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Dive into the research topics where Deepakraj Gajanana is active.

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Featured researches published by Deepakraj Gajanana.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2018

TCT-797 Sex and Racial Disparities in Outcomes for patients Undergoing Percutaneous Intervention: Data from a Large Tertiary Center

Micaela Iantorno; Rebecca Torguson; Deepakraj Gajanana; Kyle Buchanan; Toby Rogers; Itsik Ben-Dor; Lowell F. Satler; Hector M. Garcia-Garcia; William S. Weintraub

Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in men and women, blacks and whites. However, there exist limited outcomes data for women and blacks after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). The aim of this retrospective analysis was to evaluate the 1 year major cardiovascular events (


International Journal of Cardiology | 2018

Antiplatelet and anticoagulation regimen in patients with mechanical valve undergoing PCI – State-of-the-art review

Deepakraj Gajanana; Toby Rogers; Micaela Iantorno; Kyle Buchanan; Itsik Ben-Dor; Augusto D. Pichard; Lowell F. Satler; Rebecca Torguson; Petros Okubagzi; Ron Waksman

A common clinical dilemma regarding treatment of patients with a mechanical valve is the need for concomitant antiplatelet therapy for a variety of reasons, referred to as triple therapy. Triple therapy is when a patient is prescribed aspirin, a P2Y12 antagonist, and an oral anticoagulant. Based on the totality of the available evidence, best practice in 2017 for patients with mechanical valves undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is unclear. Furthermore, the optimal duration of dual antiplatelet therapy after PCI is evolving. With better valve designs that are less thrombogenic, the thromboembolic risks can be reduced at a lower international normalized ratio target, thus decreasing the bleeding risk. This review will offer an in-depth survey of current guidelines, current evidence, suggested approach for PCI in this cohort, and future studies regarding mechanical valve patients undergoing PCI.


Cardiovascular Revascularization Medicine | 2018

The impact of in-hospital P2Y12 inhibitor switch in patients with acute coronary syndrome

Deepakraj Gajanana; William S. Weintraub; Paul Kolm; Toby Rogers; Micaela Iantorno; Kyle Buchanan; Itsik Ben-Dor; Augusto D. Pichard; Lowell F. Satler; Vinod H. Thourani; Rebecca Torguson; Petros Okubagzi; Ron Waksman

BACKGROUND/PURPOSEnDual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) varies after placement of drug-eluting stents (DES) in patients presenting with acute coronary syndromes (ACS). Our aim was to study patient characteristics and predictors of switching, in-hospital or at discharge, from clopidogrel (CLO) to ticagrelor (TIC) or vice versa.nnnMETHODS/MATERIALSnThe study population included patients with ACS who had DES and initially received either CLO or TIC between January 2011 and December 2017. Patients were divided into 4 groups based on initial DAPT choice and whether DAPT was switched in-hospital or during discharge. Clinical outcomes of interest were bleeding events, need for anticoagulation, and need for in-hospital coronary artery bypass graft (CABG).nnnRESULTSnWe identified 2837 patients who received DES and started on DAPT. DAPT switch from 1 P2Y12 inhibitor to another occurred in 9%, either in-hospital or at discharge. Of 1834 patients started on CLO, 112 were switched to TIC. Of 1003 patients started on TIC, 142 were switched to CLO. The need for in-hospital CABG was 7.8% in the TIC-CLO group compared to none in the CLO-TIC group (pu202f=u202f0.002). Adjusted for covariates, the TIC-CLO group was 3 times more likely to need anticoagulation with warfarin than the CLO-CLO group (pu202f<u202f0.001) and over 5 times more likely than the CLO-TIC group and the TIC-TIC group (pu202f<u202f0.005 for both).nnnCONCLUSIONSnSwitching from 1 generation P2Y12 inhibitor to another does occur in ACS patients. Clinical needs such as in-hospital CABG or oral anticoagulation upon discharge are real and dictate the switch from TIC to CLO.nnnSUMMARYnA single-center observational study of 2837 patients with acute coronary syndromes treated with drug-eluting stents found that some do get switched from one generation P2Y12 inhibitor to another. The switch from clopidogrel to ticagrelor is driven by clinical needs such as in-hospital coronary artery bypass grafting or the need for oral anticoagulation upon discharge.


Cardiovascular Revascularization Medicine | 2018

Coronary perfusion pressure and left ventricular hemodynamics as predictors of cardiovascular collapse following percutaneous coronary intervention

Kyle Buchanan; Paul Kolm; Micaela Iantorno; Deepakraj Gajanana; Toby Rogers; Jiaxiang Gai; Rebecca Torguson; Itsik Ben-Dor; William O. Suddath; Lowell F. Satler; Ron Waksman

BACKGROUND/PURPOSEnAppropriate patient selection for mechanical circulatory support following percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) remains a challenge. This study aims to evaluate the role of coronary perfusion pressure and other left ventricular hemodynamics to predict cardiovascular collapse following PCI.nnnMETHODS/MATERIALSnWe retrospectively analyzed all patients who underwent PCI for acute coronary syndrome (ACS) from 2003 to 2016. Coronary perfusion pressure was calculated for each patient and defined as the difference in mean arterial pressure and left ventricular end diastolic pressure (LVEDP). Logistic regression analysis was performed to determine predictor of composite outcome of in-hospital mortality, myocardial infarction (MI), congestive heart failure (CHF), and cardiogenic shock.nnnRESULTSnNine hundred twenty-two patients were analyzed. Two-hundred twenty-eight (25%) presented with ST-elevation MI (STEMI) while 694 (75%) underwent PCI for unstable angina or non-Q-wave MI. The mean LVEDP was significantly higher in the STEMI patients (24u202f±u202f9 vs. 19u202f±u202f8u202fmmu202fHg, pu202f<u202f0.05) and perfusion pressure significantly lower (68u202f±u202f24 vs. 74u202f±u202f18u202fmmu202fHg, pu202f<u202f0.05). Eighty-seven (9.4%) reached the composite endpoint, and there was no difference between the STEMI and Not-STEMI groups. Neither LVEDP nor coronary perfusion pressure was a predictor of the composite outcome following multivariable logistic regression analysis for either STEMI or Not-STEMI patients. Increasing age, chronic renal insufficiency (CRI), CHF, and low left ventricular ejection fraction were predictors of the composite outcome for Not-STEMI patients, whereas only history of cerebrovascular accident and CRI were predictors for STEMI patients.nnnCONCLUSIONSnIn hemodynamically stable patients presenting with ACS, LVEDP and coronary perfusion pressure are not predictive of in-hospital cardiovascular collapse.nnnSUMMARYnThe authors retrospectively analyzed 922 patients from a single center who underwent percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for acute coronary syndromes to evaluate the role of coronary perfusion pressure and other left ventricular hemodynamics to predict cardiovascular collapse following PCI. They found that neither coronary perfusion pressure nor left ventricular end diastolic pressure was predictive of in-hospital cardiovascular collapse.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2018

Clinical Characteristics, Procedural Factors, and Outcomes of Percutaneous Coronary Intervention in Patients With Mechanical and Bioprosthetic Heart Valves

Deepakraj Gajanana; Toby Rogers; William S. Weintraub; Micaela Iantorno; Kyle Buchanan; Itsik Ben-Dor; Augusto D. Pichard; Lowell F. Satler; Vinod H. Thourani; Rebecca Torguson; Petros Okubagzi; Ron Waksman

There is scarcity of evidence regarding antiplatelet and anticoagulant therapy in patients with prosthetic valves undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Our goal was to compare clinical outcomes between patients with mechanical or bioprosthetic valves undergoing PCI. The study population comprised patients with either a bioprosthetic or mechanical heart valve in the aortic and/or mitral position undergoing PCI between January 2003 and July 2017. Demographics, admission, and discharge medications as well as procedural details were documented. Outcomes were postprocedural bleeding, length of stay, and in-hospital deaths. Of 211 patients, we identified 119 and 92 patients with a bioprosthetic or mechanical valve, respectively. Mean age was 75 ± 9 years and 66 ± 12 years in bioprosthetic and mechanical valve patients, respectively. Bare-metal stents were used in 18.2% and 30.1% of bioprosthetic and mechanical valve patients, respectively. Major bleeding was documented in 0.8% and 6.5% of bioprosthetic and mechanical valve patients, respectively (pu202f=u202f0.04). Use of triple therapy (aspirin AND clopidogrel AND oral vitamin K antagonist) was significantly lower in bioprosthetic valve patients compared with mechanical valve patients (12% vs 68%, p <0.001). Our study shows variation in periprocedural anticoagulation and/or antiplatelet choice exists in this population. Patients with mechanical valves experienced higher rates of major bleeding compared with patients with bioprosthetic valves, which could be due to concomitant anticoagulation and dual antiplatelet therapy.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2018

Meta-Analysis of the Impact of Strut Thickness on Outcomes in Patients With Drug-Eluting Stents in a Coronary Artery

Micaela Iantorno; Michael J. Lipinski; Hector M. Garcia-Garcia; Brian J. Forrestal; Toby Rogers; Deepakraj Gajanana; Kyle Buchanan; Rebecca Torguson; William S. Weintraub; Ron Waksman

The aim of this network meta-analysis is to assess the impact of strut thickness on clinical outcomes in patients who underwent percutaneous coronary intervention. We searched Medline/PubMed and performed a Bayesian network meta-analysis to compare outcomes of patients who underwent percutaneous coronary intervention with drug-eluting stents (DES) of different strut thicknesses (ultrathin 60 to 80 μm; thin 81 to 100 μm; intermediate 101 to 120 μm; thick ≥120 μm). Studies comparing DES with similar strut thickness, bare metal stents, and fully bioresorbable scaffolds were excluded. Odds ratios with credible intervals (OR [CrIs]) were generated with random-effects models to compare outcomes. Our primary end point was stent thrombosis (ST). We identified 69 RCTs including 80,885 patients (ultrathin groupu202f=u202f10,219; thin groupu202f=u202f36,575; intermediate groupu202f=u202f11,399; thick groupu202f=u202f22,692). Mean age was 64 ± 11 years and 75% were male gender. When compared with thick-strut DES, ultrathin struts had significant less ST and myocardial infarction (OR 0.43 [CrI 0.27 to 0.68]; and OR 0.73 [CrI 0.62 to 0.92], respectively). Sensitivity analysis including only studies with permanent polymer DES gave similar results. Improvement in DES technology with thinner struts is associated with significant reduction in ST and myocardial infarction compared with thicker struts.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2018

IN-STENT RESTENOSIS OF DRUG-ELUTING STENTS COMPARED TO A MATCHED GROUP OF PATIENTS WITH DE NOVO CORONARY ARTERY STENOSIS

Ron Waksman; Kyle Buchanan; M. Chadi Alraies; Micaela Iantorno; Deepakraj Gajanana; Toby Rogers; Linzhi Xu; Jiaxiang Gai; Rebecca Torguson; William O. Suddath; Itsik Ben-Dor; Lowell F. Satler


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2018

MYNXGRIP VASCULAR CLOSURE DEVICE IS SAFE AND EFFECTIVE FOR HEMOSTASIS OF PERCUTANEOUS TRANSFEMORAL VENOUS ACCESS CLOSURE

Ron Waksman; Itsik Ben-Dor; Toby Rogers; Rebecca Torguson; Kyle Buchanan; M. Chadi Alraies; Micaela Iantorno; Deepakraj Gajanana; Mun K. Hong; Lowell F. Satler; Petros Okubagzi; William O. Suddath


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2018

UTILITY OF AN ADDITIVE FRAILTY TESTS SCORE FOR MORTALITY RISK ASSESSMENT FOLLOWING TRANSCATHETER AORTIC VALVE REPLACEMENT

Ron Waksman; Kyle Buchanan; Arik Steinvil; Elizabeth Bond; M. Chadi Alraies; Micaela Iantorno; Deepakraj Gajanana; Toby Rogers; Linzhi Xu; Rebecca Torguson; Petros Okubagzi; Itsik Ben-Dor; Lowell F. Satler


Jacc-cardiovascular Interventions | 2018

CRT-700.56 The Clinical Characteristics, Procedural Factors and Outcomes of Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI) in Patients with Mechanical Valves

Deepakraj Gajanana; William S. Weintraub; Toby Rogers; Micaela Iantorno; Kyle Buchanan; Rebecca Torguson; Jiaxiang Gai; Vinod H. Thourani; Lowell F. Satler; Itsik Ben-Dor; Ron Waksman

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Kyle Buchanan

MedStar Washington Hospital Center

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Rebecca Torguson

MedStar Washington Hospital Center

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Toby Rogers

National Institutes of Health

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Lowell F. Satler

MedStar Washington Hospital Center

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Ron Waksman

MedStar Washington Hospital Center

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Micaela Iantorno

MedStar Washington Hospital Center

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William S. Weintraub

MedStar Washington Hospital Center

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Petros Okubagzi

MedStar Washington Hospital Center

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Jiaxiang Gai

MedStar Washington Hospital Center

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