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Title: Vein graft disease: the clinical impact of stenoses in saphenous vein bypass grafts to coronary arteries. Author: Lytle BW, Loop FD, Taylor PC, Simpfendorfer C, Kramer JR, Ratliff NB, Goormastic M, Cosgrove DM. Journal: J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg; 1992 May; 103(5):831-40. PubMed ID: 1569763. Abstract: The influence of coronary artery stenoses on patient survival and event-free survival is known, but no studies have reported the long-term outcome of patients with stenoses in saphenous vein bypass grafts. We retrospectively studied 723 patients who underwent a postoperative angiographic study that documented a stenosis of 20% to 99% in at least one saphenous vein graft and who did not undergo reoperation or percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty within 1 year after that catheterization. The mean follow-up interval was 83 months (range 1 to 237 months). For comparison, a group of 573 patients who underwent a postoperative catheterization that did not show any vein graft stenosis were also followed up. Cox regression analyses were used to identify predictors of late survival, reoperation-free survival, and event-free survival. For the entire group of patients with stenotic vein grafts, moderate or severe impairment of left ventricular function (p less than 0.001), interval between operation and catheterization (p less than 0.001), older age (p = 0.001), triple-vessel or left main coronary artery disease (p = 0.004), and stenosis of the vein graft to the left anterior descending coronary artery (p = 0.09) were associated with decreased late survival. Patients with an operation-to-catheterization interval greater than or equal to 5 years were at particularly high risk, and multivariate analyses of that subgroup confirmed that a stenotic graft to the left anterior descending artery was a strong predictor of decreased survival (p less than 0.001), decreased reoperation-free survival (p less than 0.001), and decreased event-free survival (p less than 0.001). Patients greater than or equal to 5 years postoperatively with greater than or equal to 50% stenosis of vein grafts to the left anterior descending artery had survival of 70% and 50% at 2 and 5 years after catheterization, compared with 97% and 80% for those with greater than or equal to 50% stenosis of the native left anterior descending artery (p = 0.002). Late vein graft stenoses are more dangerous than native coronary stenoses. Late stenoses in saphenous vein grafts to the left anterior descending coronary artery predict a high rate of death and cardiac events and are an indication for reoperation.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]