November 5th, 2012
AHA 2012 Headquarters
CardioExchange Editors, Staff
CardioExchange is dedicated to bringing you the latest from AHA 2012. Check here often for coverage of late-breaking clinical trials, interviews with the authors of the most important research, and blogs from our fellows on the most interesting presentations at the meeting.
Previews:
News:
- Ultrafiltration Fails to Show Benefit in Acute Heart Failure
- RELAX-AHF Stirs Interest in Novel Drug for Acute Heart Failure
- Early Look: New Methods to Enhance Cholesterol Efflux
- Dalcetrapib: Another HDL-Raising CETP Inhibitor Bites the Dust
- FREEDOM Lends Strong Support to CABG for Diabetics with Multivessel Disease
- NIH Trial Gives Surprising Boost to Chelation Therapy
- ARCTIC Blows a Cold Wind on Platelet Function Tests
- ASPIRE: Aspirin an Attractive Alternative After First VTE
The Expert Is In:
- A New Era in ICD Therapy – Get with the Programming!
- Platelet-Function Testing in Coronary Stenting: Frozen in Its Tracks
Follow the Fellows:
- Closing Remarks from AHA
- Science, with a Little Bit of Flash
- Risk Prediction and Translation to Clinical Practice
- Poster Sessions: Better to Present or Observe?
- AHA — There’s an App for That!
- Breadth versus Depth at AHA
- What Tack to Take in Thinking about TACT?
- Using the Internet to Learn from Leaders in Cardiology
- Acknowledging our Mentors, Both Faculty and Peers
- Cardiology Circles and the AHA
- Late Breaking Trials vs. Abstract Oral Sessions
- What’s the Value of the Expo?
- Reclassifying AHA on the West Coast
- AHA with Some Perspective
- Management of Aortic Stenosis: Up Close and in Person
- The Benefits of Technology
November 4th, 2012
FREEDOM Lends Strong Support to CABG for Diabetics with Multivessel Disease
Larry Husten, PHD
Diabetics with multivessel disease do better with CABG than PCI, according to FREEDOM (Future Revascularization Evaluation in Patients with Diabetes Mellitus: Optimal Management of Multivessel Disease), a large NIH-sponsored study presented at the American Heart Assocation conference in Los Angeles and published simultaneously in the New England Journal of Medicine.
The study was designed to evaluate the relative worth of the two revascularization procedures in diabetics with multivessel disease. Although many studies, including BARI, ARTS, CARDia, and SYNTAX, have suggested that CABG was more effective than PCI in this population, PCI has remained a popular procedure in this group. Now, many experts agreed here in Los Angeles, FREEDOM may well dampen enthusiasm for PCI in this group.
In the trial, 1900 patients were randomized to either PCI with a drug-eluting stent or CABG. After follow-up for at least 2 years, the primary outcome — the composite of death, nonfatal MI, or nonfatal stroke — occurred more often in the PCI group. There were more deaths and MIs in the PCI group but more strokes in the CABG group:
Here are the 5-year event rates:
- Composite endpoint: 26.6% in the PCI group versus 18.7% in the CABG group (p=0.005)
- Deaths: (16.3% versus 10.9%, p=0.049)
- MI: 13.9% versus 6%, p=<0.001)
- Stroke: 2.4% versus 5.2%, (p=0.03)
The results in favor of CABG were consistent across all the prespecified subgroups, including severity of disease as assessed by the SYNTAX score.
In an accompanying editorial, Mark Hlatky discussed the resistance of many cardiologists to accepting that CABG is superior to PCI in this patient population. Previous studies were dismissed because they were outdated, an argument that Hlatky labels “a catch-22, since long-term studies are needed to compare hard outcomes, but evidence from long-term studies may be ignored if therapies are evolving.” In particular, PCI advocates have proposed that the use of drug-eluting stents would close the gap between PCI and CABG.
Now, he writes, 17 years after the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute issued a clinical alert based on the results of the BARI trial, FREEDOM “provides compelling evidence of the comparative effectiveness of CABG versus PCI.”
He concludes:
“The results of the FREEDOM trial suggest that patients with diabetes ought to be informed about the potential survival benefit from CABG for the treatment of multivessel disease. These discussions should begin before coronary angiography in order to provide enough time for the patient to digest the information, discuss it with family members and members of the heart team, and come to an informed decision.”
At an AHA press conference, David O. Williams said that FREEDOM “provides meaningful information to help” cardiologists choose the best therapy for their patients and that it will cause “a definite change in practice.”
At the same press conference, Alice Jacobs said that FREEDOM might result in CABG receiving a class 1 recommendation in the guidelines. Now, she said, “one would think long and hard” about offering PCI to diabetics with multivessel disease.
Mandatory YouTube link for this trial:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fA51wyl-9IE
November 4th, 2012
NIH Trial Gives Surprising Boost to Chelation Therapy
Larry Husten, PHD
With a result that is likely to surprise and baffle much of the mainstream medical community, a large NIH-sponsored trial has turned up the first substantial evidence in support of chelation therapy for patients with coronary disease. Known as TACT (Trial to Assess Chelation Therapy), the highly controversial trial was presented today at the American Heart Association conference by Gervasio Lamas. The trial was sponsored by two NIH institutes, the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.
Chelation therapy with disodium ethylene diamine tetra acetic acid (EDTA) to remove heavy metals from the blood to treat coronary disease has been around — and provoked criticism — since the 1950s. Despite a lack of evidence and the skepticism of the medical community, passionate supporters have kept the therapy alive in alternative medicine circles.
TACT was funded by the NIH more than a decade ago as part of a much-publicized initiative to study the claims of alternative medicine. In 2008, enrollment in TACT was temporarily suspended in response to claims that the trial was unethical. The trial was additionally hampered by slow enrollment.
Now, the results of TACT will likely provide ammunition to chelation defenders, but the trial investigators and other experts have expressed considerable caution about the proper interpretation of the results.
TACT was a double-blind study testing active or placebo infusions of chelation in stable patients with a history of MI. Due to slow enrollment, the trial was downsized, ultimately enrolling 1,708 patients instead of the planned 2,372. To maintain the trial’s power to achieve a meaningful result, the follow-up time was increased. Because of this change, and because the data and safety monitoring board reviewed the data multiple times over the course of the study, the threshold for statistical significance was lowered to 0.036.
The primary endpoint of the trial — the composite of death, MI, stroke, coronary revascularization, or hospitalization for angina — was significantly lower in the chelation group:
- 26.5% in the chelation group versus 30% in the placebo group (HR 0.82, 0.69-0.99, p=0.035)
There were no significant differences in any of the individual components of the primary endpoint. Most of the difference between the groups was due to a lower rate of coronary revascularization in the chelation group:
- 15.5% versus 18.1% (HR 0.81, CI 0.64-1.02, p=0.076)
Nearly all of the benefit in the trial was found to occur among the one-third of patients who had diabetes:
- 67 events in the chelation group versus 102 events in the placebo group (HR 0.61, CI 0.45-0.83, p=0.002)
The investigators were cautious in their interpretation, noting that the trial barely achieved statistical significance, most of the difference was found in the softer endpoint of revascularization, and the finding is less reliable since there was a high withdrawal rate (17%) of patients in the trial.
The authors said that their findings were “unexpected and additional research will be needed to confirm or refute our results and explore possible mechanisms of therapy.” TACT, they concluded, “does not constitute evidence to recommend the clinical application of chelation therapy.”
At an AHA press conference, Paul Armstrong said that TACT was a response to an unusual situation. On the one hand, most physicians and scientists have dismissed chelation therapy as lacking any evidence or rationale. On the other hand, chelation therapy is strongly supported by the alternative medicine community and more than 100,000 people receive chelation therapy each year. Armstrong said the results of the trial were “hypothesis generating, not practice changing.”
November 4th, 2012
Platelet-Function Testing in Coronary Stenting: Frozen in Its Tracks
Gilles Montalescot, MD, PhD
CardioExchange editors Richard Lange and David Hillis ask an ARCTIC trial investigator to discuss possible reasons why antiplatelet-drug and dosing adjustments, guided by platelet-function testing, did not improve clinical outcomes for stented patients.
THE STUDY
In an open-label trial from France, 2440 patients about to undergo coronary stenting were randomized to one of two strategies:
(A) a monitoring-guided approach of platelet-function testing in the catheterization lab with the VerifyNow assay (Accumetrics), followed by antiplatelet-drug (aspirin, clopidogrel, or prasugrel) and dosage adjustment for patients with inadequate inhibition. Platelet-function testing was repeated 14 to 30 days later in the outpatient clinic.
(B) a conventional approach of no platelet-function testing or corresponding drug adjustment
The monitoring-guided group had no significant improvements in clinical outcomes, relative to the conventional group.
THE EXPERT RESPONDS
1. Do you think the results can be explained by any of the following?
a. The test (or variables) used to define high platelet reactivity during treatment doesn’t accurately reflect platelet function or predict clinical outcome.
Montalescot: No, I think the test detects the right patients — those with high platelet reactivity, who are known to have a worse prognosis. But we may be looking at a marker of risk and not a risk factor. Or the interventions were not the right ones to alter the prognosis.
b. The additional antiplatelet treatment didn’t adequately correct the high platelet reactivity noted in some subjects.
Montalescot: We used the most potent agents available to correct the anomaly of high platelet reactivity: glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors and high doses of clopidogrel, aspirin, and (when it became available) prasugrel. We cannot exclude the possibility that some of these interventions might be deleterious — e.g., GPIIb/IIIa inhibitors have been shown to have agonistic effects in certain situations.
c. We’re chasing the wrong car (i.e., treating platelet reactivity doesn’t really matter).
Montalescot: Again, we may be looking at a marker of risk and not a risk factor that, when modified, is associated with better outcomes. Platelet reactivity has been used as a surrogate endpoint in many intervention studies with antiplatelet agents, and we know the limits of surrogate endpoints. We will need more data to unravel all the hypotheses.
2. In the trial, only 27% of patients (those at highest risk) had an ACS. Was bedside monitoring of platelet reactivity helpful in this group?
Montalescot: ACS patients were a prespecified subgroup, and the results were the same in this subgroup as in the rest of the cohort.
3. About 90% of the thienopyridine-treated patients received clopidogrel. Do you think the results (i.e., no significant improvement in clinical outcomes with platelet-function monitoring and treatment adjustment) would be similar for the newer antiplatelet agents?
Montalescot: That is a possibility, but it needs to be tested in a new study. Prasugrel was not available when we started to enroll patients, nor ticagrelor. When prasugrel became available, we had an amendment to use it in the study, but keep in mind that we are talking about off-label use for these drugs anyway.
Share your thoughts and questions about the findings from the ARCTIC trial.
For perspective on the ARCTIC trial from Journal Watch Cardiology‘s Dr. Howard C. Herrmann, click here.
November 4th, 2012
AHA with Some Perspective
Reva Balakrishnan, MD, MPH
Several Cardiology Fellows who are attending AHA.12 in LA this week are blogging together for CardioExchange. The Fellows include Tariq Ahmad, Reva Balakrishnan, Megan Coylewright, Eiman Jahangir, Amit Shah, and John Ryan (moderator). Read the previous post here. Read the next one here. For related CardioExchange content, go to our AHA 2012 Headquarters page.
This year’s AHA conference is a very different experience for me. It is most likely because this year, my home institution of NYU was severely affected by hurricane Sandy. In a way, my mind hasn’t truly left New York City entirely — our institution is in the process of a major recovery on many levels, not only from the physical damage from the storm has caused but also from the resulting displacement of hundreds of patients, and some uncertainty lingers within the training programs for residents and fellows that staff the three hospitals.
Arriving in LA with a group of my co-fellows provided a much needed respite from the events of the past week. Since this is my second AHA conference, and I remembered that overwhelming feeling when picking up the final Scientific Sessions program. As fellows, we’d like to make these meeting the most productive learning experiences possible, and the consensus amongst the group of cofellows in attendance with me was that there is so much to see and to see and too little time. Although I do agree with Eiman that the app is very convenient, I did I resort back to flipping through the program to get to the summary pages for each day which seem to be more user friendly (and then put them in my app, of course).
Overall, I’ve already noticed several differences at this conference:
Positives:
- Opening session – less flashing lights and theatrics compared with last year’s opening session, which felt at times like a Vegas act
- The Expo floor is not in the middle of everything: You can go to the sessions without getting pulled into the distractions of all the pharmaceutical booths. I also think that the space is smaller compared to prior conferences I have been to, which I feel is an improvement — does anyone agree with this?
Negatives:
- LA — not the best choice for convention location. One has to rent a car and drive everywhere, if you aren’t going to stay right by the convention center, and everything people say about the traffic is unfortunately true
- Poster session location — The “meat and potatoes” for the fellows experience is the poster sessions. Often times, this is our introduction into the research world, and a lot of our hard work and time is put into these posters during our busy training. The poster session at this conference is relegated to what seems like a basement area, and is not easy to navigate through, and seems more confusing than last year’s poster area, and the topic areas are not clearly delineated.
November 4th, 2012
ARCTIC Blows a Cold Wind on Platelet Function Tests
Larry Husten, PHD
The use of platelet-function tests to monitor and guide antiplatelet therapy in PCI patients has sparked heated debate. Cardiologists have sought to reconcile biological plausibility with the absence of clinical evidence. Now the ARCTIC (Assessment by a Double Randomization of a Conventional Antiplatelet Strategy versus a Monitoring-guided Strategy for Drug-Eluting Stent Implantation versus Continuation One Year after Stenting) trial brings cold comfort to supporters of the monitoring strategy.
The ARCTIC investigators randomized 2440 PCI patients either to a strategy in which antiplatelet therapy was guided by platelet-function monitoring, or to conventional therapy without monitoring. The VerifyNow P2Y12 and aspirin point-of-care assay was used in the monitoring group. Results of the trial were presented at the American Heart Association scientific sessions in Los Angeles on Sunday and published simultaneously in the New England Journal of Medicine.
The primary endpoint was the composite of death, MI, stent thrombosis, stroke, or urgent revascularization at 1 year:
- 31.1% in the conventional group and 34.6% in the monitoring group (HR 1.13, CI 0.98-1.29, p=0.10)
The ARCTIC investigators also reported a main secondary endpoint consisting of stent thrombosis, revascularized or not, or any urgent revascularization:
- 4.6% and 4.9% (HR 1.06, CI 0.74-1.52, p=0.77)
In the monitoring group, 7.6% of patients were found to be poor responders to aspirin and 34.5% were poor responders to clopidogrel. The authors conclude that platelet-function testing with antiplatelet therapy adjustment does not improve clinical outcomes as compared with standard treatment and that their results “do not support the routine use of platelet-function testing in patients undergoing coronary stenting.”
A second arm of the trial, studying whether clopidogrel therapy should be continued after 1 year, is ongoing. In addition, a follow-up study, ANTARCTIC, is evaluating the value of platelet-function testing in an elderly population “with a paradigm shift towards safety.”
CardioExchange’s Rick Lange and David Hillis interview one of the ARCTIC investigators here. Take a look, then tell us what you think.
November 4th, 2012
ASPIRE: Aspirin an Attractive Alternative After First VTE
Larry Husten, PHD
It is unclear what the best approach is for the long-term treatment of people who have had a first unprovoked episode of venous thromboembolism (VTE). Although warfarin is effective at preventing a recurrence, it is inconvenient and raises the risk for bleeding. Newer anticoagulants have not been tested or approved for this population.
The ASPIRE (Aspirin to Prevent Recurrent Venous Thromboembolism) trial randomized 822 patients who had finished an initial course of anticoagulant therapy after a first unprovoked case of VTE to either aspirin (100 mg daily) or placebo for 4 years. Although the reduction in the rate for recurrent VTE with aspirin did not reach statistical significance, there were significant reductions in secondary outcomes of clinical events:
26% reduction in the yearly rate of VTE recurrence (primary endpoint):
- 6.5% for placebo and 4.8% for aspirin (HR 0.74, CI 0.52-1.05, p=0.09)
34% reduction in the yearly rate of major vascular events (VTE, MI, stroke, or CV death):
- 8.0% versus 5.2% (HR 0.66, CI 0.48-0.92, p=0.01)
33% reduction in the yearly rate of VTE, MI, stroke, major bleeding, or all-cause mortality (net clinical benefit):
- 9.0% versus 6.0% (HR 0.67, CI 0.49-0.91, p=0.01)
The ASPIRE investigators calculated that for every 1000 patients treated for 1 year, aspirin would prevent 17 episodes of VTE and 28 major thrombotic events, at a cost of 5 nonfatal bleeding episodes.
Reporting in the New England Journal of Medicine, the investigators write that although aspirin is “substantially less effective than warfarin,” it is “an attractive alternative because it is simple and inexpensive and its safety profile is well documented.”
In an accompanying editorial, Theodore Warkentin combined the ASPIRE results with findings from the recent WARFASA trial and calculated that aspirin results in a 32% reduction in the rate of recurrent VTE and a 34% reduction in the rate of major vascular events. He concludes that aspirin is “a reasonable option” for patients who wish to stop anticoagulation:
Aspirin is inexpensive, does not require monitoring (in contrast to warfarin), and does not accumulate in patients with renal insufficiency (in contrast to dabigatran and rivaroxaban); in addition, if major bleeding occurs or the patient requires urgent surgery, the antiplatelet effects of aspirin can be reversed…”
November 4th, 2012
Management of Aortic Stenosis: Up Close and in Person
Megan Coylewright, MD MPH
The light and heat outside are intense as I emerge from the darkened, cool room where I spent the last 4 hours, focused on the treatment of aortic stenosis. A good crowd had gathered, and a stunning line up of experts led the way, lecturing on what is known and what is to come. From John Webb on the newest sheaths (14 french expandable), radically diminishing vascular complications and bleeding (and leading me to appreciate my peripheral training more than ever), to David Holmes outlining strategies for rational dispersion of the technology, I marvel at how well this field is managed.
Once again it is easy to prove within the first hour why attendance in person is so important: I stategize with an old friend from residency, Susan Bell, now on staff at Vanderbilt and an emerging expert in Geriatric Cardiology, about how best to deliver care to our elderly TAVR patients. Her insight is instrumental to my own research in shared decision making, and yet I hadn’t yet identified her as a research partner. I laugh with friends from other interventional fellowships about our own experience with getting to the front of the table on TAVR cases…this shared experience is helpful. I meet John Webb during a break, and am impressed with his foresight, helpful for a trainee. And the meeting has just begun.
I’ll sign off now as I head to a meeting for an ACC committee focused on delivering care to patients with aortic stenosis…the ability to bring work groups together in person is another benefit of traveling to LA. By the way, I also didn’t realize how gorgeous the mountains would be. Looking forward to the late breakers- especially FREEDOM- this afternoon. Until then…
November 4th, 2012
The Benefits of Technology
Eiman Jahangir, MD
Several Cardiology Fellows who are attending AHA.12 in LA this week are blogging together for CardioExchange. The Fellows include Tariq Ahmad, Reva Balakrishnan, Megan Coylewright, Eiman Jahangir, Amit Shah, and John Ryan (moderator). Read the next post here.
Today, I returned for my 2nd AHA meeting. Similar to last year, I registered, received my registration material, and began to sift through the conference schedules to decide what to attend. The book is large and difficult to sort through. After 5 minutes of sifting through it and marking various pages, a colleague of mine stopped to say hello and mentioned that I should download the AHA app. I felt foolish for not knowing that there was an app but happily accepted the recommendation. Two minutes later, I had the app downloaded to my iPhone and was now going through to find the sessions I wanted to attend.
The AHA app is a great tool. Not only does it make it easy to sort through sessions by day, core, and track through the “Educational Sessions” tab, but it also allows you to add items to a “My Schedule” tab. This tab allows for a simple-to-access schedule that gives the time, name, and location of sessions you bookmarked under “Educational Sessions.” Additionally, you can find sessions, posters, and other presentations by the person presenting under the “Faculty” tab. This has revolutionized my way of accessing and sorting through the sessions. After just 10 minutes of searching, I had outlined my schedule for the next 3 days. This is a vast improvement compared with the hour it took me last year. Finally, the app also gives access to maps, Twitter feeds, and additional meeting information.
With all this information in one simple location, I wonder why the AHA is still wasting money and paper to print out the program booklet. In this day when smart phones are widely used, especially among the medical field, do you think it is necessary to print a program? Should there be a way to opt out of receiving the booklet?
November 3rd, 2012
ALTITUDE Autopsy Shows What Went Wrong With Aliskiren
Larry Husten, PHD
In its short lifespan the direct renin inhibitor aliskiren (a.k.a., Rasilez or Tekturna) rapidly declined from being a highly promising, first-of-its kind drug to a major failure. The death blow was struck last December with the early termination of the ALTITUDE trial, after the data and safety monitoring committee found an increased risk in patients taking aliskiren. Now the final results of the Aliskiren Trial in Type 2 Diabetes Using Cardiorenal Endpoints have been presented at Kidney Week 2012 in San Diego and simultaneously published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
8,561 type 2 diabetics at high risk for cardiovascular and renal complications already receiving an ACE inhibitor or an angiotensin-receptor blocker were randomized to receive aliskiren or placebo. The primary outcome of a cardiorenal event (CV death, resuscitated death, MI, stroke, unplanned hospitalization for heart failure, onset of end-stage renal disease or doubling of baseline creatinine) occurred more often in the aliskiren group, although this difference did not achieve statistical significance:
- 18.3% for aliskiren versus 17.1% for placebo (hazard ratio, 1.08; 95% CI, 0.98-1.20; P=0.12).
A similar trend was observed for just cardiovascular outcomes:
- 13.8% versus 12.6%, respectively (hazard ratio, 1.11; 95% CI, 0.99-1.25; P=0.09)
Compared with placebo, patients on aliskiren had lower blood pressure and a greater reduction in the urinary albumin-to-cretinine ratio. But there was also a significantly higher risk of hyperkalemia (39.1% versus 29.9%; P<0.001) and hypotension (12.1% versus 6.3%, p<0.001).
The authors concluded that the addition of aliskiren to standard therapy in high risk type 2 diabetics “is not supported by these data and may even be harmful.” The result of ALTITUDE, they write, “underscores the need to go beyond surrogate biomarkers and obtain risk-benefit data from clinical end-point trials to better inform clinical decisions.”