Background
Grafting of the left internal mammary artery (LIMA) to left anterior descending artery (LAD) is the established standard of care during coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery [
1]. However, grafting strategies to territories other than the LAD, involving the use of either arterial grafts versus saphenous vein(s) is still a matter of debate. This in spite of evidence suggesting superior patency and better long-term clinical outcome with arterial grafts [
2-
5]. This is reflected in the overall use of total arterial grafts, which remains very low, with less than 5% in patients within the Society of Thoracic Surgery (STS) Adult Cardiac Surgery database receiving multiple arterial grafts [
6].
Most of the evidence favoring multiple arterial grafts has been obtained from retrospective analysis of large registry data [
2-
5]. These studies suggest that the use of multiple arterial grafts may improve long-term survival after CABG. A limited number of randomized controlled trials have been published examining all arterial grafting strategies without consistent findings. In a randomized controlled trial of 160 patients, Muneretto et al., demonstrated superior graft patency and lower return of angina in TAG patients [
7]. In contrast, a randomized controlled trial involving 331 patients, Damgaard et al., was unable to show any significant differences in patency or clinical endpoints between TAG vs. LIMA+SVG grafting strategies at one year follow up [
8]. Of note the primary outcomes for the study from Damgaard et al. were graft patency and cardiac event –free survival at 1 year.
The above reported randomized study highlight conflicting evidence in the literature and the relative paucity of definitive large randomized studies comparing total arterial grafting strategy (TAG) to saphenous vein and arterial grafting strategy. We sought in the present trial to test the feasibility of conducting such a trial by performing first a small-scale pilot trial in which barriers would be explored including taking into consideration individual surgeon practice as part of our analysis. In the present study we will demonstrate 3 important barriers to consider in designing a definitive trial comparing grafting strategy with TAG versus LIMA+SVG and how these can impact feasibility.
Methods
Randomized control trial study design
Given the paucity of randomized evidence available to guide surgeons in choosing the best grafting strategy for their patients, the present study was designed as a pilot prospective randomized controlled trial comparing total arterial grafting (TAG) to conventional grafting using a LIMA to the LAD and saphenous vein grafts for the other territories (LIMA+SVG) in patients undergoing non-redo isolated CABG.
Patients were excluded from enrolment if they were scheduled to undergo emergent surgery, single vessel bypass surgery, had received a prior CABG or displayed evidence of varicose veins on pre-operative physical examination. In addition, patients with a documented history of chest radiotherapy, allergy to contrast media and renal insufficiency (defined by serum creatinine > 176 μmol/L), were also excluded.
Informed consent was obtained from all patients in accordance with our institutional research ethics review board guidelines (Randomized Controlled Trial number: ISRCTN80270323). Once the patient had consented, he or she was randomized prior to entering the operating room. The randomization process was performed using random permuted blocks with varying block sizes of 4, 6 and 8. Numbered index cards were placed in sealed, opaque envelopes and stored safely with the research coordinator. Consented patients were randomized prior to surgery, and the surgeon opened the envelope in the operating room before starting the case. The index card indicated whether the patient was to be randomized to TAG or LIMA+SVG. If the surgeon decided intra-operatively that the patient could not undergo the procedure to which he or she was randomized, the patient was offered the revascularization strategy most likely to afford the patient the best possible outcome. If the patient required a concomitant cardiac procedure (e.g. valve replacement or repair) or could not undergo a revascularization procedure with a minimum of two distal bypasses, the patient was excluded from the study.
Primary outcome
The primary objectives of our pilot study were to evaluate the feasibility of a larger randomized trial in current cardiac surgical practice in which individual surgeon preferences have been suggested to play a large role in choosing grafting strategies [
1]. Feasibility was defined as our ability to recruit more than 20% of eligible patients and assess completion of CT-coronary angiography in greater than 80% of patients at 6 month follow-up.
Secondary outcome
The secondary objectives of the study were to compare postoperative graft patency and in-hospital mortality and morbidity. In addition the quality of graft imaging was also examined. All analysis was performed on an intent-to-treat basis. The treating team and patients were not blinded to the treatment allocation. However, CT-coronary angiograms were reviewed in a blinded manner by a single radiologist.
Operative technique
All interventions were performed via a midline sternotomy, and cardiopulmonary bypass was utilized in a standardized manner for all cases. Body temperature during the procedure was allowed to drift briefly to 32°C. Intermittent cold blood cardioplegia solution was delivered anterograde via the aortic root unless otherwise indicated. Arterial conduits were harvested with minimal trauma (LIMA and RIMA were not skeletonized) and were treated with either a papaverine solution or a nitroglycerine/calcium channel blocker (verapamil) solution prior to their use. TAG was defined as the use of any arterial conduit (LIMA, RIMA or radial artery), either alone or in combination, without concomitant use of SVG. The choice of conduit and the manner in which the grafts were constructed, including composite T- or Y-grafts, proximal aorto-coronary anastomoses or sequential anastomoses, was based entirely on surgeon preference rather than on any fixed criteria such as territory to graft or degree of target vessel stenosis. LIMA+SVG was defined as any case in which the LIMA was used for a single bypass to the LAD and SVGs were used for the remaining bypasses, constructed as either a series of sequential anastomoses or as single bypasses and were anastomosed proximally to the aorta.
Post- operative management
All study patients received postoperative intravenous nitroglycerine infusions for the first 24 hours upon return from the operating room unless hypotensive (systolic blood pressure < 90 mm Hg). Other routine post-operative medications included daily aspirin as well as resumption of cholesterol lowering agents, B-blockers and angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors as appropriate.
CT-coronary angiography
All study patients received CT angiography 6 months post CABG. This was performed on a 64 slice multi-detector CT scanner (Siemens Sensation 64, Erlangen, Germany), using the following scan parameters: 330 ms gantry rotation, detector collimation 32 × 0.6 mm (with a rapidly alternating focal spot resulting the acquisition of 64 slices per gantry rotation with effective special resolution of 0.4 mm), tube voltage 120 kV, maximum obtainable tube current (800 – 900 mAs) scanning in a caudo-cranial direction. Retrospecive ECG gating was used with ECG pulsing such that full tube current was applied between 50% and 80% of the cardiac cycle, and reduced to 40% during the remainder. One hundred mL of contrast agent (Isovue 370, Bracco, Italy) was injected into a right antecubital vein via an 18-guage cannula at a flow rate of 5 mL/s, followed by 40 mL of normal saline bolus chaser at a rate of 5 mL/s. All patients with heart rate >65 beats per minute, unless contra-indicated, received beta blocker in the form of 50 mg oral metoprolol, 0.2 micrograms of sublingual glycerol trinitrate, plus or minus 1–2 mg oral lorazepam prior to being scanned in order to reduce heart rate and maximize the lumen diameter of the coronary artery bypass grafts. Axial data sets with a slice thickness 0.75 mm and slice interval 0.6 mm, were reconstructed using a medium smooth reconstruction kernel (B30f) at the following intervals during the cardiac cycle (20%, 55%, 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%). Further datasets from different time intervals or at a sharper reconstruction kernel (B46f) were reconstructed at the interpreting radiologist’s discretion. Interpretation of all CT angiograms was performed by a single level 3 trained cardiac radiologist who was blinded to the treatment allocation.
Each bypass graft was assessed for image quality with graft visualization determined as excellent, diagnostic or non-diagnostic. The presence or absence of artifact was noted with the following categories: none, clip, rhythm, respiratory motion and other. Heart rate and heart rhythm during the CTA acquisition were recorded.
Each bypass graft for which visualization was determined not to be non-diagnostic was visually assessed using axial data, multi-planar reformats and curved planar reformats as per Society of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography guidelines and assigned to one of three categories: Occluded (defined as any focus where there was complete lack of luminal contrast), luminal stenosis of greater than 50%, or patent (no luminal stenosis greater than 50%) [
9].
Data sources
The Maritime Heart Center (MHC) Cardiac Surgery Registry captures pre-operative, intra-operative and in-hospital post-operative clinical variables including mortality and morbidity for all patients undergoing cardiac surgery at the QEII Health Sciences Centre in Nova Scotia, Canada. Pre-operative variables included age, sex, body mass index (BMI), smoking history, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, peripheral and/or cerebrovascular disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, left ventricular ejection fraction (EF), myocardial infarction within 21 days prior to surgery, urgency of surgery (urgent patients required surgery within 24 hours, in-house patients were waiting in-hospital, elective patients were waiting at home), prior percutaneous coronary intervention, left main stenosis >50%, and number of diseased vessels. In-hospital outcomes included all-cause mortality, stroke (neurological deficit persisting at time of hospital discharge), peak troponin T, deep sternal wound infection, mechanical ventilation >24 hours, and postoperative length of stay in hospital >9 days. Aortic cross-clamp time was also reported.
Statistical analysis
The TAG and LIMA+SVG groups were compared using Chi-square or Fisher’s exact tests for categorical variables, two-tailed t-tests for continuous variables that were normally distributed, and Wilcoxon rank sum tests for continuous variables that did not have a normal distribution.
One of the primary objectives was > 20% recruitment of patients into the randomized trial. Patient eligibility was based on inclusion and exclusion criteria and assignment to participating surgeons. This allowed for the creation of a predictive model capable to identify factors that predicted use of TAG. Design variables were created for reference level coding of categorical variables with more than two levels. For the multivariable analysis, candidate variables were selected based on clinical relevance or a significance of bivariate association with p value <0.2. A non-parsimonious logistic regression model was developed to identify the predictors of receiving TAG. The area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve was used to assess predictive accuracy of the model. A bootstrap procedure was used to obtain 1000 subsamples with replacement. The 2.5th and 97.5th percentiles of the bootstrap distribution were then used to determine the 95% Confidence Interval (CI) of the ROC.
All statistical analyses were performed using the SAS software package version 9.2 (SAS, Cary, North Carolina).
Discussion
Numerous studies based on registry data have suggested that multiple arterial grafting in CABG patients provides a survival benefit over conventional CABG performed with a LIMA graft to the LAD and saphenous veins [
2-
5]. However, there have been few randomized studies have addressed this question [
7,
8]. In fact, this paucity of high-level evidence supporting the use of multiple arterial grafts may be responsible at least in part to the limited adoption of multiple arterial grafts. This lack of adoption is best illustrated by the fact that less than 5% of CABG patients in the STS database receive multiple arterial grafts [
6].
The objective of the present pilot study was to look at the feasibility of conducting such a randomized study comparing grafting strategies. We defined feasibility as the ability to recruit a reasonable proportion of patients and to ensure that the majority would complete the follow-up. The recruitment was set at 20% of eligible patients, which represents a conservative estimate so that findings from the larger study could be applied to a modern CABG practice rather than highly selected cases. Study follow-up was defined as completion of a CT-angiogram at 6 month after surgery in more than 80% of patients. In this pilot study we failed to meet the primary objective with a recruitment of 14.3% of eligible patients and completion of CT angiography in 76% of patients. Our findings suggest therefore that a primary trial comparing TAG versus conventional CABG may be plagued by poor recruitment, which could compromise the generalizability of the findings.
However, the present study did demonstrate that in selected patients, CABG surgery can be safely performed with both grafting strategies ie. TAG or LIMA+SVG. In the 58 patients in the study there was no in-hospital mortality. However, it should be noted that TAG patients required longer clamp times and had significant higher Troponin T levels post-operatively. This findings is of importance given evidence that increased incidence of myocardial injury has been shown to impact outcomes after surgery [
10,
11]. While we reported in our study no new q wave myocardial infarction, our findings suggest that TAG patients may be at higher risk for myocardial injury assessed by a sensitive Troponin assay. We speculate that the Troponin rise is likely multifactorial but could easily be related to the longer cross-clamp times. Our observed longer cross clamp time highlights inherent higher technical challenges in using only arterial grafts compared to their venous counterparts which in our study translated in longer myocardial exposure to ischemia. The methods used for myocardial protection were identical between groups suggesting that our observation is unlikely related to inadequate myocardial protection.
In the patients that had follow-up CT angiography (76% of patients), graft patency in both groups of patients was found to be greater than 90%. Our findings of similar 6-month patency between groups would suggest that a very large study would be required to be able to detect a patency difference between groups. The observed excellent early graft patency in combination with the limited outcome differences between grafting strategies makes the design of any future large RCT difficult. In the present pilot the lack of differences observed would suggest that an appropriately powered definitive study based on patency as an outcome would need to be prohibitively large. Our findings contrast with lower patency rates in saphenous vein grafts from older contemporary studies [
12]. However, our findings of greater than 90% patency are remarkably similar to findings from recent trials in which graft patency was used as a primary outcome supporting our findings [
13]. Taken together it is increasingly apparent that any benefit of TAG over conventional grafting may not manifest until much later in time making the design of a definitive study problematic. This is best illustrated by findings from large registries were the benefits increase with time but only become apparent after 10 years [
2]. This is also apparent from findings from the ART trial comparing single IMA to bilateral IMA in which results at one year are comparable [
14].
In the present study we chose to evaluate graft patency between groups with CT- Angiography based on its limited invasiveness, safety and reported accuracy in assessing graft patency [
9]. However, we were surprised to report that significant difficulty in assessing graft patency may be an issue in up to 5% of grafts, particularly when evaluating sequential grafts on the lateral wall. Previous authors using the same scanner hardware and similar scanning protocols have reported varying results in terms of non – evaluable grafts ranging from 0% to 13% [
15-
18]. More recent studies using improved hardware and scanning protocols have also reported a small percentage of non-evaluable grafts [
19]. In support of our observation is the observation by others that arterial grafts to the lateral wall may be particularly difficult to visualize [
20]. Although the absolute numbers of non-diagnostic grafts are small, the low incidence rate of stenosis or occlusion calls into question the utility of CT-angio for the purpose of graft evaluation in this study population. Our findings appear to confirm that coronary angiography remains the gold standard for evaluation of coronary artery bypass grafts patency. More importantly for the design of endpoints in a trial comparing grafting strategies our observed difficulty with graft visualization would need to be taken into consideration for power calculations. One should note that CT technology is continuing to improve significantly such that this limitation may no longer be an issue in the future.
During the study period 421 patients were eligible for enrolment in the trial based on inclusion and exclusion criteria. However, only 60 patients (14.3%) were randomized and 2 of these patients withdrew. Recruitment was largely left to the participating surgeons making surgeon preference a major determinant of revascularization strategy. This explains why in this part of the manuscript we decided to explore clinical reasons why patients may not have been enrolled by creating a predictive model to determine the relative role of clinical variables in the decision making of surgeons to perform TAG outside of the trial. This approach was used to estimate the relative roles of surgeon preference as compared to objective clinical reasons for determining the use of TAG grafting. As one would expect patients who were older, required more urgent procedures and had more co-morbidities were least likely to undergo TAG. However, what is novel about our analysis is that surgeon was one of the most robust predictors of grafting strategy independent of all clinical variables. We interpret this finding as being highly suggestive that surgeons select patients for particular grafting strategy based on variables that are not captured by our database such as overall patient appearance, and also speculate that surgeon also use inherent biases about the relative benefit of one grafting strategy over another. Despite the above findings, we acknowledge that we remain unable to determine why exactly a particular patient was not enrolled.
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Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Authors’ contributions
JL: Wrote the manuscript, and participated in data analysis and interpretation. RJB: Participated project design, subject acquisition, manuscript editing and data analysis. KJB: Participated in data interpretation and analysis. GMH: Participated project design, manuscript editing, subject acquisition, and data analysis. AB: Participated in Radiological interpretation of data. RG: Participated in subject acquisition and data analysis. JFL: Participated in subject acquisition, data analysis and interpretation, study design, and manuscript editing. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.