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Stents don’t work? A look back at the research

Stents don’t work? A look back at the research

Authors note: This post was updated 10/11/23 to include a summary of the newer REVIVE trial.

In 2020, hospitals placed more than 45,000 coronary stents in Medicare patients that met criteria for overuse, a recent report from the Lown Institute Hospitals Index finds. Coronary stents were the most overused service by volume of the eight measured, and were provided unnecessarily even at some of the most prestigious hospitals in the country.

Coronary stenting or balloon angoplasty (known as percutaneous coronary intervention or “PCI”) for stable heart disease has long been considered an indicator of overuse, because many years of evidence shows that PCI doesn’t provide benefits to patients beyond medication therapy. However, some hospitals disagree, saying their stents are appropriate.

What’s the evidence behind PCI, and why do hospitals keep doing these procedures? We revisit this issue with a look back at research and interviews over last few years to give you the answers.

Dr. Lown’s example

The practice of placing a stent or balloon into patients’ arteries to open up blockages started in Switzerland in 1977 when Dr. Andreas Grüntzig first performed this intervention. This procedure quickly became the standard of care for treating heart attack patients and saved countless lives.

Soon, PCI became more popular for treating patients not having heart attacks, but for patients with stable heart disease as well. The assumption was that unblocking arteries would prevent a future heart attack or stroke, just as unblocking a clogged pipe prevents it from bursting. However, there was little evidence to support this theory.

As PCI became widespread, cardiologists like Dr. Bernard Lown recognized that they were widely overused and put patients at unnecessary risk of harm. As Dr. Lown wrote, his team took a conservative approach, avoiding PCI and the coronary artery imaging that typically leads to these interventions. Instead they treated risk factors, prescribed medications when necessary, recommended lifestyle changes, and discussed stress. Over 35 years, their clinic saw about a thousand patients scheduled for surgeries looking for a second opinion; fewer than 30% of patients were referred for PCI. Their published work showed a low rate of cardiac events and mortality for patients managed conservatively.

Do stents for stable heart disease work?

Dr. Lown’s experiment showed that many patients with stable heart disease could be managed without surgery and avoid poor outcomes. This finding would later be validated in multiple randomized trials. See the following timeline of trials of PCI compared to medical therapy:

1983

CASS Trial

As early as 1983, the Coronary Artery Surgery Study (CASS) showed no mortality benefit of coronary artery bypass surgery (a precursor to PCI) compared to medical treatment, putting in question the “clogged pipe” theory of heart disease.

Early trials show no mortality benefit for PCI

Eleven randomized trials including 2,950 patients are done between 1987 and 2001, evaluating PCI compared to medical therapy. A 2005 meta-analysis of these trials showed no mortality benefit or difference in cardiac events for PCI, except for patients who recently had a heart attack. At this time, PCI was still seen to be effective for reducing angina (chest pain).

1987-2001
2007

COURAGE study puts PCI to the test

This large trial of 2287 patients found that PCI in addition to medical therapy did not reduce all-cause mortality, heart attack, or hospitalization for heart disease compared to medical therapy alone.

Prior to COURAGE, PCI trials had not incorporated modern stents and medication management standards.

Dueling meta-analyses

The benefits of PCI over medical therapy remain controversial, with competing studies finding different results. While one meta-analysis found a long-term mortality benefit to PCI and another study found a benefit for patients with reduced blood flow to the heart, other trials once again found no benefit to PCI particularly when compared to modern medical therapies.

2008-2016
2017

ORBITA Trial breaks new ground

The ORBITA trial tested PCI for the first time against medical therapy plus a “sham” procedure, in which patients believed they were getting a stent but nothing was inserted. The results showed not only that PCI did not have a mortality benefit but also that it did not improve chest pain. The authors experienced backlash from cardiologists contesting their findings.

ISCHEMIA trial validates conservative approach

ISCHEMIA is the largest study to date (n=5179) measuring the effect of stents and bypass surgery on patients with stable coronary artery disease. Given that previous studies showed a potential PCI benefit for a subgroup of people with reduced blood flow, this trial looked at the impact of PCI for people with severely reduced blood flow. The results showed no difference in risk of heart attack or death compared to drug therapy, even for patients in this higher-risk subgroup. This study was hailed as “extraordinarily important” by doctors and the results also made waves on social media

2019
2022

REVIVE gives stents “best chance to win” but still fails

The REVIVE trial enrolled 700 patients with conditions thought to be most helped by stents: those with a severe coronary disease and left ventricle dysfunction, but also viable heart muscle. They randomized patients to optimal medical therapy or medical therapy plus PCI.

The results showed no difference in the rates of the primary outcome (death or heart failure hospitalization) between the two groups after 3.5 years. There was also no difference in heart function or patient-reported quality of life. No subgroups saw an additional benefit from PCI.

The REVIVE results were shocking to many cardiologists. Dr. Sanjay Kaul said, “This was the best chance for PCI to win (they really cued it up for PCI), and it still came up short.”

Why do we still put in stents?

Despite trial after trial showing a lack of benefit, why are these invasive cardiac procedures still common for patients with stable heart disease? These trial findings go against the intuitive idea that arteries with plaque are like a “clogged pipe” and that opening blocked arteries prevents heart attacks and death. In fact, it’s not a single blocked artery, but the presence of plaque throughout the coronary system (known as atherosclerotic plaque burden) that is most dangerous. Opening up an artery only treats the symptom of the disease; plaque buildup in the arteries is best ameliorated with lifestyle changes and medical therapy.

As Louisville cardiologist Dr. John Mandrola wrote about the ISCHEMIA trial in Medscape, it is hard to disabuse the clogged pipe analogy because it fits so well with how we believe our bodies should work. “While part of our brains can understand the data, another part of our brain cannot unsee the gnarliness of a severely stenosed coronary artery,” he wrote.

It’s also difficult for cardiologists to change their practices when they want to do something to improve their patients’ condition. “It’s hard to think that the procedure we were trained to do for so many years doesn’t actually help patients,” said Dr. David L. Brown, professor of medicine at Washington University of St. Louis, in response to the ORBITA trial. “But if cardiologists look at the evidence objectively and with an open mind, that should be all it takes for them to make changes in how they talk to patients about the issue,” he said.

We also can’t ignore the financial incentives behind cardiac interventions. Clinicians are paid much more for doing surgical interventions than they are for consulting patients on lifestyle changes. When you add the financial reward on top of the belief that they are helping patients “that’s the methamphetamine of being a physician, it’s very mentally addictive,” said Dr. Vinay Prasad, Associate Professor in the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics at the University of California San Francisco. Even when faced with new evidence about an intervention, it’s difficult to sway doctors’ views. “Smart people are very good at coming up with reasons why the new study doesn’t apply to them,” said Prasad.

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