Steg Philippe Gabriel, López-Sendón José, Lopez de Sa Esteban, Goodman Shaun G, Gore Joel M, Anderson Frederick A, Himbert Dominique, Allegrone Jeanna, Van de Werf Frans
Department of Cardiology, Hôpital Bichat, Paris, France.
Arch Intern Med. 2007 Jan 8;167(1):68-73. doi: 10.1001/archinte.167.1.68.
Patients enrolled in randomized clinical trials (RCTs) may not reflect those seen in real-life practice. Our goal was to compare patients eligible for enrollment but not enrolled in contemporary RCTs of reperfusion therapy with patients who would have been ineligible and also with patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) participating in RCTs.
Consecutive patients with AMI (n = 8469) enrolled in the GRACE registry (Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events) were divided into 3 groups: RCT participants (11%; n = 953), eligible nonenrolled patients (55%; n = 4669), and ineligible patients (34%; n = 2847). Our main outcome measures were hospital mortality rates.
Based on baseline characteristics or GRACE risk-score distribution, RCT participants had the lowest a priori risk of death; eligible patients had a higher risk; and ineligible patients had the highest risk. Actual hospital mortality showed a similar gradient (3.6%, 7.1%, and 11.4%, respectively) (P<.001). Multivariable analysis adjusting for baseline risk, use and type of reperfusion therapy, and delay from symptom onset to admission consistently showed a higher mortality rate for eligible nonenrolled patients than for RCT participants (odds ratio, 1.61; 95% confidence interval, 1.06-2.43; and odds ratio, 1.97; 95% confidence interval, 1.24-3.13, respectively).
Patients with AMI participating in RCTs have a lower baseline risk and experience lower mortality than nonenrolled patients, even when they are trial eligible. This difference is not entirely explained by differences in baseline risk, use and type of reperfusion therapy, and/or delays in presentation. Caution is necessary when extending the findings obtained in RCTs to the general population with AMI.
纳入随机临床试验(RCT)的患者可能无法反映现实临床实践中所见到的患者情况。我们的目标是比较符合入选标准但未纳入当代再灌注治疗RCT的患者、不符合入选标准的患者以及参与RCT的急性心肌梗死(AMI)患者。
连续纳入全球急性冠状动脉事件注册研究(GRACE注册研究)的AMI患者(n = 8469)被分为3组:RCT参与者(11%;n = 953)、符合入选标准但未入选的患者(55%;n = 4669)和不符合入选标准的患者(34%;n = 2847)。我们的主要结局指标是住院死亡率。
根据基线特征或GRACE风险评分分布,RCT参与者的先验死亡风险最低;符合入选标准的患者风险较高;不符合入选标准的患者风险最高。实际住院死亡率呈现出类似的梯度(分别为3.6%、7.1%和11.4%)(P<0.001)。在对基线风险、再灌注治疗的使用和类型以及症状发作至入院的延迟进行调整的多变量分析中,始终显示符合入选标准但未入选的患者死亡率高于RCT参与者(比值比分别为1.61;95%置信区间为1.06 - 2.43;以及比值比为1.97;95%置信区间为1.24 - 3.13)。
参与RCT的AMI患者基线风险较低,死亡率也低于未入选的患者,即使他们符合试验入选标准。这种差异不能完全由基线风险、再灌注治疗的使用和类型以及/或就诊延迟的差异来解释。将RCT中获得的结果推广到一般AMI人群时需谨慎。