Title: Outpatient stenting
1Outpatient stenting
James R Wilentz, MD Assistant Professor of
Medicine Albert Einstein College of
Medicine Interventional Cardiologist Beth Israel
Medical Center and St Vincents Hospital New
York, NY Ian C Gilchrist, MD Associate
Professor of Medicine Cardiology Division MS
Hershey Medical Center Hershey, PA
2Motivation
Outpatient stenting
- My patients wanted to go home early.
-
- Radial approach to stenting puts patients on
their feet quickly, and I couldnt come up with
any good reason to keep them in hospital. - -Ian Gilchrist
3Adjunctive therapies
Outpatient stenting
- All patients receive
- aspirin and Plavix
- (or something similar)
- GP IIb/IIIa inhibitor
- (6-hour infusion due to time constraints)
- Heparin in the cath lab
- (up to an ACT of 200-300 seconds)
- -Ian Gilchrist
-
4Catheterization procedure
Outpatient stenting
- Radial artery approach
- (5 Fr or 6 Fr catheter)
- Direct stenting, or balloon and stent
- If procedure is uncomplicated with an optimal
result, the patient is offered the chance to go
home the same day. - -Ian Gilchrist
-
5Motivation
Outpatient stenting
- We were doing early studies with vascular sealing
and patients didnt need to stay. -
- It feels to the patients like a diagnostic
catheterization. - The post-procedural course is less complicated
than for some other outpatient surgeries. -
- -James Wilentz
6Outpatient stenting
Catheterization procedure
- Femoral approach with vascular sealing devices
(DUETT and VasoSeal) - We were concerned about using the radial artery
because there was a 3-5 rate of occlusion which
could potentially compromise a bypass conduit for
the future. - 6 Fr and 8 Fr devices
- Ambulation at 4.25 hours and discharge at 5 hours
(6 Fr) - 45 outpatients and only 1 complication
(pseudoaneurysm) - -James Wilentz
Wilentz JR, et.al. J Invasive Cardiol 1999 Dec
11(12)709-717.
7Using GP IIb/IIIa inhibitor
Outpatient stenting
- GP IIb/IIIa for only 6 hours should be looked at
in a serious way, because all reports demand long
infusion for efficacy. - We excluded GP IIb/IIIa from our group, and that
might open us to some criticism. - The strongest data for GP IIb/IIIa is from the
CAPTURE study (unstable angina with positive
troponin) and those patients ought not to be
considered for outpatient stenting. - -James Wilentz
8On GP IIb/IIIa
Outpatient stenting
- EPIC started the idea that longer is better for
GP IIb/IIIa infusion. - The idea is being reconsidered following recent
trials (oral IIb/IIIa and GUSTO IV-ACS). - Unpublished retrospective analysis of ESPRIT data
suggests the same benefit in low-risk patients
who got integrilin for lt6 hours, 6-12 h, or the
full 18-24 h. - We dont really know the optimum infusion time.
- -Ian Gilchist
9Cost savings
Outpatient stenting
- Cost of outpatient stenting per patient,
including vascular sealing - 213/patient
- Cost savings per patient by avoiding average
overnight stay (26 hours) in our cardiac
step-down unit - 478/patient
- Cost savings per patient if using average length
of hospital stay (2.2 days) reported nationally
1155/patient -
- Wilentz JR, et.al. J Invasive Cardiol 1999 Dec
11(12)709-717.
10Nationwide savings
Outpatient stenting
- And when you look throughout the United States -
666,000 percutaneous interventions, 65 stenting
- with a conservative estimate of 20 eligible
for an outpatient therapy, that would be savings
nationwide of between 40 and 100 million dollars.
Which although it may not be a huge dent in the
national budget, its significant. -
- -James Wilentz
11Throughput
Outpatient stenting
- Our incentive was not only cost considerations.
Our cath-lab holding area also doubles as our
chest pain center. If we can get a patient out in
6-8 hours, we have another bed available. - -Ian Gilchrist
- Throughput is eased by this method. If you know
patients are outpatient candidates, you can
schedule patients more easily. - -James Wilentz
12Family logistics
Outpatient stenting
- The families dont understand that they block the
system by not picking up their family member on
time. - With outpatient treatment, the family often
doesnt leave and therefore arent delayed
getting back. - -Ian Gilchrist
13Safety
Outpatient stenting
- Safety has improved over the years.
-
- Rates of acute closure
- -NHLBI angioplasty registry (1983) 7.5
- -NHLBI angioplasty registry (1985-6) 6.8
- -Richard Myler study in JACC (1992) 4.9
- -Ticlopidine/stent registries (1996) 0.8
- -STARS trial (1998) 0.5
-
-
- -James Wilentz
14Safety
Outpatient stenting
- Most recently at our institution, 12/1600 (0.75)
stenting patients have had acute closures
(includes CCU patients). - Patients chosen for outpatient treatment
- MI gt24 hours ago
- stable or unstable angina
- no active ST segment deviations
- no angiographic thrombus in the lesions
- In this group one would expect the in-hospital
occlusion rate to be vanishingly low. -
- -James Wilentz
15Hazards
Outpatient stenting
- Recent data pooled from 3 trials not using
GPIIb/IIIa found a stent thrombosis rate in these
patients of 2 in a 1000 over a 30-day period. - Cutlip DE, et al. Circulation 2001 Apr 17
103(15)1967-1971. - There are hazards of being in a hospital.
Patients dont get a good nights sleep, and are
less able to understand their discharge
instructions or otherwise function the next day. - -Ian Gilchrist
16Staff mindset
Outpatient stenting
- The staff in the cath-lab and discharge unit need
a whole different mindset. - There has to be a protocol for education of the
patient. - Patients must receive discharge instructions re
possible bleeding. - -James Wilentz
17Patient education
Outpatient stenting
- A full-time nurse practitioner in our holding bay
- Pre-written instructions for the patient
- A 24-hour number for patient questions
- The nurses need to take the initiative in
preparing patients for discharge in the
outpatient setting. - -Ian Gilchrist
18Post-procedure protocol
Outpatient stenting
- We aim for a 2.5 hour time to ambulation with
observation of patients just prior to ambulation. - Discharge is half an hour after they have
ambulation, if there are no complications. -
- A study is needed of either short infusion GP
IIb/IIIa or perhaps a high dose Plavix bolus or
pre-treatment to see if it is safe from acute
complications. - -James Wilentz
19Will it catch on?
Outpatient stenting
- If you look at, historically, other procedures
that have gone from must be done in the
hospital, to could be done maybe as an
outpatient, to now done invariably as an
outpatient, that this is something that is going
to be a primarily outpatient procedure for the
patient who is an elective stent patient. -
- -James Wilentz
20Patient enthusiasm
Outpatient stenting
- Patients usually feel good at the end of the day,
more so than for some other outpatient
procedures. - Locally, we have had patients leaving other
hospitals because they want outpatient stenting
at Hershey. -
- If the finances can be straightened out, it can
be more cost effective, and if the payor
recognizes the benefit they may start to demand
it. - -Ian Gilchrist
21Why use the radial approach?
Outpatient stenting
- A convenient, one-day approach
- It is a cost saving measure.
- The radial approach eliminates major groin
complications. - You can make the argument that it is safer than
keeping a patient in-hospital overnight. - -Ian Gilchrist
22Why use the femoral approach?
Outpatient stenting
- The patients love it. They feel like they were a
healthy person who went in for a procedure and
came home. - The femoral approach is compatible with more
implements. Surgeons like to use the radial
artery and prefer if it hasnt been previously
compromised. - -James Wilentz
23Reimbursement
Outpatient stenting
- When I talk to my European colleagues, they say
that they cant possibly do it because they have
absolutely no incentive to decrease length of
stay from their payer point of view. I just
hope that HCFA can find its way to understand
that were giving the same service and therefore
ought to be recompensed similarly. -
- -James Wilentz
24Outpatient stenting