Characteristics of Contemporary Patients Discharged from the Hospital After an Acute Coronary Syndrome.

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Characteristics of Contemporary Patients Discharged from the Hospital After an Acute Coronary Syndrome.

Am J Med. 2015 May 22;

Authors: Goldberg RJ, Saczynski JS, McManus DD, Waring ME, McManus R, Allison J, Parish DC, Lessard D, Person S, Gore JM, Kiefe CI, TRACE-CORE investigators

Abstract
BACKGROUND: Limited contemporary data compare the clinical and psychosocial characteristics and acute management of patients hospitalized with an initial versus a recurrent episode of acute coronary disease. We describe these factors in a cohort of patients recruited from six hospitals in Massachusetts and Georgia after an acute coronary syndrome.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: We performed structured baseline in-person interviews and medical record abstractions for 2,174 eligible and consenting patients surviving hospitalization for an acute coronary syndrome between April, 2011 and May, 2013.
RESULTS: The average patient age was 61 years, 64% were men, and 47% had a high school education or less; 29% had a low general quality of life and 1 in 5 were cognitively impaired. Patients with a recurrent coronary episode had a greater burden of previously diagnosed comorbidities. Overall, psychosocial burden was high, and more so in those with a recurrent versus those with an initial episode. Patients with an initial coronary episode were as likely to have been treated with all 4 effective cardiac medications (51.6%) as patients with a recurrent episode (52.3%), but were significantly more likely to have undergone cardiac catheterization (97.9% vs 92.9%) and a percutaneous coronary intervention (73.7% vs 60.9%) (p <0.001) during their index hospitalization.
CONCLUSIONS: Patients with a first episode of acute coronary artery disease have a more favorable psychosocial profile, less comorbidity, and receive more invasive procedures, but similar medical management than patients with previously diagnosed coronary disease. Implications of the high psychosocial burden on various patient-related outcomes requires investigation.

PMID: 26007672 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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