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Published Online
on August 6, 2007

Circulation. 2007
Published online before print August 6, 2007, doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.107.703959
A more recent version of this article appeared on August 28, 2007
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Submitted on March 19, 2007
Accepted on June 25, 2007

Beneficial Effect of Recruitable Collaterals. A 10-Year Follow-Up Study in Patients With Stable Coronary Artery Disease Undergoing Quantitative Collateral Measurements

Pascal Meier MD, Steffen Gloekler MD, Rainer Zbinden MD, Sarah Beckh BS, Stefano F. de Marchi MD, Stephan Zbinden MD, Kerstin Wustmann MD, Michael Billinger MD, Rolf Vogel MD, PhD, Stéphane Cook MD, Peter Wenaweser MD, Mario Togni MD, Stephan Windecker MD, Bernhard Meier MD, and Christian Seiler MD*

From the Department of Cardiology, University Hospital, Bern, Switzerland.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: christian.seiler{at}insel.ch.

Background—The prognostic relevance of the collateral circulation is still controversial. The goal of this study was to assess the impact on survival of quantitatively obtained, recruitable coronary collateral flow in patients with stable coronary artery disease during 10 years of follow-up.

Methods and Results—Eight-hundred forty-five individuals (age, 62±11 years), 106 patients without coronary artery disease and 739 patients with chronic stable coronary artery disease, underwent a total of 1053 quantitative, coronary pressure–derived collateral measurements between March 1996 and April 2006. All patients were prospectively included in a collateral flow index (CFI) database containing information on recruitable collateral flow parameters obtained during a 1-minute coronary balloon occlusion. CFI was calculated as follows: CFI=((Pocc1-CVP)/(Pao-CVP)) where Poccl is mean coronary occlusive pressure, Pao is mean aortic pressure, and CVP is central venous pressure. Patients were divided into groups with poorly developed (CFI < 0.25) or well-grown collateral vessels (CFI ≥ 0.25). Follow-up information on the occurrence of all-cause mortality and major adverse cardiac events after study inclusion was collected. Cumulative 10-year survival rates in relation to all-cause deaths and cardiac deaths were 71% and 88%, respectively, in patients with low CFI and 89% and 97% in the group with high CFI (P0.0395, P0.0109). Through the use of Cox proportional hazards analysis, the following variables independently predicted elevated cardiac mortality: age, low CFI (as a continuous variable), and current smoking.

Conclusions—A well-functioning coronary collateral circulation saves lives in patients with chronic stable coronary artery disease. Depending on the exact amount of collateral flow recruitable during a brief coronary occlusion, long-term cardiac mortality is reduced to one fourth compared with the situation without collateral supply.


Key words: angiogenesis • collateral circulation • coronary circulation • prognosis • survival


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Circulation 2007 116: 969. [Full Text]



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