Title: COURAGE TRIAL
1COURAGE TRIAL Clinical Outcomes Utilizing
Revascularization and Aggressive Drug
Evaluation (Veterans Affairs Cooperative Studies
Program no. 424)
Presented by Dr. Shrinivasan R.
Iyenger Dietitian Nandini Panchamiya
2Global Mortality and Burden of Disease
Attributable to CVD
3CHDThe Response To Injury Hypothesis
4Average values of various measures of obesity in
South Asians/ Asian Indians and other ethnic
groups
Parameters Rural Urban Urban slums Migrant White Caucasians Blacks Mexican Americans
BMI 19.6 20.9 22.4 24.7 26.3 28.5 25.7
body fat 20.4 24.4 28.2 33.1 26.6 29.7 48.8
Waist circumference (cm) 79.4 83.7 85.2 83.7 91.3 83.9 94.5
Waist hip ratio 0.87 0.92 0.87 0.92 0.91 0.86 0.92
5Characteristics of Asian Indian Phenotype
Greater ethnic/ genetic susceptibility to type 2
diabetes
Lower threshold for BMI
? inflammatory markers CRP
? serum insulin levels/insulin resistance
? abdominal obesity and abdominal fat
ASIAN INDIAN PHENOTYPE
Characteristic dyslipidemia ? HDL-C, ? TG ?
small dense LDL
? levels of adiponectin
? prevalence of type 2 diabetes and CAD
6- Introduction
- More than 1 million percutaneous coronary
interventions (PCIs) are performed in the USA
each year, the great majority of which are
performed electively in patients with stable
coronary artery disease(CAD). - PCI in patients with acute coronary syndrome
(ACS) has been shown to reduce the incidence of
death and myocardial infarction (MI). - However, the effects of PCI in patients with
stable CAD have not been well studied, with prior
studies in this patient population suggesting
that PCI only reduces the frequency of angina and
improves short-term exercise performance with no
impact on mortality.
7Background for study Major improvements in
medical therapy and percutaneous coronary
intervention (PCI) for coronary heart disease
have occurred during the past decade, but no
randomized trial has compared these 2 strategies
for the hard clinical end points of death or
myocardial infarction nor have earlier studies
incorporated the use of coronary stents and
aggressive multifaceted medical therapy during
long-term follow-up.
8- Study Design
- Multicenter, randomized, controlled trial of
patients with documented myocardial ischemia and
angiographically confirmed single or multivessel
CAD. - A total of 2287 patients screened at 50 centers
in the USA and Canada were randomized to PCI (n
1149) or to Optimal Medical Therapy (OMT) (n
1138).
9- Study Design continue
- Patients were followed for 2.5-7.0 years (mean,
4.6 years). - Patients with 1-, 2-, or 3-vessel disease (gt 70
visual stenosis of proximal segment), with
anatomy suitable for PCI, and Canadian
Cardiovascular Society (CCS) class I-III angina
were enrolled in the study. - Patients with unstable angina, post-MI,
revascularization within the last 6 months,
cardiogenic shock, or heart failure were
excluded. - Baseline clinical and angiographic
characteristics were well balanced between the 2
groups
10Methods Medical therapy in both groups is
guideline-driven and includes aspirin,
clopidogrel, simvastatin (low-density lipoprotein
cholesterol target 60-85 mg/dL), long-acting
metoprolol and/or amlodipine, lisinopril or
losartan, and long-acting nitrates, as well as
lifestyle interventions. More than half of all
patients in the PCI arm were treated with 1 stent
and 41 received 2 stents.
11Methods continue
- Quality of life was assessed with 3
questionnaires - The Seattle Angina Questionnaire (SAQ)
- RAND 36-Item Health Survey
- Utility by Standards Gamble
- Data were collected at 1, 3, 6, and 12 months,
and then annually. - An incremental cost-efficacy analysis was
calculated as the additional cost of PCI divided
by the gain in life-years and quality-adjusted
life-years (QALYs). QALYs were calculated by
multiplying survival by utility.
12Hypothesis PCI plus aggressive medical therapy
(projected event rate 16.4) will be superior to
aggressive medical therapy alone (projected event
rate 21) during a 2.5- to 7-year (median of 5
years) follow-up. Primary PCI would reduce
all-cause mortality or nonfatal MI relative to
Optimal Medical Therapy (OMT) alone. Secondary
PCI would yield superior outcomes related to
resource utilization and quality-of-life outcomes.
13- End point
- Primary Death or nonfatal MI.
- Secondary
- Death, MI, or stroke
- Hospitalization for biomarkers
- Cost, resource utilization
- Quality of life, including angina and
- Cost-effectiveness.
14- Results of Primary Hypothesis
- After a mean follow-up of 4.6 years, there was
no difference in the rate of freedom from death
of any cause or nonfatal MI between the PCI and
OMT-alone groups (19.0 vs 18.5, respectively P
62). - There were also no differences in the individual
rates of all-cause mortality, MI, stroke, or
hospitalization for ACS
15- Results of Primary Hypothesis continue
- The number of patients in the PCI group who
underwent revascularization was significantly
lower than the number of first procedures
performed in the OMT group, at an average of 10
and 11 months, respectively (21.1 vs 32.6 P
lt001). - In addition, freedom from angina was higher in
the PCI group than OMT alone at 1- and 3-year
follow-up by 5 years, the rates were similar
between the 2 groups.
16Freedom from angina
17- Conclusions Primary Hypothesis
- As an initial management strategy in patients
with stable coronary artery disease, PCI did not
reduce the risk for death, MI, or other major
cardiovascular events when added to OMT. - PCI resulted in better angina relief during most
of the follow-up period, but OMT was also
effective, with no between-group difference in
angina-free status at 5 years.
18- Conclusions Primary Hypothesis continue
- PCI can be safely deferred in patients with
stable CAD, even in those with extensive,
multivessel involvement and inducible ischemia,
provided that intensive, multifaceted OMT is
instituted and maintained. - OMT and aggressive management of multiple
treatment targets without initial PCI can be
implemented safety in the majority of patients
with stable CAD, 2/3rds of whom may not require
even a first revascularization during long-term
follow-up.
19- Results of Secondary Hypothesis Quality of life
(QOL) -
- At baseline, there was no difference between the
2 groups in SAQ scores that measured physical
limitations, angina frequency, and quality of
life. - However, evidenced as early as 3 months and
sustained out to 36 months, patients in the PCI
group had higher SAQ scores, suggesting improved
status in all measures studied. - RAND 36 scores were higher in the PCI group, but
by 24 months, the difference was not significant.
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21- Results of Secondary Hypothesis Resource
utilization - At each follow-up period, cost were
significantly lower with OMT than with PCI (P
lt0001). - There was no difference in utility between the 2
groups at any time during follow-up. - The difference in calculated QALYs was 0.024,
equating to about 8 days. This difference
translated into a cost of 217,000 per QALY
gained. - Given that the cost-effective benchmark for such
therapies is 50,000, the overall cost of QALY
gained suggests that PCI would only be considered
a cost-effective approach in lt 1 of patients.
22- Conclusions Secondary Hypothesis
- Compared with OMT alone, PCI plus OMT is
associated with improved QOL measures over
long-term follow-up. - PCI plus OMT as a first-choice therapy for stable
CAD is not cost-effective compared with OMT alone.
23- Viewpoint
- COURAGE is a landmark trial in stable angina
patients with CAD. - The results reinforce that OMT can be as
effective safe as PCI in the prevention of hard
endpoints, such as death, MI, stroke. - However, PCI provided better anginal relief in
the initial years of follow-up. - Evaluating QOL and cost-effectiveness, provides
important information on how we treat our
patients.
24- Viewpoint
- The study showed that PCI OMT does a better
job in controlling physical limitation, angina,
and improves QOL, but at a significantly higher
cost. - These results have spawned considerable
attention, and at times, controversy, over the
way that we treat patients with stable CAD. - The results are telling, but are they
sufficiently conclusive to deny early PCI in all
stable patients?
25Thank You