James M. Rankin
Royal Perth Hospital
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Featured researches published by James M. Rankin.
Circulation | 2006
Vladimir Dzavik; Christopher E. Buller; Gervasio A. Lamas; James M. Rankin; G.B. John Mancini; Warren J. Cantor; Ronald J. Carere; John Ross; Deborah J. Atchison; Sandra Forman; Boban Thomas; Pawel Buszman; Carlos Vozzi; Anthony Glanz; Eric A. Cohen; Peter Mečiar; Gerald Devlin; Alice M. Mascette; George Sopko; Genell L. Knatterud; Judith S. Hochman
Background— In the present study, we sought to determine whether opening a persistently occluded infarct-related artery (IRA) by percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in patients beyond the acute phase of myocardial infarction (MI) improves patency and indices of left ventricular (LV) size and function. Methods and Results— Between May 2000 and July 2005, 381 patients with an occluded native IRA 3 to 28 days after MI (median 10 days) were randomized to PCI with stenting (PCI) or optimal medical therapy alone. Repeat coronary and LV angiography was performed 1 year after randomization (n=332, 87%). Coprimary end points were IRA patency and change in LV ejection fraction. Secondary end points included change in LV end-systolic and end-diastolic volume indices and wall motion. PCI was successful in 92%. At 1 year, 83% of PCI versus 25% of medical therapy–only patients had a patent IRA (P<0.001). LV ejection fraction increased significantly (P<0.001) in both groups, with no between-group difference: PCI 4.2±8.9 (n=150) versus medical therapy 3.5±8.2 (n=136; P=0.47). Median change (interquartile range) in LV end-systolic volume index was −0.5 (−9.3 to 5.0) versus 1.0 (−5.7 to 7.3) mL/m2 (P=0.10), whereas median change (interquartile range) in LV end-diastolic volume index was 3.2 (−8.2 to 13.3) versus 5.3 (−4.6 to 23.2) mL/m2 (P=0.07) in the PCI (n=86) and medical therapy–only (n=76) groups, respectively. Conclusions— PCI with stenting of a persistently occluded IRA in the subacute phase after MI effectively maintains long-term patency but has no effect on LV ejection fraction. On the basis of these findings and the lack of clinical benefit in the main Occluded Artery Trial, routine PCI is not recommended for stable patients with a persistently occluded IRA after MI.
Circulation | 2011
Judith S. Hochman; Harmony R. Reynolds; Vladimír Džavík; Christopher E. Buller; Witold Rużyłło; Zygmunt Sadowski; Aldo P. Maggioni; Antonio Carlos Campos de Carvalho; James M. Rankin; Harvey D. White; Suzanne Goldberg; Sandra Forman; Daniel B. Mark; Gervasio A. Lamas
Background— Despite observations suggesting a benefit for late opening of totally occluded infarct-related arteries after myocardial infarction, the Occluded Artery Trial (OAT) demonstrated no reduction in the composite of death, reinfarction, and class IV heart failure over a 2.9-year mean follow-up. Follow-up was extended to determine whether late trends would favor either treatment group. Methods and Results— OAT randomized 2201 stable patients with infarct-related artery total occlusion >24 hours (calendar days 3–28) after myocardial infarction. Patients with severe inducible ischemia, rest angina, class III-IV heart failure, and 3-vessel/left main disease were excluded. We conducted extended follow-up of enrolled patients for an additional 3 years for the primary end point and angina (6-year median survivor follow-up; longest, 9 years; 12 234 patient-years). Rates of the primary end point (hazard ratio, 1.06; 95% confidence interval, 0.88–1.28), fatal and nonfatal myocardial infarction (hazard ratio, 1.25; 95% confidence interval, 0.89–1.75), death, and class IV heart failure were similar for the percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and medical therapy alone groups. No interactions between baseline characteristics and treatment group on outcomes were observed. The vast majority of patients at each follow-up visit did not report angina. There was less angina in the PCI group through early in follow-up; by 3 years, the between group difference was consistently <4 patients per 100 treated and not significantly different, although there was a trend toward less angina in the PCI group at 3 and 5 years. The 7-year rate of PCI of the infarct-related artery during follow-up was 11.1% for the PCI group compared with 14.7% for the medical therapy alone group (hazard ratio, 0.79; 95% confidence interval, 0.61–1.01; P=0.06). Conclusions— Extended follow-up of the OAT cohort provides robust evidence for no reduction of long-term rates of clinical events after routine PCI in stable patients with a totally occluded infarct-related artery and without severe inducible ischemia in the subacute phase after myocardial infarction. Clinical Trial Registration— http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00004562.
Heart Lung and Circulation | 2013
Berbadette Aliprandi-Costa; Isuru Ranasinghe; Fiona Turnbull; Alex Brown; Leonard Kritharides; Anushka Patel; Derek P. Chew; D. Walters; James M. Rankin; Marcus Ilton; Ian T. Meredith; Alan Cass; D. Brieger
BACKGROUND Cardiovascular observational registries characterise patients and describe the manner and use of therapeutic strategies. They facilitate analyses on the quality of care among participating institutions and document variations in clinical practice which can be benchmarked against best practice recommendations. The Cooperative National Registry of Acute Coronary care, Guideline Adherence and Clinical Events (CONCORDANCE) is an Australian observational registry that describes management and outcomes in patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACS) and feeds back both performance and outcome measures to participating hospitals. METHODS The CONCORDANCE registry has been designed within a comparative effectiveness research (CER) framework to collect and report data from hospitals located in geographically diverse regions of Australia. Information including patient demographics, presenting characteristics, past medical history, in-hospital management and outcomes at six months and two years are entered into a web-based database using an electronic clinical record form (eCRF). Individual hospital information is returned to the sites in a real time confidential report detailing information on key performance indicator (KPI) process measures and outcomes benchmarked against the aggregated study cohort. Governance rules ensure data security and protect patient and clinician confidentiality. Consistent with a CER framework, additional characteristics of the registry include: (a) the capacity to evaluate associations between the inter and intra hospital systems and the provision of evidence based care and outcomes, (b) ongoing data collection from representative hospitals which allow spatial and temporal analysis of change in practice and the application of treatment modalities in the real world setting and (c) the provision of a data spine for quality improvement strategies and practical clinical trials. CONCLUSION The CONCORDANCE registry is a clinician-driven initiative describing clinical care for ACS patients admitted to Australian hospitals. The registry generates high quality data which is fed back to clinicians, and key stakeholders in ACS care. Using a CER approach, the registry describes the translation of randomised trial evidence into practice, and provides insights into strategies that could improve care and ultimately patient outcomes.
Heart Lung and Circulation | 2014
Uwe Siebert; Marjan Arvandi; Raffaella Matteucci Gothe; Bernhard Bornschein; David Eccleston; D. Walters; James M. Rankin; Bernard De Bruyne; William F. Fearon; Nico H.J. Pijls; Richard W. Harper
PURPOSE The international multicentre FAME Study (n=1,005) demonstrated significant health benefits for patients undergoing multivessel percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) guided by fractional flow reserve (FFR) measurement compared with angiography guidance alone (ANGIO). We determined the cost-effectiveness and the public health/budget impact for Australia. METHODS We performed a prospective economic evaluation comparing FFR vs. ANGIO in patients with multivessel disease based on original patient-level FAME data. We used Australian utilities (EQ-5D) and costs to calculate quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) and incremental cost-effectiveness adopting the societal perspective. The public health and budget impact from the payers perspective was based on Australian PCI registries. Uncertainty was explored using deterministic sensitivity analyses and the bootstrap method (n=5,000 samples). RESULTS The cost-effectiveness analysis showed that FFR was cost-saving and reduces costs by 1,776 AUD per patient during one year. Over a two-year time horizon, the public health impact ranged from 7.8 to 73.9 QALYs gained and the budget impact from 1.8 to 14.5 million AUD total cost savings. Sensitivity analyses demonstrated that FFR was cost-saving over a wide range of assumptions. CONCLUSIONS FFR-guided PCI in patients with multivessel coronary disease substantially reduces cardiac events, improves QALYs and is cost-saving in the Australian health care system.
Catheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions | 2009
Vladimír Dz̆avík; Christopher E. Buller; Gerard Devlin; Ronald G. Carere; G.B. John Mancini; Warren J. Cantor; Pawel Buszman; James M. Rankin; Carlos Vozzi; John R. Ross; Sandra Forman; Bruce A. Barton; A. Gervasio A. Lamas; Judith S. Hochman
The majority of patients randomized to percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in the Occluded Artery Trial (OAT) and its angiographic substudy, the Total Occlusion Study of Canada 2 (TOSCA‐2) were treated with bare metal stents (BMS). We aimed to determine if stenting of the target occlusion in OAT with drug‐eluting stents (DES) was associated with more favorable angiographic results and clinical outcome when compared with treatment with BMS.
Circulation-cardiovascular Interventions | 2010
Terje K. Steigen; Christopher E. Buller; G.B. John Mancini; Vinod Jorapur; Warren J. Cantor; James M. Rankin; Boban Thomas; John G. Webb; Shari S. Kronsberg; Deborah J. Atchison; Gervasio A. Lamas; Judith S. Hochman; Vladimír Džavík
Background—Whether myocardial perfusion grade (MPG) following late recanalization of infarct-related arteries (IRAs) predicts left ventricular (LV) function recovery beyond the acute phase of myocardial infarction (MI) is unknown. Methods and Results—The Total Occlusion Study of Canada-2 enrolled stable patients with a persistently occluded IRA beyond 24 hours and up to 28 days post-MI. We studied the relationship between the initial MPG and changes in LV function and volume as well as the change in MPG from immediate post-percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) to 1 year in 139 PCI patients with thrombolysis in myocardial infarction grade 3 epicardial flow post-PCI and with paired values grouped into impaired or good MPG groups (MPG 0/1 or MPG 2/3). MPG 0/1 patients were more likely to have received thrombolytic therapy and to have a left anterior descending IRA. They had lower blood pressure and LV ejection fraction (LVEF) and a higher heart rate and systolic sphericity index at baseline. Changes in the MPG 0/1 and MPG 2/3 groups from baseline to 1 year were LVEF, 3.3±9.0% and 4.8±8.9% (P=0.42); LV end-systolic volume index (LVESVI), −1.1±9.2 and −4.7±12.3 mL/m2 (P=0.25); LV end-diastolic volume index (LVEDVI), 0.08±19.1 and −2.4±22.2 mL/m2 (P=0.67); and SDs/chord for infarct zone wall motion index (WMI), 0.38±0.70 and 0.84±1.11 (P=0.01). By covariate-adjusted analysis, post-PCI MPG 0/1 predicted lower WMI (P<0.001), lower LVEF (P<0.001), and higher LVESVI (P<0.01) but not LVEDVI at 1 year. Of the MPG 0/1 patients, 60% were MPG 2 or 3 at 1 year. Conclusions—Preserved MPG is present in a high proportion of patients following late PCI of occluded IRAs post-MI. Poor MPG post-PCI frequently improves MPG over 1 year. MPG graded after IRA recanalization undertaken days to weeks post MI is associated with LV recovery, indicating that MPG determined in the subacute post-MI period remains a marker of viability. Clinical Trial Registration—URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00025766.
American Heart Journal | 2012
Xavier Freixa; Vladimír Džavík; Sandra Forman; James M. Rankin; Christopher E. Buller; Warren J. Cantor; Witold Rużyłło; Harmony R. Reynolds; Gervasio A. Lamas; Judith S. Hochman
BACKGROUND The OAT, a randomized study of routine percutaneous coronary intervention or optimal medical therapy (MED) alone for the treatment of a totally occluded infarct-related artery in the subacute phase after myocardial infarction, showed similar rates of death, reinfarction and congestive heart failure (CHF) between study groups. Although most percutaneous coronary intervention patients were treated with bare metal stents (BMS), drug-eluting stents (DES) were also implanted in the latter part of the study. The aim of the study was to conduct an exploratory analysis of long-term outcomes for DES vs. BMS deployment vs. MED in the OAT. METHODS Patients enrolled after February 2003 (when first DES was implanted) were followed (DES n = 79, BMS n = 393, MED n = 552) up to a maximum of 6 years (mean survivor follow-up 5.1 years). RESULTS The 6-year occurrence of the composite end point of death, reinfarction and class IV CHF was similar [20.4% of DES, 18.9% of BMS and 18.4% of MED (P = .66)] as were the rates of the components of the primary end point. During the follow-up period, 33.4% of DES, 44.4% of BMS and 48.1% of MED patients, developed angina (P = .037). The rate of revascularization during follow up was 11.3%, 20.5% and 22.5% among these groups, respectively (P = .045). CONCLUSIONS There is no suggestion of reduced long-term risk of death, reinfarction or class IV CHF with DES usage compared to BMS or medical treatment alone. An association between DES use and freedom from angina and revascularization relative to medical therapy is suggested.
American Heart Journal | 2011
Gerard Devlin; Harmony R. Reynolds; Daniel B. Mark; James M. Rankin; Antonio Carlos Campos de Carvalho; Carlos Vozzi; George Sopko; Paulo Caramori; Vladimír Džavík; Michael Ragosta; Sandra Forman; Gervasio A. Lamas; Judith S. Hochman
BACKGROUND the OAT found that routine late (3-28 days post-myocardial infarction) percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) of an occluded infarct-related artery did not reduce death, reinfarction, or heart failure relative to medical treatment (MED). Angina rates were lower in PCI early, but the advantage over MED was lost by 3 years. METHODS angina and revascularization status were collected at 4 months, then annually. We assessed whether non-protocol revascularization procedures in MED accounted for loss of the early symptomatic advantage of PCI. RESULTS seven per 100 more PCI patients were angina-free at 4 months (P < .001) and 5 per 100 at 12 months (P = .005) with the difference narrowing to 1 per 100 at 3 years (P = .34). Non-protocol revascularization was more frequent in MED (5-year rate 22% vs 19% PCI, P = .05). Indications for revascularization included acute coronary syndromes (39% PCI vs 38% MED), stable angina/inducible ischemia (39% in each group), and physician preference (17% PCI vs 15% MED). Revascularization rates among patients with angina at any time during follow-up (35% of cohort) did not differ by treatment group (5-year rates 26% PCI vs 28% MED). Most symptomatic patients were treated without revascularization during follow-up (77%). CONCLUSIONS in a large randomized clinical trial of stable post-myocardial infarction patients, the modest benefit on angina from PCI of an occluded infarct-related artery was lost by 3 years. Revascularization was slightly more common in MED during follow-up but was not driven by acute ischemia, and almost 1 in 5 procedures were attributed to physician preference alone.
American Heart Journal | 1996
James M. Rankin; Greta D. Hartland; Mark A. Ireland
excluded. In addition, the specificity of tilt testing in athletes has been questioned, 9 although other data 3,10 indicate that the specificity of tilt testing in athletes may be equivalent to that seen in nonathletes and another report suggests that long-distance runners may be more susceptible than other athletes. 11 Until this issue is clarified, some skepticism will exist. In summary, the evaluation of exercise-associated syncope is challenging. Our report and those of others4: s, 11 indicate that in select patients tilt table testing may be useful in the evaluation of this condition.
World Journal of Cardiology | 2010
Vinod Jorapur; Gervasio A Lamas; Zygmunt Sadowski; Harmony R. Reynolds; Antonio Carlos Campos de Carvalho; Christopher E. Buller; James M. Rankin; Jean Renkin; Philippe Gabriel Steg; Harvey D. White; Carlos Vozzi; Eduardo Balcells; Michael Ragosta; C. Edwin Martin; Vankeepuram S. Srinivas; William W Wharton; Staci J. Abramsky; Ana C Mon; Shari S. Kronsberg; Judith S. Hochman
AIM To study if impaired renal function is associated with increased risk of peri-infarct heart failure (HF) in patients with preserved ejection fraction (EF). METHODS Patients with occluded infarct-related arteries (IRAs) between 1 to 28 d after myocardial infarction (MI) were grouped into chronic kidney disease (CKD) stages based on estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR). Rates of early post-MI HF were compared among eGFR groups. Logistic regression was used to explore independent predictors of HF. RESULTS Reduced eGFR was present in 71.1% of 2160 patients, with significant renal impairment (eGFR < 60 mL/min every 1.73 m(2)) in 14.8%. The prevalence of HF was higher with worsening renal function: 15.5%, 17.8% and 29.4% in patients with CKD stages 1, 2 and 3 or 4, respectively (P < 0.0001), despite a small absolute difference in mean EF across eGFR groups: 48.2 ± 10.0, 47.9 ± 11.3 and 46.2 ± 12.1, respectively (P = 0.02). The prevalence of HF was again higher with worsening renal function among patients with preserved EF: 10.1%, 13.6% and 23.6% (P < 0.0001), but this relationship was not significant among patients with depressed EF: 27.1%, 26.2% and 37.9% (P = 0.071). Moreover, eGFR was an independent correlate of HF in patients with preserved EF (P = 0.003) but not in patients with depressed EF (P = 0.181). CONCLUSION A significant proportion of post-MI patients with occluded IRAs have impaired renal function. Impaired renal function was associated with an increased rate of early post-MI HF, the association being strongest in patients with preserved EF. These findings have implications for management of peri-infarct HF.