Early Hospital Discharge (Within Six Hours) for Patients Undergoing Coronary Angioplasty

pp. 206-209

Authors

  • Gabriel F. Dionisio Hospital General de Agudos Francisco Santojanni-MTSAC
  • Sergio A. Centeno Hospital General de Agudos Francisco Santojanni
  • Alicia L. Terragno Hospital General de Agudos Francisco Santojanni
  • Leandro Puerta Hospital General de Agudos Francisco Santojanni
  • Pablo Olmedo Hospital General de Agudos Francisco Santojanni
  • María C. Etcheverry Hospital General de Agudos Francisco Santojanni
  • Sergio D. Brandeburgo Hospital General de Agudos Francisco Santojanni
  • Natacha Ruiz Hospital General de Agudos Francisco Santojanni
  • Ignacio Garrido Hospital General de Agudos Francisco Santojanni
  • Tomás Valverde Hospital General de Agudos Francisco Santojanni

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7775/rac.v90i3.111

Keywords:

Angioplastia - Length of Stay - Time Factors - Patient Discharge

Abstract

Background: 24-hour hospitalization is common practice in patients (P) who underwent scheduled coronary angioplasty (PCI).
Previous experiences propose same-day discharge in selected P.
Methods: Prospective, comparative, randomized, single-blind study. P aged 18 to 75 years were included as candidates for a
scheduled radial-access PCI with the possibility of accessing the emergency system in less than 40 minutes. P with left ventricular
ejection fraction <30%, creatinine >1.5 mg/dL, heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, decompensated diabetes or very complex coronary anatomy were excluded. The population was divided in two groups (G). G 1: same-day discharge in 6 hours. G2: discharge the next day. Primary endpoint: death or need for rehospitalization within 24 hours of the procedure. Follow-up was carried out by phone the night of the procedure and the next morning, in person at 48 hours, and by telephone after a month, six months and a year. Continuous variables were expressed as median and their respective interquartile range, and qualitative variables as percentages.
Results: 80 P were randomized. Six P (7.5%) presented exclusion criteria during the procedure. There were no deaths or major cardiovascular events in either groups. At one year of follow-up, 3.75% of in-stent restenosis was detected. Troponin elevation was detected in 20 P (25%); 4 were P excluded due to complications during PCI, in the remaining 16 it had no clinical repercussion.
Conclusion: In a population of patients between 55 and 75 years old, mostly male, with a high prevalence of previous myocardial infarction, and ventricular function depression, a scheduled radial-access PCI could be performed with same day discharge in 6 hours, with an adequate safety margin.

How to cite this article:

Dionisio GF, Centeno SA, Terragno AL, Puerta LG, Olmedo P, Etcheverry MC, et al. Early Hospital Discharge (Within Six Hours) for Patients Undergoing Coronary Angioplasty. Rev Argent Cardiol 2022;90:206-9. http://dx.doi.org/10.7775/rac.v90.i3.20520

Published

2023-06-08

Issue

Section

BRIEF ARTICLES

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