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Planka, RM; Herold, L; Glantschnig, T; Sommer, G; Pavek, J; Hatzl, S; Verheyen, N; Strohhofer, C; Gollmer, J; Kolesnik, E; Benedikt, M; Wallner, M; Zirlik, A; Toth-Gayor, G; von Lewinski, D.
Applying DanGer Shock Eligibility Criteria to a Real-World Cohort of Cardiogenic Shock Patients
CATHETER CARDIO INTE. 2025;
Doi: 10.1002/ccd.70239
Web of Science
PubMed
FullText
FullText_MUG
- Führende Autor*innen der Med Uni Graz
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Planka Raffaela Miriam
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von Lewinski Dirk
- Co-Autor*innen der Med Uni Graz
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Benedikt Martin
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Glantschnig Theresa
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Gollmer Johannes
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Hatzl Stefan
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Herold Lukas
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Kolesnik Ewald
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Strohhofer Christoph
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Toth-Gayor Gabor
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Verheyen Nicolas Dominik
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Wallner Markus
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Zirlik Andreas
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- Abstract:
- Background The DanGer Shock trial investigated the effects of adding a microaxial flow pump to guideline-recommended therapy in patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI)-related cardiogenic shock (CS), finding a lower all-cause mortality at 180 days in the intervention group.Methods DanGer Shock eligibility criteria were applied to the prospective single-center PREPARE CardShock registry, which consecutively enrolled 721 patients between April 2019 and August 2024 with advanced CS-classified as stages C to E according to the SCAI shock classification-who were on vasoactive medication and underwent cardiac catheterization.Results Among 721 patients in the registry, 384 (53.3%) had STEMI-related CS. Of those, 117 (30.5%) met DanGer Shock trial eligibility criteria, accounting for 16.2% of the registry cohort. Median age of the eligible patients was 68 years (interquartile range [IQR]: 58-78), and 62.4% were male, compared to 68 years (IQR: 60-76) and 79.2% in DanGer Shock. PREPRARE-CS DanGer Shock eligible patients had a higher median systolic blood pressure (SBP) (92 mmHG [78-107] vs. 83 mmHG, [72-91]) and higher median lactate levels (5.2 mmol/L [3.6-7.6] vs. 4.6 mmol/L [3.3-7.0]) at baseline, and were more frequently resuscitated (56.4% vs. 20.3%). Device use was 42.7% in eligible patients. Renal replacement therapy (RRT) was more frequent among trial participants (34.4% vs. 17.1%). The 180-day mortality rate among eligible patients was 71.8%, compared to 52.1% in trial participants.Conclusions Among STEMI-related CS patients in our cohort, only one-third met the DanGer Shock eligibility criteria. Consequently, trial outcomes may not be broadly applicable.
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AMICS
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cardiogenic shock
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MCS
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microaxial flow pump
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mortality
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STEMI-related CS