In this episode (18:41 min), Medicom’s correspondent covers 6 presentations from the American College of Cardiology (ACC.22) which was held virtually and in person in Washington DC, USA this year, between the 2- 4 April 2022.
- PACMAN-AMI’s alirocumab eats coronary plaques
Adding the PCSK9 inhibitor alirocumab to high-intensity statin therapy shortly after an acute myocardial infarction (MI) promoted coronary plaque regression better than statin therapy alone, based on serial intracoronary imaging performed in the PACMAN-AMI trial. - 1-year CLASP TR data support tricuspid regurgitation repair
Transcatheter valve repair with the PASCAL system provided further validation for transcatheter edge-to-edge repair. The prospective, multicentre CLASP TR study reported significant reductions in tricuspid regurgitation (TR) and improved quality of life (QoL) at 1 year. - DIAMOND trial: Patiromer scratches hyperkalaemia
Heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) patients taking renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitors (RAASi) had significantly lower serum potassium levels when adding the potassium-binding agent patiromer to their regimen compared with placebo. - Dietary intervention… from your supermarket?
The potential of dietary interventions in supermarkets in improving nutrition education was demonstrated by the positive findings from the Supermarket and Web-based Intervention Targeting Nutrition (SuperWIN) Trial presented at the ACC Scientific Sessions. - Treat chronic mild hypertension during pregnancy? Yes!
New research from the randomised CHAP trial showed that aggressively targeting blood pressure in pregnant women with mild chronic hypertension to be <140/90 mmHg provided better pregnancy outcomes, with no consequent harm to either mothers or babies. The results were presented during the late-breaking clinical trial session of the American College of Cardiology and published simultaneously in the New England Journal of Medicine. - Sotagliflozin SCORED MACE benefit
New analyses of the SCORED trial revealed that SGLT1/2 inhibitor sotagliflozin provides up to 23% risk reduction of major cardiovascular adverse events (MACE) in patients with type 2 diabetes, chronic kidney disease, and at high risk for cardiovascular disease.
Enjoy listening!
Posted on
Previous Article
« AAN 2022 Highlights Podcast Next Article
Should tomosynthesis replace mammography? »
« AAN 2022 Highlights Podcast Next Article
Should tomosynthesis replace mammography? »
Table of Contents: ACC 2022
Featured articles
Alirocumab significantly reduces high-risk coronary plaques
Highlighted Original Research
POISE-3: Tranexamic acid for non-cardiac surgery
Treating chronic mild hypertension during pregnancy leads to better outcomes
New VOYAGER PAD data: Should patients with both PAD and CKD get rivaroxaban?
Alirocumab significantly reduces high-risk coronary plaques
Aggressive warming during non-cardiac surgery does not improve outcomes
Heart Failure and Cardiomyopathy
DIAMOND trial: Patiromer lowers risk of severe hyperkalaemia
Replacing septal reduction therapy with mavacamten for HCM
Omecamtiv mecarbil does not impact exercise capacity of patients with HFrEF
Symptomatic obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: long-term mavacamten control
Interventional and Structural Cardiology
COMPLETE revascularisation improves angina-related QoL
Plot twist for negative FAME 3 results: early QoL benefits of PCI
1-year CLASP TR results support tricuspid regurgitation repair
Head-to-head: post-TAVR edoxaban not better than DAPT
Chocolate Touch vs Lutonix catheters
No FLAVOUR difference between FFR and IVUS for PCI guidance
Myocardial Infarction
Low-resource countries benefit from global STEMI initiative
Sodium thiosulfate ineffective at cardiac protection
ICM-guided management did not improve MACE after MI
Prevention
PACIFIC-AF: Low bleeding rates for asundexian in atrial fibrillation
RCT-IVVE trial: Do HF patients benefit from annual flu shots?
TRANSLATE-TIMI 70: Primary endpoint met but safety concerns for vupanorsen
Lipoprotein(a) slashed by 98% in APOLLO trial
Dietary intervention from your supermarket
Related Articles
June 15, 2022
Lipoprotein(a) slashed by 98% in APOLLO trial
June 15, 2022
POISE-3: Tranexamic acid for non-cardiac surgery
© 2024 Medicom Medical Publishers. All rights reserved. Terms and Conditions | Privacy Policy
HEAD OFFICE
Laarderhoogtweg 25
1101 EB Amsterdam
The Netherlands
T: +31 85 4012 560
E: publishers@medicom-publishers.com