass surgery was once thought to be the only solution for blockages in two or three coronary arteries, at the junction of two arteries, in a heart with poor pumping power in the left ventricle, or in an individual with diabetes or kidney disease. But here, angioplasty is catching up. It’s hard to be sure how comparable the two procedures are, since there are no data yet from head-to-head trials for such complex situations. But there are inklings from other sorts of information.

The latest comes from a review of data collected by the state of New York. It included all 17,000 bypass surgeries and angioplasties performed in 2003 and 2004 in the state’s non-federal hospitals. Investigators compared deaths immediately after these procedures, deaths within 18 months, and heart attacks within 18 months. News reports about this work, which was published in the January 24, 2008 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, bore headlines like “Surgery better than stents for multiple blockages.” That isn’t the whole story.

Bypass surgery was better but not by much. An extra 1.6 to 2 percent of people in the bypass group were still alive and had not had a heart attack after 18 months. Of course, that small difference isn’t anything to sneeze at when millions of these procedures are performed each year worldwide. The biggest difference between the two methods of treatment was in the need for repeat procedures. Among those who initially underwent angioplasty, 30 percent needed a second procedure within 18 months, compared with five percent in the bypass group.

This study collected information from 2003 to 2004, when the use of drug-eluting stents was in full swing. So the results are relevant today. But the cardiologists and patients chose which procedure to have. This could skew the results in favor of bypass surgery because doctors sometimes suggest angioplasty for frail patients or those with conditions that might increase the chances of dying soon after any cardiovascular procedure.

The risks versus benefits of the two procedures are noted in Table 1 (CABG-Coronary Artery Bypass Graft) and in Table 2 (PCI — Percutaneous Coronary Intervention or Angioplasty). Better answers to the angioplasty-or-bypass question should be coming in the next few years. At least three ongoing trials, dubbed FREEDOM, SYNTAX, and VA CARDS, are comparing the short-term and long-term effects of angioplasty and bypass surgery for multivessel or complex coronary artery disease.

Until then, the results of angioplasty and bypass surgery are close enough that you usually have a choice. And never hesitate to ask your doctor why he/she is recommending one over the other, or to seek a second opinion. The bottom line is this: When considering treatment for a blocked or narrowed coronary artery, it’s important to talk to your doctor about all treatment options. There’s no right or wrong therapy for everyone. Each option has its pros and cons. Deciding which is best for you depends on your individual situation.

Do you really need a procedure?

If you are having a heart attack, then undergoing emergency angioplasty or bypass surgery is absolutely the best remedy. The same isn’t true for mild chest pain brought on by physical activity (angina) or a narrowed coronary artery that doesn’t cause any symptoms at all. Before hopping on the train for these procedures, consider the advances of the medical approach: drugs that improve cholesterol, control blood pressure, stabilize the heart rhythm, fight blood clots, reduce the work of the heart muscle, relax tight arteries, stabilize vulnerable plaques, and manage diabetes. When these medications are added to lifestyle therapy that includes smoking cessation, diet, exercise, and stress reduction, they produce results that are hard to beat, even with invasive reperfusion therapy.

Medical therapy isn’t really an option. It should be an integral part of life after angioplasty or bypass surgery. Angioplasty squashes a plaque, bypass surgery creates a detour around it, but only medical therapy fights atherosclerosis, the disease that causes plaque to form. Without it, plaque keeps growing.

For people with stable angina or a narrowed but silent coronary artery, medical therapy alone is as good as angioplasty. It avoids the small but very real risk of complications from angioplasty or bypass surgery. These can range from infection to stroke or even death. The Clinical Outcome Utilizing Revascularization and Aggressive Drug Evaluation (COURAGE) trial showed that adding angioplasty to state-of-the-art medical therapy was no better than medical therapy alone at preventing future heart attacks and extending life. The lesson from COURAGE is that angioplasty can be a choice, not a necessity, for treating stable angina.

The other big thing to think about is how you’ll manage taking clopidogrel (Plavix) and aspirin every day for at least a year after getting a drug-eluting stent. These drugs are essential for preventing the sudden, and often deadly, formation of a clot on the stent. But they can be hard on the stomach or cause gastrointestinal bleeding, especially for people who also need to take a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug. Moreover, some doctors don’t want their patients to stop taking this combination long enough to have a hip or heart valve replaced, a gall bladder removed, or other surgery. Before agreeing to have angioplasty with a drug-eluting stent, make sure your doctor has a strategy for protecting the stent if you end up needing surgery down the road.

The take-home message is this: Every form of treatment has just two goals — to help patients live better and to help them live longer. Each procedure has unique risks and benefits which must be considered relative to your own individual situation.

So, which form of treatment will it be for you? Angioplasty or bypass? Or maybe, even just medical therapy alone. It’s really up to you, and your doctor, to decide.

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ANGIOPLASTY

ARTERY

BYPASS

CORONARY

CORONARY ARTERY BYPASS GRAFT

DRUG EVALUATION

HEART

MEDICAL

SURGERY

THERAPY

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