Aims: The aim of this study was to determine the impact of bifurcation lesions on outcomes after primary percutaneous intervention (PCI) for acute myocardial infarction.
Methods and results: We retrospectively reviewed a single-centre database of 646 patients admitted for primary angioplasty within 12 hours after AMI. We compared baseline characteristics and outcomes between bifurcation and non-bifurcation lesions. Bifurcation lesions were found in 23% of patients. They predominantly involved the left anterior descending artery. Provisional T-stenting was used in 89.3% of patients (with stenting of the main branch in 82% and of both branches in 7.3%), side-branch protection in 54.6%, and final kissing balloon inflation in 33%. The procedural success rate was 92% for the main branch of bifurcation lesions compared with 93% for non-bifurcation lesions (P=0.65). Major adverse cardiac event (MACE) rates were comparable in the two groups: in-hospital MACE was 13.3% in the bifurcation group versus 11.4% in the non-bifurcation group (P=0.72), and the 1-year total MACE rate was 22.6% in the bifurcation group versus 19.5% in the non-bifurcation group (P=0.56).
Conclusions: Bifurcation lesions are common in patients with AMI. In a population with AMI, immediate and mid-term outcomes of primary PCI were similar in patients with and without bifurcation lesions.