Shawn X Li, Hannah I Chaudry, Jiyong Lee, Theodore B Curran, Vishesh Kumar, Kendrew K Wong, Bruce W Andrus, James T DeVries. Patterns of in-hospital mortality and bleeding complications following PCI for very elderly patients: insights from the Dartmouth Dynamic Registry[J]. Journal of Geriatric Cardiology, 2018, 15(2): 131-136. DOI: 10.11909/j.issn.1671-5411.2018.02.006
Citation: Shawn X Li, Hannah I Chaudry, Jiyong Lee, Theodore B Curran, Vishesh Kumar, Kendrew K Wong, Bruce W Andrus, James T DeVries. Patterns of in-hospital mortality and bleeding complications following PCI for very elderly patients: insights from the Dartmouth Dynamic Registry[J]. Journal of Geriatric Cardiology, 2018, 15(2): 131-136. DOI: 10.11909/j.issn.1671-5411.2018.02.006

Patterns of in-hospital mortality and bleeding complications following PCI for very elderly patients: insights from the Dartmouth Dynamic Registry

  • Background Very elderly patients (age ≥ 85 years) are a rapidly increasing segment of the population. As a group, they experience high rates of in-hospital mortality and bleeding complications following percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). However, the relationship between bleeding and mortality in the very elderly is unknown. Methods Retrospective review was performed on 17,378 consecutive PCI procedures from 2000 to 2015 at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. Incidence of bleeding during the index PCI admission (bleeding requiring transfusion, access site hematoma > 5 cm, pseudoaneurysm, and retroperitoneal bleed) and in-hospital mortality were reported for four age groups (Results Of 17,378 patients studied, 1019 (5.9%) experienced bleeding and 369 (2.1%) died in-hospital following PCI. Incidence of bleeding and in-hospital mortality increased monotonically with increasing age (mortality: 0.94%, 2.27%, 4.24% and 4.58%; bleeding: 3.96%, 6.62%, 10.68% and 13.99% for ages Conclusions Bleeding and mortality following PCI increase with increasing age. For the very elderly, despite high rates of bleeding, bleeding is no longer predictive of in-hospital mortality following PCI.
  • loading

Catalog

    /

    DownLoad:  Full-Size Img  PowerPoint
    Return
    Return