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Coronary artery disease often necessitates complex interventions like coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG) or percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with stents. Hybrid coronary revascularization, a minimally invasive approach, integrates both methods for complete revascularization. This multicenter randomized trial involves 1200 patients, comparing hybrid coronary revascularization to CABG in a 1:1 ratio. Eligible participants have multi-vessel coronary disease and are referred for elective or sub-acute CABG. Inclusion criteria include age 18 or older, significant multi-vessel disease, and potential complete revascularization with both methods. Exclusion criteria include chronic kidney disease, pregnancy, contradiction to dual antiplatelet therapy, recent myocardial infarction, and acute revascularization. The hybrid group undergoes staged revascularization, combining minimally invasive grafting of the left interior mammary artery to the left anterior descending artery with PCI-stenting of remaining lesions. The control group undergoes conventional CABG with sternotomy. The primary outcome is a composite of all-cause mortality, myocardial infarction, stroke, or unplanned hospitalization, while secondary outcomes include periprocedural complications, cardiovascular mortality, hospital-free days within 90 days, angina frequency, and quality of life. Evaluation occurs 12 months after randomization. The trial commences in 2024, with inclusion expected to conclude in 5 years.
Full description
Background
Cardiovascular diseases, mainly coronary artery disease (CAD), are the leading causes of death worldwide. CAD is characterized by the narrowing or blockage of blood flow in the coronary arteries often necessitating complex interventions like coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) or percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with drug-eluting stents. The preferred revascularization strategy depends on several characteristics, one being the number of diseased vessels. Multivessel coronary artery disease (MVD) is defined as stenosis of at least two major coronary arteries.
Over the years, several large trials have concluded that CABG and PCI with newer-generation drug-eluting stents are both associated with improved survival rates compared to medical therapy.
CABG is still regarded as the gold standard for complex multivessel disease, with the cornerstone being the in-situ left internal mammary artery (LIMA) anastomosed to the left anterior descending artery (LAD).1 Current guidelines recommend CABG or PCI with equipoise in patients with one-vessel proximal LAD stenosis, two-vessel disease with proximal LAD stenosis, left main disease or three-vessel disease with lower complexity.2 The LIMA graft, with its excellent patency, has been shown to outperform PCI of the LAD and is in part responsible for the apparent success and survival benefit of CABG.3 However, saphenous vein grafts, the most common graft for non-LAD targets perform rather poorly, with graft failure ranging as high as 43%, 18 months after surgery.4 PCI with DES, especially with intravascular imaging, is documenting meagre failure rates and may consequently offer better results in non-LAD vessels than CABG with vein grafts does.5
Despite its survival benefits, the CABG comes at the cost of a full sternotomy, necessitating longer rehabilitation. Patients may prefer less invasive treatment options if these are feasible and have consistent long-term results. The minimally invasive coronary artery bypass (MIDCAB) procedure was developed as a less invasive method for revascularization. MIDCAB allows for the grafting of the anterior vessels through a small left anterior thoracotomy without the use of extracorporeal circulation. Thus, ensuring vital revascularization with a lesser trauma.
Complete revascularization has been established as the most important factor for survival. Recent data have showed comparable 10-year mortality in patients achieving this goal with either PCI or CABG.6
Hybrid coronary revascularization was developed to combine the best parts of the two revascularization techniques, consisting of a minimally invasive grafting of the LIMA to LAD, and PCI of all functionally significant non-LAD stenoses. Theoretically, patients may obtain the survival benefit from the LIMA-LAD graft, from a less invasive approach and avoidance of vein graft failures.
However, to this date, hybrid coronary revascularization is supported by very limited data. Only three small, randomized feasibility trials have been conducted, which all stated that the procedure is feasible but that larger randomized trials are necessary to determine if it is a suitable alternative to treating multivessel disease.7-9
Trial objective
The trial objective is to assess the beneficial and harmful effects of hybrid coronary revascularization versus coronary artery bypass graft surgery in patients with multivessel coronary artery disease.
Trial design
The trial investigaors will conduct a multicentre randomized superiority trial comparing hybrid coronary revascularization versus conventional CABG surgery in patients with multi-vessel coronary artery disease. Patients will be randomized 1:1 to hybrid coronary revascularization or CABG. The randomisation will be stratified according to clinical site and diabetes (yes/no).
Selection of participants
All patients with multi-vessel coronary disease referred for a CABG will be discussed during the heart team conference and considered for participation in the trial.
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Trial intervention
Experimental intervention:
Coronary revascularization will be conducted as a staged intervention. First, the MIDCAB will be conducted through a small left anterior thoracotomy, with endoscopic LIMA harvest and off-pump LIMA to LAD-grafting. Second, PCI with implantation of contemporary DES of all non-LAD lesions will be conducted within 4 weeks of the surgical procedure. Patients will receive dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) according to local routine and international guidelines.
A "reverse hybrid" with PCI preceding MIDCAB is also an option in patients with sub-acute coronary syndrome or CTO. Surgery will be conducted 3 months after PCI when it is safe to pause DAPT. PCI of CTO, guided by viability tests, may further be staged at up to 30 days after MIDCAB surgery.
Control intervention:
Coronary revascularization will be conducted as a conventional CABG, through a sternotomy, on- or off-pump with grafting of all target vessels, according to local best practice. All graft types are permitted and, therefore, surgeons decide their own specific graft strategy.
CABG, MIDCAB, and PCI are all standard procedures performed routinely at the hospitals. Therefore, there is no expected increased risk for trial participants no matter which group they are randomized to.
The statistical analysis will adhere to the intention-to-treat principle, meaning that participants will be analyzed based on their originally assigned groups even if they undergo a crossover to other interventions.
Outcome measures
Primary outcome
• A composite outcome of either all-cause mortality, a diagnosis of myocardial infarction, a diagnosis of stroke, or any unplanned hospitalization at 12 months postoperatively.
Secondary outcomes
Exploratory outcomes
Sample size and power estimation
Provided that the incidence of all-cause mortality, a diagnosis of myocardial infarction, a diagnosis of stroke, or hospitalization in the control group is equal to 55%, an absolute risk reduction of 10% (corresponding to a relative risk reduction of 18.2%), α=0.05, beta=0.10 (giving a power of 90%) we will need 524 participants in the intervention and in the control group. Notably, a 10% absolute risk reduction corresponds to an incidence of either all-cause mortality, a diagnosis of myocardial infarction, a diagnosis of stroke, or hospitalization equal to 45% in the experimental intervention group.
Enrollment
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Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
1,048 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Erika Nodin, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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