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Milestones in Acute Myocardial Infarction 1 Celebrating 10 Years of Insights from the National Registry of Myocardial Infarction Cardiovascular Disease: Problems/Opportunities • 58 million Americans have one or more types of cardiovascular disease • Approximately 1 million Americans will have a new/recurrent myocardial infarction this year • Coronary heart disease is the single largest cause of death in the United States • Estimated direct/indirect cost: • Coronary heart disease • Congestive heart failure $95.6 billion/year $20.2 billion/year 1998 Heart and Stroke Statistical Update, American Heart Association The Role of Observational Studies • Collect data on selected demographics, practice patterns, and outcomes; describe variations and trends • Complement controlled, randomized trials by comparing data with large groups of patients treated under “real world” conditions • Examine treatment effects on subgroups • Access and analyze clinical issues at less cost than in clinical trials • Generate hypotheses for more complete examination in clinical trials Major Observational Studies • Cooperative Cardiovascular Project • Framingham Heart Study • Myocardial Infarction Triage and Intervention (MITI) • National Registry of Myocardial Infarction (NRMI) • Nurses’ Health Study • Physicians’ Health Study The Framingham Heart Study • Collecting data for over 50 years • 5,209 adult residents of Framingham, MA (2,873 women and 2,336 men) • Collects data from • • • • standardized biennial cardiovascular examinations daily surveillance of hospital admissions death information information from physicians and other sources outside the clinic Framingham Heart Study Contributions • Identified major risk factors associated with heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and other diseases • Identified hypotheses for clinical trials • Created new and larger emphasis for preventive medicine • Over 1,000 published articles The Nurses' Health Study • Collecting data prospectively for nearly 25 years • 121,700 women aged 30 to 55 • Collects data on diet, exercise, smoking, hormone use, alcohol use • Still in contact with 90% of the original participants The Nurses' Health Study Contributions • Demonstrated • • • • drinking coffee does not increase risk of MI HRT reduces risk of MI and osteoporosis second hand smoke increases risk of heart disease Vitamin E can protect against heart disease • Over 250 published articles NRMI: Leadership in Observational Databases 1 1990–1994 Over 350,000 patients 1,073 hospitals Identified delays in thrombolytic therapy 1994–1998 771,653 patients 1,506 hospitals Assisted in decreasing door to drug time 1998 - 2000 Over 500,000 patients Approximately 1,600 hospitals Identified untreated eligibles, timely reperfusion, and use of adjunctive therapies NRMI 4 • Initiated in July 2000 – – – – – – Includes approximately 1,600 hospitals Collects information on pre-hospital care Emphasizes process improvement Provides customized reporting for hospital systems Identifies eligible untreated patients Collects information on TNK, GP IIb/IIIa inhibitors, combination therapies – Evaluates of additional medications/procedures – Monitors outcomes such as clinical events and mortality – Compatible with current ACC/AHA guidelines for AMI care NRMI Goal Improve AMI patient care through evaluation/ assessment of care delivery systems Purpose Collect, analyze, and disseminate observational data related to outcomes and quality of care for AMI patients Rationale Ongoing assessment of practice is critical for improving patient care NRMI Publications Articles Abstracts 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 *additional abstracts and articles are expected for 2000 1998 1999 2000* NRMI Highlights • • • • Trends Study validation Time to treatment Diagnosis and treatment of women • AMI subgroups • Seasonality • Use of cardiac procedures • Complications of MI/safety • Bundle branch block • ACE inhibitors • JCAHO/ORYX Median time, minutes National Trends in AMI Management: Door to Drug Time with Thrombolysis NRMI 1 NRMI 2 NRMI 3 (Activase only) (All lytics) (All lytics) 100 91 90 80 70 60 75th percentile, 52 60 50 39 40 34 30 20 25th percentile, 22 10 0 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 NRMI 1: Includes patients where initial ECG was the method of MI diagnosis NRMI 2 and 3: Includes patients with ST on 1st 12-lead ECG results, where 1st 12-lead ECG date/time = 1st 12-lead ECG with ST and/or BBB date/time Non-transfer-in patients National Trends in AMI Management: Door to Balloon Time in PPTCA Median time, minutes 120 NRMI 2 116 NRMI 3 110 108 100 90 80 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 Includes patients with ST on 1st 12-lead ECG results, where 1st 12-lead ECG date/time = 1st 12-lead ECG with ST and/or BBB date/time (non-transfer-in patients) National Trends in AMI Management: Hospital Length of Stay Median days in hospital No reperfusion strategy 8 7.5 NRMI 1 7 6 6.8 5 4 3 2 1 0 1990 1991 1992 Non-transfer-in patients Reperfusion strategy used NRMI 2 NRMI 3 4.6 3.5 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 National Trends in AMI Management: Medications Used Within 24 Hours Patients, % ASA Heparin Beta blockers Ace inhibitors GP IIa/IIIb inhibitors 90 NRMI 1 NRMI 2 NRMI 3 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 Non-transfer-in patients NRMI Study Validation Background • Compared NRMI 2 to the Cooperative Cardiovascular Project (CCP) Objective • To evaluate whether or not the simpler case identification and data abstraction processes used in NRMI 2 are comparable to the more rigorous processes used in the CCP Every et al. JACC 1999 Hospital-level Comparison: Baseline Characteristics Age (mean) Sex (% male) White race (%) History of AMI (%) Heart failure (%) Bypass surgery (%) Coronary angioplasty (%) NRMI CCP (n=35,673) (n=42,703) P value 76.9 50.3 86.9 77.3 49.4 89.5 0.391 0.015 <0.001 29.0 21.3 12.2 5.3 32.0 25.1 12.9 6.7 <0.001 <0.001 0.002 <0.001 Adapted from Every N, et al. JACC 1999 Hospital-level Comparison: Process of Care and Outcomes Length of stay (mean days) Cardiac catheterization (%) Coronary angioplasty (%) Bypass surgery (%) Thrombolytic therapy (%) Mortality Stroke NRMI CCP (n=35,673) (n=42,703) P value 8.3 33.3 12.6 7.1 15.6 19.7 1.9 8.1 32.8 12.5 7.0 14.6 18.1 3.4 <0.001 0.156 0.846 0.420 <0.001 <0.001 <0.001 Adapted from Every N, et al. JACC 1999 Patient-level Comparison: Hospital Course % Agreement Stroke in hospital Reinfarction Shock in hospital Thrombolytic treatment Coronary angiography Coronary angioplasty Bypass surgery Hospital mortality (n=25, 664) Kappa 98.0 95.2 94.7 98.3 98.2 97.9 99.7 99.3 0.57 0.21 0.63 0.94 0.96 0.91 0.97 0.98 Adapted from Every N, et al. JACC 1999 NRMI Study Validation: Conclusions • The simpler case identification and data abstraction processes used in NRMI are comparable to the more rigorous processes used in the CCP • NRMI is less expensive to administer and maintain, provides timely and continuous feedback, allows ongoing involvement in data collection and analysis, and facilitates QI activities • In summary, the NRMI is a valid outcomes measurement tool Every N, et al. JACC 1999 NRMI: Time to Treatment Studies • Time to treatment – Established factors that can lead to delays in treatment – Suggested areas for process improvement and quality control • Consultation – Compared the time used for consultation to patient outcomes • Door-to-drug time – Identified that longer door-to-drug time increases rates of mortality • Angioplasty – Examined the relationship of symptom-onset-to-balloon time and door-to-balloon time with mortality in patients undergoing angioplasty for AMI Factors Influencing Time to Treatment with rt-PA Background • Very early administration of thrombolytic therapy for AMI has significantly reduced mortality Objectives • To evaluate factors which influence – the time from symptom onset to hospital presentation – the time from hospital presentation to the onset of thrombolytic treatment Maynard C, et al. Am J Cardiol 1995 Factors that Predict Time to Treatment Factors Treatment in the ED Male sex Accelerated 90-min infusion Treatment from 6 am to 6 pm Western US region Advanced age* Anterior infarct location *Age coded as (1) <60, (2) 61-74, and (3) >75 years of age Odds ratio 95% CI 3.08 1.26 1.26 1.26 1.24 0.86 0.90 2.94, 3.23 1.21, 1.31 1.24, 1.28 1.22, 1.31 1.17, 1.30 0.83, 0.88 0.87, 0.94 Maynard C, et al. Am J Cardiol 1995 Factors Influencing Time to Treatment: Conclusions • To shorten time to treatment, thrombolytic treatment should be initiated in the Emergency Department • Reducing time to treatment allows more patients to benefit from thrombolytic therapy • The effectiveness of programs aimed at reducing time to treatment should be subject to continuing quality improvement surveillance Maynard C, et al. Am J Cardiol 1995 Factors Influencing the Time to Thrombolysis in AMI Background • The extent of myocardial salvage and the magnitude of mortality reduction in patients with AMI are directly related to how early drug is given after the onset of symptoms and how quickly reperfusion occurs Objective • The Time to Thrombolysis Substudy of the NRMI identified factors that delay thrombolytic treatment of patients with ST-segment elevation AMI Lambrew CT, et al. Arch Intern Med 1997 Time to Treatment: Cardiac Consultation by Gender Median minutes Men 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Women P = .001 P = .001 Door-to-data Door-to-decision Door-to-drug Time intervals Lambrew CT, et al. Arch Intern Med 1997 Time to Treatment: Bedside vs Telephone Consultation Median minutes Telephone 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Bedside P = .001 P = .001 Door-to-data Door-to-decision Door-to-drug Time intervals Lambrew CT, et al. Arch Intern Med 1997 Time to Treatment: Conclusions • Hospital practices and policies can significantly delay treatment of patients with AMI • Delays in hospital arrival for women are compounded by delays in decisions and initiation of therapy in those women who receive consultation compared with men • ED physicians should have the authority to initiate thrombolytic therapy • Monitoring should be part of a multidisciplinary, continuous QI effort Lambrew CT, et al. Arch Intern Med 1997 Consultation Before Thrombolytic Therapy in AMI Background • In-hospital delay is often the largest factor impacting time-to-thrombolytic treatment. Time-consuming ED protocols and practices may explain some of these delays Objectives • To determine whether patients for whom consultation was obtained before initiation of therapy differ in presenting characteristics from their counterparts for who consultation was not obtained • To ascertain differences in time to treatment due to consultation • To determine if time delays associated with consultation affect outcomes Al-Mubarak N, et al. Am J Cardiol 1999 Factors that Predict Use of Consultation Odds ratio 95% CI 0.825 0.890 0.928 0.949 0.956 1.003 1.084 1.088 1.126 1.184 1.195 1.278 1.390 1.391 ST segment elevation Race (white) Presence of chest pain Male gender ST segment depression MI sx to ECG (per 10 min) History of PTCA HMO vs commercial insurance History of CABG Age >70 years LBBB RBBB Pulmonary edema Normal ECG Al-Mubarak N, et al. Am J Cardiol 1999 Less likely 0.5 0 Consultation 1.5 P value .0001 .0001 .047 .01 .025 .0001 .04 .009 .0001 .0001 .029 .0001 .0001 .0001 2 More likely Elapsed Door-to-drug Time After Hospital Arrival No consultation Patients treated, % 100 Consultation 80 60 40 20 0 0 60 120 180 Time after hospital arrival (min) Al-Mubarak N, et al. Am J Cardiol 1999 Consultation Before Thrombolytic Therapy: Conclusions • Consultation was sought in 64% of patients although presenting features were typical, rather than atypical, in most patients • Consultation significantly delayed the administration of lytic therapy and was associated with increased hospital mortality • This study led to the empowerment of ED physicians to initiate thrombolytic therapy Al-Mubarak N, et al. Am J Cardiol 1999 Longer Door-to-drug Time Associated with Increased Mortality Background • It has been recommended that all hospitals work to decrease door-needle-time, yet the relationship between door-needle-time and mortality had not been examined Objective • To evaluate whether longer door-to-needle times increase the rate of mortality Cannon et al. JACC 2000 (Abstract, Suppl A) MV adjusted odds of mortality Odds for Mortality Associated with Longer Door-to-drug Time P=0.0001 1.4 P=0.01 1.2 P=NS 1.23 1.11 1.03 1 n=28,624 n=33,867 n=11,616 n=10,316 0.8 0-30 31-60 61-90 Door-to-drug time (min) >90 Cannon et al. JACC 2000 (Abstract, Suppl A) Longer Door-to-drug Time: Conclusions • Delays in door-to-needle times over 60 minutes increases the rate of mortality • Delays in door-to-needle times over 30 minutes increases the development of left ventricular dysfunction post-MI • These data provide direct evidence of the need to reduce door-to-needle times in order to improve the chances of survival post AMI Cannon et al. JACC 2000 (Abstract, Suppl A) Symptom-onset-to-balloon Time and Door-to-balloon Time with Mortality in Patients Undergoing Angioplasty for AMI Background • Rapid time to treatment with thrombolytic therapy is associated with lower mortality in patients with AMI. However, data on time to primary angioplasty and its relationship to mortality are inconclusive Objective • To test the hypothesis that more rapid time to reperfusion results in lower mortality with primary angioplasty Cannon CP, et al. JAMA 2000 Multvariate-adjusted oods of inhospital mortality Relationship Between Symptomonset-to-balloon Time Intervals and Mortality 2.2 2 1.8 1.6 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 P=0.21 P=0.35 P=0.17 P=0.65 P=0.95 0-2 >2-3 >3-4 >4-6 Time, hours >6-12 >12 Adapted from Cannon CP, et al. JAMA 2000 Multvariate-adjusted oods of inhospital mortality Relationship between Door-toBalloon Time Intervals and Mortality 2.2 2 1.8 1.6 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 P<0.001 P<0.001 P=0.01 P=0.35 0-60 61-90 P=0.29 91-120 121-150 151-180 >180 Time, minutes Adapted from Cannon CP, et al. JAMA 2000 Time to Treatment in Angioplasty: Conclusions • More rapid time to reperfusion results in lower mortality with primary angioplasty • Physicians and health care systems should work toward reducing door-to-balloon times to less than 90 minutes (plus or minus 30 minutes) • Door-to-balloon time should be considered when choosing a reperfusion strategy Cannon CP, et al. JAMA 2000 Women: Risk of AMI, Treatment Patterns, and Outcomes • Women have a worse prognosis than men after AMI • Women present at an older age, may have more advanced disease, often have coexisting conditions, and may get less aggressive referral, diagnosis, and treatment • Two key studies have used the NRMI database to examine sex-based differences in patients with AMI Thrombolytic Therapy Demographics No thrombolytic therapy Factors Thrombolytic therapy Men Women Men Women 136,401 92,335 87,392 34,941 Mean age (years) 65.8 72.4 59.1 65.2 Mean weight (kg) 83.2 68.7 85.9 71.6 Mean time to treatment (min) NA NA 90.3 104.2 Number of patients P <.001 Adapted from Chandra NC et al. Arch Intern Med 1998 Mortality in Men and Women, by Age Women, No TT Men, No TT Women, TT Men, TT 30 Mortality, % 25 20 15 10 5 0 50 50-60 60-70 Age, years 70-80 >80 Adapted from Chandra NC et al. Arch Intern Med 1998 Treatment of Women with MI: Conclusions • Women have higher mortality rates and are less likely to receive thrombolytic therapy, cardiac catheterization, coronary artery bypass surgery, aspirin, heparin, and beta-blockers • These findings contribute to the growing body of evidence suggesting that women receive insufficient referral and treatment for AMI Chandra NC et al. Arch Intern Med 1998 Sex-based Differences in Early Mortality Background • To further investigate mortality patterns among women with AMI, Vaccarino and colleagues analyzed NRMI 2 data Objective • To test the hypothesis that younger, but not older, women have higher in-hospital mortality rates than their male peers Vaccarino V, et al. N Engl J Med. 1999 Rates of Mortality During Hospitalization, by Age Men Deaths in hospital, % 30 Women 25 20 15 10 5 0 <50 50-54 55-59 60-64 65-69 70-74 75-79 80-84 85-90 Age, years P <0.001 Vaccarino V, et al. N Engl J Med. 1999 Sex-based Differences in Early Mortality After MI: Conclusions • The younger the women, the greater the relative risk for mortality compared to men • The risk for mortality is greater for women less than 75 years, but after the age of 75, the risk for men is greater • Under the age of 50, women have a 2:1 greater risk for mortality • Younger women with MI are a high-risk group Vaccarino V, et al. N Engl J Med. 1999 Sex-based Differences in AMI: Conclusions • Many earlier observational studies on AMI did not analyze sex-based differences • The size and scope of the NRMI databases allow identification of important findings on the treatment of women: – younger women with AMI are a high risk group requiring special attention – substantial differences exist in the way women and men are treated for AMI • Further research is warranted Seasonality in AMI • Seasonal patterns in mortality from AMI have been established. However, it is unclear if a seasonal rhythm for onset of AMI exists. • Two studies used NRMI databases was to determine if there is a seasonal variation in the occurrence of AMI and if so, if it is present in all geographic areas. Number of Cases of AMI 1994-1996 40000 35000 30000 25000 20000 15000 10000 5000 0 Winter Spring Summer Fall Spencer et al. JACC 1998 Regional Breakout of AMI Cases by Season % of AMI cases Winter Summer 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 NE Mi t dA l t SA l EN C ES C C N W WS C Mo u ai nt n P if ac ic Adapted from Spencer et al. JACC 1998 AMI Cases by Season: Men and Women Male Female Number of AMI cases 25000 20000 15000 10000 5000 0 Summer Fall Winter Spring Adapted from Spencer et al. JACC 1998 AMI Cases by Season: Age Groups Winter Summer Number of AMI cases 12000 10000 8000 6000 4000 2000 0 <50 yrs 55-64 yrs 65-74 yrs >75 yrs Adapted from Spencer et al. JACC 1998 Seasonality in AMI: Conclusions • 53% more cases of AMI occur in winter vs summer • Though there are regional differences in the occurrences of AMI, the same general pattern of seasonality occurs across the United States • Results are also consistent for seasonality when looking at gender and age Spencer et al. JACC 1998; Ornato JP, et al. JACC 1996 NRMI: Focus on Procedures that Affect Patient Outcomes • • • • Hospital capabilities and equipment Influence of payor status on outcomes Comparison of reperfusion strategies Hospital volume (experience) of MIs and overall outcomes Treatment and Outcomes for AMI Patients in Hospitals With and Without Invasive Capability Background • Patients with AMI are usually transported to the closest hospital • However, relatively few hospitals have the capability for immediate coronary arteriography, PTCA, or CABG Objective • To determine the extent to which the capability of a hospital to perform invasive cardiovascular procedures influences treatment and outcome of patients admitted with AMI Rogers WJ, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 2000 Distribution of Hospital Types (n=1506) in NRMI 2 Non-invasive Cath-capable PTCA-capable CABG-capable Invasive-capable, % Non-Invasive, % 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Rogers WJ, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 2000 Invasive Capability and AMI Outcome: Findings The proportion of patients receiving initial reperfusion intervention was only slightly higher at the more invasive hospitals Among thrombolytic recipients, median door-to-drug time interval differed little among hospital types The proportion of patients transferred out to other facilities was 51.0% (noninvasive), 42.2% (cath-capable), 39.9% (PTCA-capable), and 4.4% (CABG-capable) (P <0.0001) Mortality at 90 days post-infarction was similar among patients initially admitted to each of the four hospital types Rogers WJ, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 2000 Invasive Capability and AMI Outcome: Conclusions • Patients with AMI admitted to hospitals without invasive cardiac facilities have a high likelihood of subsequent transfer to other facilities • Yet, their likelihood of receiving a reperfusion intervention at the first hospital, their door to thrombolytic drug intervals, and their 90-day survival rates are similar to those of patients initially admitted to more invasively equipped hospitals • Data suggest that a policy of initial treatment of AMI at the closest medical facility is appropriate medical practice Rogers WJ, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 2000 Payor Status, Use of Invasive Cardiac Procedures, and Outcomes after MI Background • The use of invasive procedures affects the cost of cardiovascular care and may be influenced by payor status Objective • To determine the influence of payor status on the use and appropriateness of cardiac procedures. Sada MJ, French WJ, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 1998 Comparison of Payor Groups: Methods Compared treatment and outcomes of MI among four payor groups: fee for service (FFS) health maintenance organization (HMO) Medicaid uninsured Performed multivariate comparison on the use of invasive cardiac procedures, length of stay and in-hospital mortality Compared use of coronary angiography in patients at low and high risk for cardiac events Sada MJ, French WJ, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 1998 Use of Procedures by Payor Groups (%) FFS HMO Medicaid Uninsured (n=10,498) (n=3,273) (n=1,354) (n=2,475) 85.5 35.6 19.4 80.4 34.0 16.1 61.0 20.8 11.0 74.9 29.3 13.5 42.2 6.6 18.0 4.2 15.4 40.8 5.6 15.3 3.2 19.6 50.2 5.8 18.4 4.1 16.9 44.6 5.2 14.4 4.3 16.5 Invasive Angiography* Angioplasty† Bypass surgery‡ Other Echocardiography# IABP§ Mechanical ventilation¶ Pacemaker§ Stress testing¶ Sada MJ, French WJ, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 1998 Use of Angiography by Payor Status Angiography Less likely More likely Medicaid Uninsured HMO 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 Odds ratio Adapted from Sada MJ, French WJ, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 1998 Factors Affecting In-hospital Mortality by Payor Status Higher mortality HMO Uninsured Medicaid 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 Odds ratio Adapted from Sada MJ, French WJ, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 1998 Payor Status and Outcomes: Conclusions • Payor status is associated with the use and appropriateness of invasive cardiac procedures but not length of hospital stay after myocardial infarction • The higher in-hospital mortality in the Medicaid cohort merits further study Sada MJ, French WJ, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 1998 Primary PTCA Compared with rt-PA in Patients with AMI Background • PTCA and thrombolytic therapy are alternative means of achieving reperfusion in patients with AMI Objective • To compare outcomes after primary PTCA or thrombolytic therapy for AMI Tiefenbrunn AJ, et al. JACC 1998 In-hospital Mortality in Lyticeligible Patients Mortality (%) rt-PA Overall 5.4 STE or LBBB 1st ECG 5.3 Age <75 yr 3.4 Age >75 yr 16.5 Men 4.5 Women 9.6 Inferior MI 3.9 Anterior MI 7.6 Low risk 2.9 Not low risk 7.5 Tiefenbrunn AJ, et al. JACC 1998 Odds ratio and 95% CI PTCA 5.2 5.5 3.5 14.4 5.2 8.9 3.9 7.1 2.8 7.4 0.5 rt-PA better 0 1.5 PTCA better In-hospital Mortality Plus Non-fatal Stroke Mortality plus nonfatal stroke (%) rt-PA PTCA All (lytic eligible without shock) 6.2 5.6 STE or LBBB 1st ECG 6.1 5.9 Age >75 yr 18.4 14.6 Age <75 yr 4.1 3.9 Tiefenbrunn AJ, et al. JACC 1998 Odds ratio and 95%CI 0.5 rt-PA better 0 1.5 PTCA better Primary PTCA Compared with rt-PA: Conclusions • Data suggest that for lytic-eligible patients not in shock, PTCA and rt-PA are comparable alternative methods of reperfusion when analyzed in terms of – in-hospital mortality – mortality plus nonfatal stroke – reinfarction Tiefenbrunn AJ, et al. JACC 1998 Volume of Primary Angioplasty Procedures and Survival after AMI Background • There is an inverse relation between mortality from cardiovascular causes and the number of elective cardiac procedures performed by individual practitioners or hospitals • It is not known whether patients with AMI fare better at higher volume centers versus lower volume centers Objective • Analyze data from the NRMI to determine the relation between the number of patients receiving reperfusion therapy and subsequent in-hospital mortality Canto JG,et al. N Engl J Med 2000 NRMI Hospitals Ranked by Thrombolytic Therapy Volume Quartile Number of Hospitals Patients Thrombolytic with MI (n) Therapy (n) Volume (#/yr) 1 129 38,964 3,929 5-15 2 129 48,003 8,385 16-28 3 129 74,380 14,694 29-45 4 129 115,809 55,666 >45 Canto JG, et al. N Engl J Med 2000 Hospital and Patient Characteristics and Outcomes: Conclusions • In-hospital mortality was 28% lower for patients receiving primary angioplasty at high-volume centers • There was no association between volume and mortality among patients treated with thrombolytic therapy • Better outcomes were not associated with referral/transfer patterns or greater total volume of patients • The time to treatment interval was significantly shorter at high volume centers Canto JG, et al. N Engl J Med 2000 Lessons in Patient Outcomes From the NRMI • ED personnel can employ immediate reperfusion strategies for patients with AMI to save lives and improve outcomes • Hospitals should be aware of the possible influence of payor status on how patients are treated • Patient characteristics and hospital capabilities are factors to consider when choosing a reperfusion strategy • Practices at hospitals with the best outcomes can be examined for ideas of where to begin process improvements Complications of MI/Safety • Risk of intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) • CABG Risk for Intracranial Hemorrhage after rt-PA Treatment for AMI Background The efficacy of thrombolytic therapy in reducing mortality from AMI has been unequivocally shown. However, thrombolysis is related to bleeding complications, including intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) Objective To determine the frequency of and risk factors for intracranial hemorrhage after rt-PA given for AMI in patients receiving usual care Gurwitz JH, et al. Ann Intern Med 1998 Risk Factors for Intracranial Hemorrhage • A small number of patients (< 1%) had an ICH during hospitalization for AMI; of the patients with confirmed ICH, 53% died during hospitalization and an additional 25.3% had residual neurologic deficit • There was a substantial increase in the incidence of ICH in older patients • An increased dose of rt-PA was a risk factor for ICH • Other risk factors are elevated systolic blood pressure, female sex and black ethnicity Gurwitz JH, et al. Ann Intern Med 1998 Risk for Intracranial Hemorrhage: Conclusions • ICH is a rare but serious complication of rt-PA in patients with AMI Appropriate drug dosing may reduce the risk for this complication • Other therapies, such as primary coronary angioplasty, may be preferable in patients with AMI who have a history of stroke Gurwitz JH, et al. Ann Intern Med 1998 Reperfusion Therapy in Patients with AMI and Prior CABG Surgery Background • The number of patients presenting with AMI who have had previous CABG has been increasing Objectives • To review data from NRMI 2 to determine the differences in characteristics and outcomes – in patients with AMI who have undergone CABG and those who have not – in post-CABG patients who were treated with rt-PA and those who were treated with PTCA Peterson LR, et al. Am J Cardiol 1999 Outcomes for Patients With or Without Prior CABG Patients treated with rt-PA With Without prior prior CABG CABG Mortality (all) 7.7% 5.3%* 8.0% 15.9% For patients <75 years 5.9% 3.3%* 6.6% 3.1% * 8.6% 6.1%* 8.5% 4.9% † 17.5% 6.7% 18.2% 4.0%* 15.5% 6.9% 12.4% 3.5% † For patients >75 years For patients <75 years *P <0.002; †P <0.005 14.0% 4.4% * For patients >75 years Mortality plus nonfatal stroke (all) 16.8% Patients treated with angioplasty With Without prior prior CABG CABG 11.5% Peterson LR, et al. Am J Cardiol 1999 Patients With Prior CABG Treated with rt-PA or Angioplasty: Differing Baseline Characteristics rt-PA PTCA n=2,544 n=735 24.4% 19.5%* 3.8% 6.1%* >4 hours to treatment 21.0% 44.0%† Treatment with aspirin 91.2% 83.7%† Treatment with intravenous beta blocker 23.5% 11.5%† Smoker LBBB *P <0.04; †P <0.0001 Peterson LR, et al. Am J Cardiol 1999 AMI and Prior CABG Surgery: Conclusions • Prior CABG is an independent predictor of mortality • The post-CABG patients who were treated with either rtPA or PTCA had similar baseline characteristics • There was no significant difference in in-hospital mortality rate or the combined end point of mortality and nonfatal stroke in the post-CABG patients who received rt-PA or underwent PTCA Peterson LR, et al. Am J Cardiol 1999 AMI Subgroups • • • • Patient eligibility Chest pain Patient populations Bundle branch block Untreated Reperfusioneligible Patients Background • There is an under-utilization of reperfusion therapy in the United States Objectives • Determine what proportion of patients with MI who are eligible for reperfusion therapy do not receive it • Identify demographic, clinical and electrocardiographic factors that are associated with the decision to not use this therapy Barron HV, et al. Circulation 1998 Use of Thrombolytic Therapies in Eligible Patients No RT (n=20,319) RT (n=64,344) Eligible patients, 31% (n=84,663) 24% RT=reperfusion therapy 76% Barron HV, et al. Circulation 1998 Use of Reperfusion Therapy RT less likely LBBB No chest pain Age >75 Prior CHF Prior MI Killip III Women Caucasian Smoker Pre-hospital ECG Sx <3 hrs 0.2 RT more likely RT=reperfusion therapy 0.4 0.6 0.8 Adapted from Barron HV, et al. Circulation 1998 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 In-hospital Mortality Patients, % 20 14.8 15 10 18.9 17.9 9.3 7.9 10.5 5.7 5 0 All eligible RT=reperfusion therapy RT No RT Women Women >65 yrs >65 yrs RT no RT RT no RT Adapted from Barron HV, et al. Circulation 1998 Untreated Reperfusion-eligible Patients: Conclusions • Women, the elderly, patients from ethnic minorities, and patients presenting without chest pain were less likely to undergo reperfusion therapy • Patients at highest risk for dying in the hospital were less likely to receive therapy than their lower-risk counterparts • There is a need for additional education for physicians regarding the potential of reperfusion therapy to improve survival Barron HV, et al. Circulation 1998 Chest Pain at Presentation Background • Although chest pain is widely considered a key symptom in the diagnosis of MI, not all patients with MI present with chest pain. The extent to which this phenomenon occurs is largely unknown Objective • To determine the frequency with which patients with MI present without chest pain and to examine their subsequent management and outcome Canto JG, et al. JAMA 2000 Major Risk Factors for Atypical Presentation in MI With chest pain 49.0% Without chest pain 51.0% Prior stroke 53.0% 47.0% Age >75 years 55.1% 44.9% Diabetes mellitus 61.5% 38.5% Nonwhite 66.3 % 33.7% Women 61.4 % 38.6% Prior heart failure Canto JG, et al. JAMA 2000 Outcomes of MI for Patients Presenting With and Without Chest Pain Heart failure requiring intervention, % Hypotension, % Stroke, % Time in ICU, mean days Length of stay, mean days Hospital arrival to time to death, mean days In-hospital death, % P <.001 With chest pain Without chest pain 15.0 29.3 14.0 1.2 3.0 7.0 5.1 18.7 2.0 3.1 8.8 6.0 9.3 23.3 Canto JG, et al. JAMA 2000 Process of Care for AMI Patients With and Without Chest Pain With chest pain Reperfusion therapy, % Without chest pain 74.0 25.3 15.6 65.4 171.6 84.5 31.8 139.8 282.0 60.4 28.8 9.4 Time interval from hospital arrival, min First ECG Thrombolysis PTCA Aspirin within 24 hours, % Any catheter-based revascularization, % P <.001 Canto JG, et al. JAMA 2000 AMI Patients With and Without Chest Pain: Conclusions • Patients without chest pain on presentation represent 33% of the AMI population – They are more likely to delay seeking medical attention – They often receive less aggressive treatments – They are at greater risk of in-hospital mortality Canto JG, et al. JAMA 2000 Patient Populations Background • A number of studies have explored differences between black and white Americans with AMI, little data exist on treatment patterns in the current thrombolytic era • There is even less data for non-black minorities experiencing AMI Objectives • To examine demographics, clinical characteristics, treatment patterns, and clinical outcomes among Hispanics, Asian-Pacific Islanders, and Native Americans with AMI • To compare characteristics, acute reperfusion strategies, treatment patterns, and clinical outcomes among black and white patients Canto JG, et al. Am J Cardiol 1998; Taylor HA Jr, et al. Am J Cardiol 1998 Patient Populations: Non-black Minorities Compared to Whites • Non-black populations (Hispanics, Asian-Pacific Islanders, and Native Americans) – Presented later to the hospital after the onset of symptoms (135 vs 122 minutes, p <0.001) – Were as likely to have IV thrombolytic therapy,* coronary arteriography, and revascularization – Were less likely to receive beta blocker therapy at discharge • There were no significant differences in hospital mortality for non-black minorities compared with whites *For all groups except Asian-Pacific Islanders Canto JG, et al. Am J Cardiol 1998 Patient Populations: Blacks Compared to Whites • Blacks presented much later after the onset of symptoms (median 145 vs 122 minutes, p <0.001) • Blacks were significantly more likely to have atypical cardiac symptoms and nondiagnostic ECGs during the initial evaluation period • Blacks were less likely to receive IV thrombolytic therapy, coronary arteriography, other elective catheter-based procedures, and coronary artery bypass surgery • Despite differences in treatment, there were no significant differences in hospital mortality between blacks and whites Taylor HA Jr, et al. Am J Cardiol 1998 Use of Reperfusion in Nonwhite Ethnic Groups Use by race compared to Caucasians Less likely More likely Black 0.76 (0.70-0.82) Hispanic 0.97 (0.86-1.09) Asian-PI 0.84 (0.72-0.99) Native Am 1.18 (0.90-1.54) 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Canto JG, et al. Am J Cardiol 1998; Taylor HA Jr, et al. Am J Cardiol 1998 Patient Populations: Conclusions • Nonwhite patients enrolled in the NRMI 2 presented significantly longer after symptom onset than white patients • Blacks and Asian Pacific Islanders were less likely than whites to receive IV thrombolytic therapy than whites; Hispanics and Native Americans were equally likely to receive this therapy as whites • There were no differences in adjusted in-hospital mortality rates between white and non-white patients Canto JG, et al. Am J Cardiol 1998; Taylor HA Jr, et al. Am J Cardiol 1998 Bundle Branch Block in AMI Background • LBBB is an important predictor of poor outcome in patients with AMI, but the consequences of RBBB are not well understood Objectives • To estimate the prevalence of left and right BBB in patients with MI • To compare the clinical characteristics of and treatments received by patients with left, right, or no BBB • To determine the independent association of LBBB and RBBB with in-hospital mortality Go AS, et al. Ann Intern Med 1998 Treatments by Presence and Type of Bundle Branch Block No BBB (%) RBBB (%) LBBB (%) Any reperfusion 84.8 44.6 23.6 Thrombolytic therapy 22.0 13.0 5.3 8.9 5.8 2.6 Primary PTCA P <0.001 Go AS, et al. Ann Intern Med 1998 Association of Bundle Branch Block and In-hospital Mortality Odds ratio (95% CI) Baseline characteristics* Baseline characteristics* plus treatment† RBBB 1.64 (1.57–1.71) 1.64 (1.57–1.71) LBBB 1.33 (1.28–1.38) 1.34 (1.28–1.39) ST segment elevation with no BBB 1.35 (1.31–1.39) 1.53(1.49–1.58) * Controlled for differences in demographics and clinical characteristics † Further controlled for differences in treatment Go AS, et al. Ann Intern Med 1998 Bundle Branch Block in AMI: Conclusions • Prevalence of RBBB and LBBB are similar in patients with AMI • Patients with BBB – have more comorbid conditions – are less likely to receive therapy – have an increased risk for in-hospital mortality • Compared with LBBB, RBBB seems to be a stronger independent predictor of in-hospital mortality Go AS, et al. Ann Intern Med 1998 Use of Angiotensin-converting Enzyme (ACE) Inhibitors at Discharge Background • There is a significant mortality benefit in patients treated with ACE inhibitors after AMI • Beneficial treatments for patients with AMI are often underused Objectives • To examine recent trends in the use of ACE inhibitor therapy in patients discharged after AMI • To identify clinical factors associated with ACE inhibitor prescribing patterns Barron HV, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 1998 Treated with ACE inhibitors, % Discharge ACE Inhibitor Use by Clinical Indication Group 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 "Definite" "Probable" "Possible" Clinical indication Barron HV, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 1998 Discharge ACE Inhibitor and Calcium Channel Blocker Use by Time Period ACE inhibitors Calicium blockers 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 6/94-12/94 1/95-6/95 7/95-12/95 1/96-6/96 Barron HV, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 1998 Discharge ACE Inhibitor Use: Conclusions • Physicians are prescribing ACE inhibitors in patients with MI with increasing frequency • Those patients with the greatest expected benefit receive ACE inhibitor treatment most often • However, the majority of even these high risk patients were not discharged with this life-saving therapy Barron HV, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 1998 Intracranial Hemorrhage Rates and Immediate Beta-Blocker Use Background • Immediate beta blocker therapy reduces the incidence of reinfarction and recurrent chest pain in patients receiving rt-PA • Data from the TIMI-2 trial raises the possibility that such therapy may reduce the rate of ICH Objective • Analyze data from NRMI 2 to reexamine whether immediate beta blocker therapy in AMI patients treated with rt-PA is associated with a lower rate of ICH Barron HV, et al. Am J Cardiol 2000 ICH Rates and Immediate Beta-Blocker Use by Age Immediate beta blocker No immediate beta blocker 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 <65 yr 65-74 yr 75 yr and older Barron HV, et al. Am J Cardiol 2000 ICH Rates and Immediate Beta-Blocker Use by Gender Immediate beta blocker No immediate beta blocker 1.8 1.6 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 Men Women Barron HV, et al. Am J Cardiol 2000 ICH and Beta Blocker Therapy: Conclusion • Immediate beta blocker therapy is associated with lower ICH rates in patients treated with rt-PA • The ACC/AHA guidelines recommend immediate beta blocker therapy for patients with suspected AMI • This study should serve to strengthen this recommendation Barron HV, et al. Am J Cardiol 2000 NRMI, JCAHO, ORYX, and Core Measures • JCAHO’s ORYX requires hospitals to participate in one or more measurement systems on its approved list • NRMI accepted measures include: – Early aspirin usage – Door to drug time for thrombolysis – No initial reperfusion strategy in eligible patients • Hospitals currently required to select 6 measures • In 2002, data collection for the JCAHO core measures will begin NRMI: 10 years of CV Healthcare Solutions NRMI 4 Enhancements • Updated to reflect revised 1999 ACC/AHA Guidelines for management of patients with AMI • Developing process improvement reports • Continued submission of ORYX data for HCOs • Validated data with extensive edits • Enhanced use of technology in study management NRMI Advisors John G. Canto, MD, MSPH, FACC William J. French, MD Costas T. Lambrew, MD Joseph P. Ornato, MD, FACC, FACEP Janice B. Penney, RN, CCRN, MSN William J. Rogers, MD Alan J. Tiefenbrunn, MD, FACC Robert J. Zalenski, MD Summary • With NRMI and other databases, we can access and analyze almost every aspect of patient care to examine how we can improve our practices and provide better information for our patients • During the last 10 years, we have seen measurable improvements in the care of patients with AMI • Our challenge is to further improve AMI care in the 21st century Congratulations • Thanks to the over 5000 investigators and coordinators who have made these accomplishments possible • Remember, Together, Everyone Achieves More!