PMID: 15229756Jul 2, 2004Paper

Impact of different patterns of invasive care on quality of life outcomes in patients with non-ST elevation acute coronary syndrome: results from the GUSTO-IIb Canada-United States substudy

The Canadian Journal of Cardiology
Padma KaulGUSTO-IIb investigators

Abstract

Comparing American and Canadian practice patterns and outcomes offers a natural experiment to examine the relative benefits of aggressive versus conservative management of coronary artery disease. In a prospective substudy of the Global Use of Strategies to Open Occluded Coronary Arteries IIb (GUSTO-IIb) trial, differences in the management of non-ST elevation acute coronary syndrome, and the associated impact on quality of life (QOL) outcomes, were examined in the two countries. The patient population, selected randomly from the parent trial population, comprised 390 Canadian and 1122 American patients for whom both baseline and one-year data were available. Validated instruments were used to assess QOL, including the Duke Activity Status Index (DASI) and scales from the SF-36 questionnaire. At baseline, American patients had significantly higher cardiac catheterization rates (83% versus 45%), percutaneous coronary intervention rates (39% versus 24%) and coronary bypass surgery rates (19% versus 12%) than did Canadian patients, respectively. However, at one year, Canadian coronary bypass surgery rates were at par with those in the United States (24% versus 26%, respectively). At baseline, the mean DASI score was 24.6 among Can...Continue Reading

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