Paulo Cury Rezende
University of São Paulo
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Paulo Cury Rezende.
Circulation | 2012
Ricardo D Vieira; Whady Hueb; Bernard J. Gersh; Eduardo Gomes Lima; Alexandre C. Pereira; Paulo Cury Rezende; Cibele Larrosa Garzillo; Alexandre Ciappina Hueb; Desiderio Favarato; Paulo R. Soares; José Antonio Franchini Ramires; Roberto Kalil Filho
Background— The importance of complete revascularization remains unclear and contradictory. This current investigation compares the effect of complete revascularization on 10-year survival of patients with stable multivessel coronary artery disease (CAD) who were randomly assigned to percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) or coronary artery bypass graft (CABG). Methods and Results— This is a post hoc analysis of the Second Medicine, Angioplasty, or Surgery Study (MASS II), which is a randomized trial comparing treatments in patients with stable multivessel CAD, and preserved systolic ventricular function. We analyzed patients who underwent surgery (CABG) or stent angioplasty (PCI). The survival free of overall mortality of patients who underwent complete (CR) or incomplete revascularization (IR) was compared. Of the 408 patients randomly assigned to mechanical revascularization, 390 patients (95.6%) underwent the assigned treatment; complete revascularization was achieved in 224 patients (57.4%), 63.8% of those in the CABG group and 36.2% in the PCI group (P=0.001). The IR group had more prior myocardial infarction than the CR group (56.2%×39.2%, P=0.01). During a 10-year follow-up, the survival free of cardiovascular mortality was significantly different among patients in the 2 groups (CR, 90.6% versus IR, 84.4%; P=0.04). This was mainly driven by an increased cardiovascular specific mortality in individuals with incomplete revascularization submitted to PCI (P=0.05). Conclusions— Our study suggests that in 10-year follow-up, CR compared with IR was associated with reduced cardiovascular mortality, especially due to a higher increase in cardiovascular-specific mortality in individuals submitted to PCI. Clinical Trial Registration Information— URL: http://www.controlled-trials.com. Registration number: ISRCTN66068876.
American Heart Journal | 2013
Eduardo Gomes Lima; Whady Hueb; Rosa Maria Rahmi Garcia; Alexandre C. Pereira; Paulo R. Soares; Desiderio Favarato; Cibele Larrosa Garzillo; Ricardo D Vieira; Paulo Cury Rezende; Myrthes Emy Takiuti; Priscyla Girardi; Alexandre Ciappina Hueb; José Antonio Franchini Ramires; Roberto Kalil Filho
INTRODUCTION Diabetes mellitus is a major cause of coronary artery disease (CAD). Despite improvement in the management of patients with stable CAD, diabetes remains a major cause of increased morbidity and mortality. There is no conclusive evidence that either modality is better than medical therapy alone for the treatment of stable multivessel CAD in patients with diabetes in a very long-term follow-up. Our aim was to compare 3 therapeutic strategies for stable multivessel CAD in a diabetic population and non-diabetic population. METHODS It was compared medical therapy (MT), percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), and coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) in 232 diabetic patients and 379 nondiabetic patients with multivessel CAD. Endpoints evaluated were overall and cardiac mortality. RESULTS Patients (n = 611) were randomized to CABG (n = 203), PCI (n = 205), or MT (n = 203). In a 10-year follow-up, more deaths occurred among patients with diabetes than among patients without diabetes (P = .001) for overall mortality. In this follow-up, 10-year mortality rates were 32.3% and 23.2% for diabetics and non-diabetics respectively (P = .024). Regarding cardiac mortality, 10-year cardiac mortality rates were 19.4% and 12.7% respectively (P = .031).Considering only diabetic patients and stratifying this population by treatment option, we found mortality rates of 31.3% for PCI, 27.5% for CABG and 37.5% for MT (P = .015 for CABG vs MT) and cardiac mortality rates of 18.8%, 12.5% and 26.1% respectively (P = .005 for CABG vs MT). CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION Among patients with stable multivessel CAD and preserved left ventricular ejection fraction, the 3 therapeutic regimens had high rates of overall and cardiac-related deaths among diabetic compared with non-diabetic patients. Moreover, better outcomes were observed in diabetic patients undergoing CABG compared to MT in relation to overall and cardiac mortality in a 10-year follow-up.
Circulation | 2012
Ricardo D Vieira; Whady Hueb; Mark A. Hlatky; Desiderio Favarato; Paulo Cury Rezende; Cibele Larrosa Garzillo; Eduardo Gomes Lima; Paulo R. Soares; Alexandre Ciappina Hueb; Alexandre C. Pereira; José Antonio Franchini Ramires; Roberto Kalil Filho
Background— The Second Medicine, Angioplasty, or Surgery Study (MASS II) included patients with multivessel coronary artery disease and normal systolic ventricular function. Patients underwent coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG, n=203), percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI, n=205), or medical treatment alone (MT, n=203). This investigation compares the economic outcome at 5-year follow-up of the 3 therapeutic strategies. Methods and Results— We analyzed cumulative costs during a 5-year follow-up period. To analyze the cost-effectiveness, adjustment was made on the cumulative costs for average event-free time and angina-free proportion. Respectively, for event-free survival and event plus angina-free survival, MT presented 3.79 quality-adjusted life-years and 2.07 quality-adjusted life-years; PCI presented 3.59 and 2.77 quality-adjusted life-years; and CABG demonstrated 4.4 and 2.81 quality-adjusted life-years. The event-free costs were
Diabetes Care | 2013
Rosa Maria Rahmi; Augusto Hiroshi Uchida; Paulo Cury Rezende; Eduardo Gomes Lima; Cibele Larrosa Garzillo; Desiderio Favarato; Celia Strunz; Myrthes Emy Takiuti; Priscyla Girardi; Whady Hueb; Roberto Kalil Filho; José Antonio Franchini Ramires
9071.00 for MT;
Coronary Artery Disease | 2012
Ricardo D Vieira; Alexandre C. Pereira; Eduardo Gomes Lima; Cibele L Garzillo; Paulo Cury Rezende; Desiderio Favarato; Alexandre Ciappina Hueb; Bernard J. Gersh; José Antonio Franchini Ramires; Whady Hueb
19 967.00 for PCI; and
European Heart Journal | 2013
Cibele Larrosa Garzillo; Whady Hueb; Bernard J. Gersh; Eduardo Gomes Lima; Paulo Cury Rezende; Alexandre Ciappina Hueb; Ricardo D Vieira; Desiderio Favarato; Alexandre C. Pereira; Paulo R. Soares; Carlos V. Serrano; José Antonio Franchini Ramires; Roberto Kalil Filho
18 263.00 for CABG. The paired comparison of the event-free costs showed that there was a significant difference favoring MT versus PCI (P<0.01) and versus CABG (P<0.01) and CABG versus PCI (P=0.01). The event-free plus angina-free costs were
World Journal of Diabetes | 2014
Rosa Maria Rahmi Garcia; Paulo Cury Rezende; Whady Hueb
16 553.00,
Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology | 2011
Vando Edésio Soares; M. A. de Andrade Belo; Paulo Cury Rezende; Vanete Thomaz Soccol; R T Fukuda; G. J. P. de Oliveira; A. J. da Costa
25 831.00, and
BMC Cardiovascular Disorders | 2012
Whady Hueb; Bernard J. Gersh; Paulo Cury Rezende; Cibele Larrosa Garzillo; Eduardo Gomes Lima; Ricardo D Vieira; Rosa Maria Rahmi Garcia; Desiderio Favarato; Carlos Alexandre Wainrober Segre; Alexandre C. Pereira; Paulo R. Soares; Expedito E. Ribeiro; Pedro A. Lemos; Marco Antonio Perin; Célia Cassaro Strunz; La Dallan; Fabio Biscegli Jatene; Noedir Ag Stolf; Alexandre Ciappina Hueb; Ricardo Augusto Dias; Fábio Antônio Gaiotto; Leandro Menezes Alves da Costa; Fernando Teiichi Costa Oikawa; Rodrigo Morel Vieira de Melo; Carlos V. Serrano; Luiz Francisco Rodrigues de Ávila; Alexandre Volney Villa; José Rodrigues Parga Filho; Cesar Higa Nomura; J.A.F. Ramires
24 614.00, respectively. The paired comparison of the event-free plus angina-free costs showed that there was a significant difference favoring MT versus PCI (P=0.04), and versus CABG (P<0.001); there was no difference between CABG and PCI (P>0.05). Conclusions— In the long-term economic analysis, for the prevention of a composite primary end point, MT was more cost effective than CABG, and CABG was more cost-effective than PCI. Clinical Trial Registration Information— www.controlled-trials.com. Registration number: ISRCTN66068876.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2015
Paulo Cury Rezende; Leandro Menezes Alves da Costa; Thiago Luis Scudeler; Debora Y Nakamura; Maria Clementina Pinto Giorgi; Whady Hueb
OBJECTIVE To assess the effect of two hypoglycemic drugs on ischemic preconditioning (IPC) patients with type 2 diabetes and coronary artery disease (CAD). RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS We performed a prospective study of 96 consecutive patients allocated into two groups: 42 to group repaglinide (R) and 54 to group vildagliptin (V). All patients underwent two consecutive exercise tests (ET1 and ET2) in phase 1 without drugs. In phase 2, 1 day after ET1 and -2, 2 mg repaglinide three times daily or 50 mg vildagliptin twice daily was given orally to patients in the respective group for 6 days. On the seventh day, 60 min after 6 mg repaglinide or 100 mg vildagliptin, all patients underwent two consecutive exercise tests (ET3 and ET4). RESULTS In phase 1, IPC was demonstrated by improvement in the time to 1.0 mm ST-segment depression and rate pressure product (RPP). All patients developed ischemia in ET3; however, 83.3% of patients in group R experienced ischemia earlier in ET4, without significant improvement in RPP, indicating the cessation of IPC (P < 0.0001). In group V, only 28% of patients demonstrated IPC cessation, with 72% still having the protective effect (P < 0.0069). CONCLUSIONS Repaglinide eliminated myocardial IPC, probably by its effect on the KATP channel. Vildagliptin did not damage this protective mechanism in a relevant way in patients with type 2 diabetes and CAD, suggesting a good alternative treatment in this population.