Publication:
Same versus next day discharge after elective transradial PCI: the radial same day discharge after PCI trial. (The RASADDA-PCI trial)

Placeholder

Organizational Units

Program

KU Authors

Co-Authors

Rodriguez-Araujo, Gerardo
Mego, David
Hakeem, Abdul
Lendel, Vasili
Cawich, Ian
Paixao, Andre
Marmagkiolis, Konstantinos
Flaherty, Patrick
Rollefson, William

Advisor

Publication Date

Language

English

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Abstract

Background and purpose: Transradial percutaneous coronary intervention (TR-PCI) has been increasingly popular over the last decade in the US. Previous studies have shown that same-day (SD) discharge after elective PCI is as safe as overnight (ON) observation. Our study was performed to assess the clinical and financial impact of early discharge in patients undergoing TR-PCI. Methods: This is a single center registry of patients undergoing elective TR-PCI. Timing of discharge was determined by the treating physician. (Groups: Same Day Discharge -SD-: Overnight Stay -ON-). Demographic data, procedural characteristics and adverse outcomes were recorded. Outcomes included 30 day-MACE and procedure- related complications, as well as total operative costs in patients from both groups. Propensity score matching for patient demographics, coronary symptoms and procedure indicators was used to compare both groups. Results: The entire cohort included 852 patients (429 in SD group and 423 in ON group) and the propensity score matched groups of 245 patients in the SD group and 245 patients in the ON group. The two groups had no significant baseline clinical differences, and had similar clinical outcomes. Specifically, no significant difference was noted in procedural complications (3.7% vs 2.5%, p = 0.43), re-hospitalization (4.1% vs 4.1%, p = 0.92), re-intervention (2.5% vs 2.1%, p = 0.77), myocardial infarction (0% vs 0.08%, p = 0.15), stroke (0% vs 0%, p = 1.0) and all-cause mortality (0% vs 0%, p = 1.0). SD Group patients had a significant lower procedure-related cost compared to overnight stay patients ($3,346.45 vs $4,681.99, p < 0.0001) and lower 30-clay post procedure-associated cumulative costs/ total operating costs ($4,493.22 vs $7,112.21, p < 0.0001). Conclusion: In elective patients undergoing low risk TR-PCI, same-clay discharge seems to be a safe and feasible clinical practice, with significant potential savings to the US healthcare system.

Source:

Cardiovascular revascularization medicine

Publisher:

Elsevier

Keywords:

Subject

Cardiac, Cardiovascular systems

Citation

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Copyrights Note

0

Views

0

Downloads

View PlumX Details