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J Am Coll Cardiol, 2007; 49:2145-2150, doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2007.02.046
(Published online 16 May 2007). © 2007 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation |
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,1
* Division of Cardiovascular Diseases, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, and Dallas VA Medical Center, Dallas, Texas
Geisinger Clinic, Danville, Pennsylvania.
Manuscript received December 12, 2006; revised manuscript received February 21, 2007, accepted February 27, 2007.
* Reprint requests and correspondence: Dr. Emmanouil S. Brilakis, Dallas VA Medical Center (111A), 4500 South Lancaster Road, Dallas, Texas 75216. (Email: emmanouil.brilakis{at}utsouthwestern.edu).
| Abstract |
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Noncardiac surgery and most invasive procedures increase the risk of stent thrombosis, especially when the procedure is performed early after stent implantation, likely because stents are not yet endothelialized early after placement, because antiplatelet therapy is often discontinued in the periprocedural period, and because surgery creates a prothrombotic state (12); this may be particularly true when done under general anesthesia compared with regional anesthesia (13). Perioperative stent thrombosis has been studied primarily in patients who received bare-metal stents (BMS). There are limited data about the risk of perioperative thrombosis of drug-eluting stents (DES), even though DES currently are used in 70% to 80% of PCI procedures in the U.S. Clinicians caring for patients with coronary stents who need surgery often have difficulty choosing a treatment strategy that allows the surgery to be as safe as possible while minimizing the risk of perioperative stent thrombosis. The goal of this review is to offer guidance to clinicians by summarizing the available data on the incidence, risk factors, prevention, and treatment of perioperative coronary stent thrombosis.
| Risk of Surgery After Stent Implantation |
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In a much larger population of patients undergoing surgery within 2 months after receiving a BMS at the Mayo Clinic, only 8 of the 207 patients (3.9%, 95% CI 1.7 to 7.5) died or suffered an AMI or stent thrombosis (15). In contrast to the study by Kaluza et al. (14), the risk of death, MI, or stent thrombosis was elevated for 6 weeks, not for just 2 weeks, and to a much lesser degree, with the risk during each of the first 6 weeks ranging from 3.8% to 7.1%; no events occurred among the 39 patients who underwent surgery in the 6th through 8th weeks after stent placement.
Another study analyzed the outcome of 27 patients who underwent noncardiac surgery within 3 weeks after BMS implantation (16). Six of 7 patients (86%), in whom the thienopyridine was stopped for >5 days died (only 1 patient had angiographically documented stent thrombosis) compared with only 1 of the 20 patients (5%) who underwent noncardiac surgery within 3 weeks from stent implantation and continued to take a thienopyridine (p < 0.001). Among 20 patients undergoing surgery 3 weeks to 3 months after stenting (70% of whom continued taking a thienopyridine), only 1 patient died (5%), and 2 suffered a nonST-segment elevation AMI.
In another series, thrombotic events or major bleeding occurred in 8 of 16 patients (50%) undergoing noncardiac surgery within 42 days after receiving a BMS, and in none of 40 patients who underwent surgery >42 days after receiving a BMS (17). Vicenzi et al. (18) reported a 43% frequency of adverse cardiac events in 103 patients undergoing surgery after stent deployment, but those events were poorly characterized.
These studies have appropriately increased attention to the potential risks of surgery early after stent implantation, and highlighted the importance of delaying surgery when possible and continuing dual antiplatelet therapy in the perioperative period when surgery is not delayed.
DES. There are limited data about the risk of noncardiac surgery after DES placement. McFadden et al. (19) reported DES thrombosis in 3 patients undergoing surgery (bladder polyp resection, colon cancer resection, and colonoscopy with polypectomy) late (343 to 442 days) after implantation. Nasser et al. (20) reported sirolimus-eluting stent (SES) thrombosis in 2 patients after surgery performed 4 and 21 months after SES implantation.
Compton et al. (21) reported a single-center series of 38 patients who underwent 41 major and 18 minor noncardiac surgeries a median of 9 months from successful DES implantation: no major adverse cardiac events or deaths occurred during or after the 41 major (0%, 95% CI 0 to 9%), and 18 minor noncardiac surgical procedures (0%, 95% CI 0 to 19%). Schouten et al. (22) reported that stent thrombosis occurred in 3 of 99 (3%) patients undergoing surgery within 2 years after DES implantation. Bakhru et al. (23) reported no stent thrombosis among 114 patients undergoing noncardiac surgery after a median of 236 days from stent placement.
Although stent thrombosis can occur before surgery (caused by cessation of antiplatelet therapy), most (24) stent thromboses occur during or after the surgical procedure.
| Prevention of Perioperative Stent Thrombosis |
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Therefore, if a patient with coronary disease is known to require surgery, the first question to ask is whether the patient really needs revascularization. The CARP study results suggest that revascularization may not be necessary for a large number of patients without an unstable coronary syndrome or other very high-risk features. This is further supported by the findings of a recent pilot study of 103 patients with extensive ischemia undergoing vascular surgery, in whom preoperative revascularization did not improve postoperative outcomes (26).
Revascularization without stents (balloon only). Despite the CARP study, many patients are believed to require revascularization before noncardiac surgery, such as patients with acute coronary syndromes or with profound ischemia on noninvasive testing at a heart rate and blood pressure likely to be exceeded in the perioperative period. Although stents are currently used in the vast majority of PCIs, coronary revascularization may be more safely performed in such patients without stents, either with coronary artery bypass grafting or percutaneously with balloon angioplasty.
In an early study of 50 patients undergoing noncardiac surgery after a median of 9 days from balloon angioplasty, the postoperative mortality and MI rates were 1.9% and 5.6%, respectively (27). In a study of 194 patients undergoing aortic abdominal surgery, carotid endarterectomy or peripheral vascular surgery after a median time of 11 days from balloon angioplasty, only 1 patient died (0.5%) and 1 patient suffered an AMI (0.5%) (28). In the largest study, in which 350 patients underwent noncardiac surgery in the 2 months after a successful balloon angioplasty procedure, only 3 of the 350 patients (0.9%, 95% CI 0.2% to 2.5%) died in the perioperative period (n = 1) or suffered a myocardial infarction (n = 2) (29).
Therefore, revascularization with balloon angioplasty may be safer than stent placement before planned noncardiac surgery, especially if a good angiographic result can be achieved, and particularly if the noncardiac surgery is planned early (within 4 to 6 weeks) after revascularization.
According to the 2002 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines on perioperative cardiovascular care, "there is uncertainty regarding how much time should pass before noncardiac surgery is performed" for patients undergoing preoperative balloon angioplasty (1). Delaying noncardiac surgery for >6 to 8 weeks was discouraged because restenosis could have occurred, leading to perioperative ischemia or MI. However, performing noncardiac surgery too early after the PCI also may be risky because acute or subacute closure after balloon angioplasty usually occurs within hours to days after the procedure. Accordingly, the guidelines emphasize that delaying surgery "for at least a week after balloon angioplasty to allow for healing of the vessel injury at the balloon treatment site has theoretical benefits."
Stent selection before surgery. Sometimes stenting cannot be avoided during PCI, either because of the complexity of the lesion or because of the inability to achieve an optimal result with balloon angioplasty. The type of stent selected should be heavily influenced by the timing of surgery.
If surgery needs to be performed within 12 months from revascularization, then BMS implantation is likely preferable to DES, because BMS endothelialize more rapidly and may therefore carry a lower risk of stent thrombosis. This is particularly likely if dual antiplatelet therapy cannot be continued through the perioperative period. If restenosis, which is more likely to occur after BMS than DES, does develop, it almost always does so more than 2 to 3 months after stent placement, at which point the patient already will have undergone the surgical procedure. At that time, a DES could be used to treat the in-stent restenosis.
If surgery can be delayed for more than 12 months, then placement of a DES may not be inappropriate, although there are data suggesting that DES may have a greater risk of late stent thrombosis than BMS beyond 12 months after implantation, particularly in the perioperative period (19). If placement of a DES is planned, it may be preferable to use a sirolimus-eluting stent, which requires a minimum of 3 months of clopidogrel after placement (30), than a paclitaxel-eluting stent (PES), which requires at least 6 months of clopidogrel (31). However, little is known about the safety of surgery performed 6 to 12 months from DES implantation. An alternative approach would be placement of a heparin-coated stent (which is not considered a DES because the heparin does not elute off of the stent); such an approach is logical but unproven, because heparin-coated stents have not been shown to reduce the frequency of stent thrombosis in any situation with any medical regimen, let alone in the perioperative period. In the future, new stent types, such as bioresorbable stents or antibody-coated stents that can attract endothelial progenitor cells and re-endothelialize more rapidly, may minimize the risk of stent thrombosis.
Regardless of the type of stent used, every effort should be made to optimally deploy the stent, which reduces the risk of stent thrombosis (4,6). Overlap of DES should be avoided because overlapping may delay their endothelialization significantly (32,33).
Delay of surgery. The earlier the surgery is performed after stenting, the higher the risk for stent thrombosis (1417). According to the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines, noncardiac surgery should be "delayed for at least 2 and ideally 4 weeks after BMS implantation to allow for at least partial endothelialization of the stent" (1). The best data suggest that delaying surgery for 6 weeks may be even better than 4 weeks (15). The optimal delay after implantation of a DES before surgery remains unknown but is likely to be more than 12 months (Fig. 1), particularly if antiplatelet therapy must be discontinued for the surgical procedure.
Antiplatelet therapy in the perioperative period. Dual antiplatelet therapy is the cornerstone of stent thrombosis prevention (11). The current recommendations that clopidogrel be administered for 3 months after placement of an SES and 6 months after placement of a PES are based on the duration of time that a thienopyridine was required in the pivotal trials of these stents that led to their approval; those durations were largely chosen empirically. Although an observational study showed reduced risk of death or MI when clopidogrel was continued up to 2 years after DES implantation (34), the optimal duration of clopidogrel required to prevent late DES thrombosis is unknown.
Antiplatelet treatment strategies to minimize perioperative stent thrombosis include:
Continue Dual Antiplatelet Therapy During Surgery
This option would likely be associated with the lowest frequency of stent thrombosis, especially in patients undergoing surgery early after stent implantation. Surgeons who are concerned about the risk of perioperative bleeding may need help weighing the risk of bleeding with the particular operation planned against the benefits of continuing dual antiplatelet therapy throughout the perioperative period. In some procedures, such as dental extractions (35), cataract surgery (36), or routine dermatologic surgery (37), bleeding almost always can be controlled with local measures, and discontinuation of antiplatelet therapy is not necessary (38). Even in procedures with higher bleeding risk, when surgeons are informed that stent thrombosis leads to death or a large MI in the majority of patients (39), and that the best available data suggest a greatly increased risk of stent thrombosis in patients undergoing surgery shortly after stent placement when dual antiplatelet therapy is discontinued, they often can be persuaded that the risk of thrombosis outweighs the risk of bleeding. This strategy would not be appropriate for patients in whom any excess bleeding could have catastrophic consequences, such as neurosurgery patients.
Stop Clopidogrel and "bridge" the Patient with a Short-Acting Antiplatelet or Antithrombotic Agent
Thienopyridines cause irreversible platelet inhibition, and need to be discontinued for 5 to 10 days to allow the production and release into the circulation of new platelets to replace the inhibited platelets and restore normal hemostasis. If surgery is needed early after stent placement and clopidogrel needs to be stopped, some clinicians "bridge" the patient to surgery using a short-acting antiplatelet agent or an anticoagulant. Because stent thrombosis is primarily a platelet-mediated phenomenon, platelet inhibitors might be a more logical choice if such a strategy is pursued. Furthermore, the cessation of heparin in a patient not on aspirin or other antiplatelet agents has been shown to cause platelet activation and a rebound phenomenon which may actually increase the likelihood of perioperative stent thrombosis compared to if no heparin bridging had been performed. However, it must be emphasized that admitting a patient to a hospital before surgery to bridge them to surgery does not offer complete protection because the greatest risk of stent thrombosis is actually during or after surgery. More data are needed that indicate that such a strategy improves outcome because this strategy is expensive, is logistically difficult, and exposes the patient to the risks associated with a prolonged hospitalization.
Stop Clopidogrel and Restart it After Surgery
This strategy may be sufficient when the stent is believed to be fully endothelialized and the risk of stent thrombosis is very low. It also should be used whenever clopidogrel cannot be continued throughout the perioperative period, such as in patients undergoing neurosurgery, in whom bleeding would likely be catastrophic. There is variability in the rate at which DES are re-endothelialized, and the risk of stent thrombosis may persist in some patients for many months or longer, especially in the prothrombotic state induced by surgery (19). Once the surgeon permits the re-initiation of clopidogrel, it might be wisest to administer a 600-mg loading, which not only reduces the time required to achieve maximal inhibition of platelet aggregation to 2 to 4 h, but also reduces the frequency of hyporesponsiveness to clopidogrel, particularly among patients with activated platelets as is uniformly the case among patients who have just undergone surgery.
The aforementioned recommendations are largely empiric and are based on indirect data, but they are mechanistically sound and logical, and the consequences of perioperative stent thrombosis are severe.
Education and a team approach. Given the morbidity and mortality associated with stent thrombosis, there is a need for continuing education of physicians, particularly noncardiologists, about the perioperative risks of patients with coronary stents. The need to delay elective surgery whenever possible after stent implantation cannot be overemphasized. In a survey of anesthesiologists, 63% were not aware of recommendations about the appropriate length of time between stent placement and a subsequent surgical procedure, and one-third recommended no delay or a delay of only 1 to 2 weeks, which is insufficient for BMS, and even more so for DES (40).
Anesthesiologists and surgeons should be alerted to the high risk of stent thrombosis in patients who have received coronary stents (41). They should:
| Treatment of Perioperative Stent Thrombosis |
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| Conclusions |
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If major noncardiac surgery is planned within 1 month and certainly within 2 weeks, stent implantation generally should be avoided. If revascularization is required, then balloon angioplasty or coronary bypass surgery might well be preferred options. If surgery is planned between 1 and 12 months, particularly if complex anatomy is present, then BMS implantation may be preferable. If surgery is planned after 12 months, DES implantation may be an acceptable option. Awareness, prevention, and early treatment of perioperative stent thrombosis are best achieved by collaboration between surgeons, anesthesiologists, and cardiologists.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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1 Dr. Berger has received research support from Conor Medsystems; honoraria for speaking at continuing medical education-approved scientific symposia supported by Bristol-Myers Squibb, Sanofi-Aventis, and Lilly/Daiichi-Sankyo; honoraria from Biogen and Schering-Plough; and has served as a consultant to Cordis/Johnson & Johnson and Boston Scientific. ![]()
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