News | Heart Failure | April 16, 2024

Around 10% of Deaths from Coronary Stenting, Balloon Angioplasty are Preventable

Complications during procedures only contributed to death in about 20% of cases

Complications during procedures only contributed to death in about 20% of cases

Getty Images


April 16, 2024 — Each year more than 500,000 Americans undergo percutaneous coronary intervention, or PCI, a minimally invasive procedure to unclog the arteries that feed the heart. 

While PCI, which includes both angioplasty and stenting, is one of the most common operations in the world, it does carry a small (about 1-2%) but significant risk of death. Around 10% of all deaths following percutaneous coronary intervention are potentially preventable, a study led by Michigan Medicine finds. 

The results are published in PLOS ONE. 

“Deaths in the hospital after PCI are rare and mostly occur in patients who arrive after a heart attack, especially if their cases involve shock,” said senior author Hitinder Gurm, M.B.B.S., chief medical officer at University of Michigan Health and medical director of the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Cardiovascular Consortium, or BMC2.

“The vast majority of deaths after PCI are unpreventable and related to patients’ underlying conditions for which they are undergoing the procedure. This is a stark change from the 1990s when the majority of deaths were traceable to procedural complications.”

The research team analyzed deaths after PCI occurring at 39 Michigan hospitals participating in BMC2 between 2012 and 2014. These hospitals use procedural and outcome data to inform quality projects to improve care and patient outcomes. 

Procedural complications contributed to 20% of the nearly 1,200 deaths reported during the study period. Just over one quarter of the patients who died were considered low risk, meaning a PCI-related mortality risk score estimated they had a 95% or greater chance of survival. 

Of the deaths that were considered preventable, 10.1% in total, angioplasty and stenting was deemed to be of low value and potentially avoidable nearly one third of the time. 

Researchers say the data suggests a need to focus on optimizing appropriateness of PCI to ensure providers are limiting rare, preventable deaths from this common procedure.

“Our data may help inform how cath labs conduct morbidity and mortality conferences, a common quality improvement practice at many hospitals, by focusing on patients with low predicted risk of mortality who subsequently experienced an adverse event,” said first author Francesco Moroni, M.D., fellow at the Robert M. Berne Cardiovascular Research Center at University of Virginia.

“Such a focus may be an effective method of identifying on periprocedural practices, as opposed to patient-related factors, that may have played a role in a patient’s adverse outcome.” 

For more information: https://www.uofmhealth.org/


Related Content

News | Cath Lab

Oct. 28, 2025 — Results from the first-of-its-kind randomized PROCTOR trial found that a strategy of saphenous vein ...

Home November 04, 2025
Home
News | Cath Lab

Oct. 27, 2025 — Results from the PREVUE-VALVE study suggest that there are currently at least 4.7 million people aged 65 ...

Home October 29, 2025
Home
News | Cath Lab

Oct. 25, 2025 — Medtronic plc has announced the launch of the Stedi Extra Support guidewire, designed to enhance ...

Home October 28, 2025
Home
News | Cath Lab

Oct. 27, 2025 — Elixir Medical, a developer of technologies to treat cardiovascular disease, has announced new clinical ...

Home October 28, 2025
Home
News | Cath Lab

Oct. 22, 2025 — Heartflow, Inc. has introduced Heartflow PCI Navigator, the newest addition to the Heartflow One ...

Home October 23, 2025
Home
News | Cath Lab

Oct. 15, 2025 — Stereotaxis recently announced it has obtained CE Mark in Europe and submitted a 510(k) application to ...

Home October 16, 2025
Home
News | Cath Lab

Oct. 7, 2025 — Medtronic has announced the full distribution of the Neuroguard IEP System (Neuroguard) after a ...

Home October 07, 2025
Home
News | Cath Lab

Sept. 22, 2025 — Nicklaus Children's Heart Institute in Miami, Florida, is now offering bedside transcatheter patent ...

Home September 23, 2025
Home
News | Cath Lab

Aug. 13, 2025 — A recent study published in the Journal of the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography & Interventions ...

Home August 13, 2025
Home
News | Cath Lab

May 1, 2025 – Analyses from the (Ergonomics in the Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory (ERGO-CATH) study show the ...

Home May 01, 2025
Home
Subscribe Now