Aims: This study aimed to examine the strategy of hybrid percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) -bare metal stent (BMS) and drug-eluting stent (DES)- versus exclusive DES implantation for patients undergoing multivessel PCI.
Methods and results: A cohort of 2,065 patients who underwent PCI (698 hybrid, 1,367 exclusive DES) were followed clinically up to one year. The primary outcome was target vessel revascularisation-major adverse cardiac events (TVR-MACE). Patients presenting with cardiogenic shock, anaemia (haematocrit <25), and bypass graft PCI were excluded. Only patients with ≥ 2 stents in two different lesions were analysed for this study. Baseline and procedural characteristics were similar. Major in-hospital complications and subacute stent thrombosis rates were similar. At one year, there was no difference in TVR-MACE (hybrid 17.2% vs. DES 14.6%, p=0.128). On multivariable analysis, hybrid PCI was not a predictor of TVR-MACE. The strongest predictors of TVR-MACE at one year were hypertension and African American race. Cumulative stent thrombosis rates at one year were similar in both groups.
Conclusions: Patients who undergo hybrid PCI have similar composite in-hospital and 1-year outcomes as those who undergo exclusive DES PCI. The hybrid stent approach should be considered for patients with multivessel PCI since it can lower the procedure cost without increasing adverse events.