Outcome of patients with acute coronary syndrome in hospitals of different sizes. A report from the AMIS Plus Registry.


Autoria(s): Radovanovic, D.; Urban, P.; Simon, R.; Schmidli, M.; Maggiorini, M.; Rickli, H.; Stauffer, J.C.; Seifert, B.; Gutzwiller, F.; Erne, P.; AMIS Plus Investigators
Data(s)

29/05/2010

Resumo

To assess the impact of admission to different hospital types on early and 1-year outcomes in patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Between 1997 and 2009, 31 010 ACS patients from 76 Swiss hospitals were enrolled in the AMIS Plus registry. Large tertiary institutions with continuous (24 hour/7 day) cardiac catheterisation facilities were classified as type A hospitals, and all others as type B. For 1-year outcomes, a subgroup of patients admitted after 2005 were studied. Eleven type A hospitals admitted 15987 (52%) patients and 65 type B hospitals 15023 (48%) patients. Patients admitted into B hospitals were older, more frequently female, diabetic, hypertensive, had more severe comorbidities and more frequent non-ST segment elevation (NSTE)-ACS/unstable angina (UA). STE-ACS patients admitted into B hospitals received more thrombolysis, but less percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Crude in-hospital mortality and major adverse cardiac events (MACE) were higher in patients from B hospitals. Crude 1-year mortality of 3747 ACS patients followed up was higher in patients admitted into B hospitals, but no differences were found for MACE. After adjustment for age, risk factors, type of ACS and comorbidities, hospital type was not an independent predictor of in-hospital mortality, in-hospital MACE, 1-year MACE or mortality. Admission indicated a crude outcome in favour of hospitalisation during duty-hours while 1-year outcome could not document a significant effect. ACS patients admitted to smaller regional Swiss hospitals were older, had more severe comorbidities, more NSTE-ACS and received less intensive treatment compared with the patients initially admitted to large tertiary institutions. However, hospital type was not an independent predictor of early and mid-term outcomes in these patients. Furthermore, our data suggest that Swiss hospitals have been functioning as an efficient network for the past 12 years.

Identificador

https://serval.unil.ch/notice/serval:BIB_234BB589F839

info:pmid:20407959

https://serval.unil.ch/resource/serval:BIB_234BB589F839.P001/REF

http://nbn-resolving.org/urn/resolver.pl?urn=urn:nbn:ch:serval-BIB_234BB589F8396

urn:nbn:ch:serval-BIB_234BB589F8396

Idioma(s)

eng

Fonte

Swiss medical weekly14021-22314-322

Palavras-Chave #Acute Coronary Syndrome/mortality; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Female; Health Facility Size; Hospital Mortality; Hospitals/classification; Humans; Inpatients; Male; Middle Aged; Outcome Assessment (Health Care); Registries; Survival; Switzerland/epidemiology
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article

Contribuinte(s)

AMIS Plus Investigators

Hess, F.

Simon, R.

Hangartner, P.J.

Lessing, P.

Hufschmid, U.

Hunziker, P.

Grädel, C.

Schönfelder, A.

Windecker, S.

Schläpfer, H.

Evéquoz, D.

Vögele, A.

Ryser, D.

Müller, P.

Jecker, R.

Niedermaier, G.

Droll, A.

Hongler, T.

Stäuble, S.

Haarer, J.

Schmid, H.P.

Quartenoud, B.

Bietenhard, K.

Gaspoz, J.M.

Keller, P.F.

Wojtyna, W.

Oertli, B.

Schönenberger, R.

Simonin, C.

Waldburger, R.

Schmidli, M.

Weiss, E.M.

Marty, H.

Zender, H.

Steffen, C.

Hugi, A.

Koltai, E.

Pedrazzini, G.

Erne, P.

Luterbacher, T.

Jordan, B.

Pagnamenta, A.

Urban, P.

Feraud, P.

Beretta, E.

Stettler, C.

Repond, F.

Widmer, F.

Lusser, H.

Polikar, R.

Bassetti, S.

Iselin, H.U.

Giger, M.

Egger, P.

Kaeslin, T.

Frey, R.

Herren, T.

Eichhorn, P.

Neumeier, C.

Grêt, A.

Schöneneberger, R.

Rickli, H.

Yoon, S.

Loretan, P.

Stoller, U.

Veragut, U.P.

Bächli, E.

Weber, A.

Federspiel, B.

Weisskopf, M.

Schmidt, D.

Hellermann, J.

Graber, M.

Haller, A.

Peter, M.

Gasser, S.

Siegrist, P.

Fatio, R.

Vogt, M.

Ramsay, D.

Bertel, O.

Maggiorini, M.

Eberli, F.

Christen, S.

Formato

application/pdf

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

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