Routine Early Angioplasty after Fibrinolysis

Research output: Contribution to journalComment/debateResearchpeer-review

Standard

Routine Early Angioplasty after Fibrinolysis. / Wang, Zhipeng; Liang, Bo; Mei, Qibing.

In: New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 361, No. 15, 2009, p. 1509.

Research output: Contribution to journalComment/debateResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Wang, Z, Liang, B & Mei, Q 2009, 'Routine Early Angioplasty after Fibrinolysis', New England Journal of Medicine, vol. 361, no. 15, pp. 1509. <http://10.1056/NEJMc091498>

APA

Wang, Z., Liang, B., & Mei, Q. (2009). Routine Early Angioplasty after Fibrinolysis. New England Journal of Medicine, 361(15), 1509. http://10.1056/NEJMc091498

Vancouver

Wang Z, Liang B, Mei Q. Routine Early Angioplasty after Fibrinolysis. New England Journal of Medicine. 2009;361(15):1509.

Author

Wang, Zhipeng ; Liang, Bo ; Mei, Qibing. / Routine Early Angioplasty after Fibrinolysis. In: New England Journal of Medicine. 2009 ; Vol. 361, No. 15. pp. 1509.

Bibtex

@article{e5c893ee35b44257b50c8e56db0630bb,
title = "Routine Early Angioplasty after Fibrinolysis",
abstract = "To the Editor:Cantor et al. report that there is a significantly reduced rate of ischemic complications among patients with myocardial infarction with ST-segment elevation who are transferred for PCI within 6 hours after fibrinolysis. However, Table 2 of the article shows that significantly more patients in the group that underwent routine early PCI than in the group that received standard treatment received clopidogrel (P<0.001) or a beta-blocker (P=0.02).The role of clopidogrel in reducing adverse cardiac events in patients who undergo PCI, as well as in those who do not, is well established,1,2 and clopidogrel has become part of the standard management of ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction. The benefit of beta-blockade — a reduction in ischemic complications — is also significant among patients with myocardial infarction, even when the possibility of an excess rate of cardiogenic shock with early beta-blocker therapy is taken into consideration.3 The overall benefit of clopidogrel and beta-blocker therapy could have influenced the outcome in patients who underwent early PCI. These facts leave the conclusion of the TRANSFER-AMI trial still highly uncertain.",
keywords = "Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences",
author = "Zhipeng Wang and Bo Liang and Qibing Mei",
year = "2009",
language = "English",
volume = "361",
pages = "1509",
journal = "New England Journal of Medicine",
issn = "0028-4793",
publisher = "Massachusetts Medical Society",
number = "15",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Routine Early Angioplasty after Fibrinolysis

AU - Wang, Zhipeng

AU - Liang, Bo

AU - Mei, Qibing

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - To the Editor:Cantor et al. report that there is a significantly reduced rate of ischemic complications among patients with myocardial infarction with ST-segment elevation who are transferred for PCI within 6 hours after fibrinolysis. However, Table 2 of the article shows that significantly more patients in the group that underwent routine early PCI than in the group that received standard treatment received clopidogrel (P<0.001) or a beta-blocker (P=0.02).The role of clopidogrel in reducing adverse cardiac events in patients who undergo PCI, as well as in those who do not, is well established,1,2 and clopidogrel has become part of the standard management of ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction. The benefit of beta-blockade — a reduction in ischemic complications — is also significant among patients with myocardial infarction, even when the possibility of an excess rate of cardiogenic shock with early beta-blocker therapy is taken into consideration.3 The overall benefit of clopidogrel and beta-blocker therapy could have influenced the outcome in patients who underwent early PCI. These facts leave the conclusion of the TRANSFER-AMI trial still highly uncertain.

AB - To the Editor:Cantor et al. report that there is a significantly reduced rate of ischemic complications among patients with myocardial infarction with ST-segment elevation who are transferred for PCI within 6 hours after fibrinolysis. However, Table 2 of the article shows that significantly more patients in the group that underwent routine early PCI than in the group that received standard treatment received clopidogrel (P<0.001) or a beta-blocker (P=0.02).The role of clopidogrel in reducing adverse cardiac events in patients who undergo PCI, as well as in those who do not, is well established,1,2 and clopidogrel has become part of the standard management of ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction. The benefit of beta-blockade — a reduction in ischemic complications — is also significant among patients with myocardial infarction, even when the possibility of an excess rate of cardiogenic shock with early beta-blocker therapy is taken into consideration.3 The overall benefit of clopidogrel and beta-blocker therapy could have influenced the outcome in patients who underwent early PCI. These facts leave the conclusion of the TRANSFER-AMI trial still highly uncertain.

KW - Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences

M3 - Comment/debate

VL - 361

SP - 1509

JO - New England Journal of Medicine

JF - New England Journal of Medicine

SN - 0028-4793

IS - 15

ER -

ID: 33849104