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  • Title: Sequential radial artery grafts for multivessel coronary artery bypass graft surgery: 10-year survival and angiography results.
    Author: Schwann TA, Zacharias A, Riordan CJ, Durham SJ, Shah AS, Habib RH.
    Journal: Ann Thorac Surg; 2009 Jul; 88(1):31-9. PubMed ID: 19559184.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: Increasing the number of arterial grafts for coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) has been linked to improved late survival. Currently, it is not known if these long-term benefits are also true when sequential radial artery (RA) grafts are the primary means to maximizing arterial revascularization. METHODS: We compared late survival of 532 consecutive patients receiving sequential RA grafts (sequential RA group: 438 men; 462 with three-vessel disease) with that of a 4,131 contemporaneous internal thoracic artery (ITA) with saphenous vein (SV) multivessel CABG cohort (conventional group). Graft failure rates were determined from symptom-driven repeat angiography films in 122 sequential RA patients performed 2 to 4,317 days after surgery. Median survival sequential RA follow-up was 5.3 years (range, 0.5 to 12.3). RESULTS: The sequential RA patients received a total of 1,181 RA grafts (538 sequential [30 triple] and 75 single) along with 636 SV and 533 ITA. Overall RA graft failure (80 of 272; 29%) was intermediate to that for ITA (7 of 121; 5.8%; p < 0.001) and vein (54 of 133, 41.6%; p = 0.032) grafts. Sequential versus nonsequential RA failure did not differ (77 of 252 [31%] versus 3 of 20 [15%]; p = 0.202), while failure of the proximal (36 of 123; 29%) and distal (40 of 129; 31%) components of sequential RA grafts were essentially identical. A total of 69 deaths (6 operative; 1.1%) have occurred in the sequential RA cohort. Unadjusted 10-year sequential RA cohort survival was 76.2% overall, and 79.0% for the 454 primary isolated CABG subgroup. The risk-adjusted 10-year survival using a logit propensity score was substantially better for the sequential RA cohort versus the conventional CABG cohort (risk ratio [95% confidence interval] 0.61 [0.44 to 0.85]; p = 0.003). CONCLUSIONS: Sequential RA grafting is a safe method for maximizing arterial revascularization and is associated with excellent 10-year survival that seems to be superior to conventional or ITA/SV CABG results. Also, the similar proximal and distal sequential RA patency mitigates concerns of a clinically significant effect of increased vasoreactivity of distal segments of RA conduits.
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