Expert Commentary

VIDEO: Did the PROMISE trial keep its promise?


 

AT ACC 15

References

SAN DIEGO – Patients with new-onset, stable chest pain account for millions of stress tests annually in the United States, but randomized data are limited on which test is best and the impact of testing on clinical outcomes.

Results from the prospective PROMISE trial, presented at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology, show there is no Holy Grail testing strategy. First-line testing with CT angiography did not reduce hard clinical events compared with functional testing, but did cut the number of patients undergoing an invasive catheterization showing no obstructive coronary artery disease.

Listen here for our interview with ACC president Dr. Patrick O’Gara on how these results will impact patient care and potentially influence current guideline recommendations.

Dr. O’Gara reported no relevant financial conflicts.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

pwendling@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

Fitter veterans have 35% lower health care costs
MDedge Internal Medicine
Tide turns in favor of multivessel PCI in STEMI
MDedge Internal Medicine
More coronary artery calcification seen with sedentary behavior
MDedge Internal Medicine
Hot flashes in younger women may signal cardiac risk
MDedge Internal Medicine
CT scans comparable to functional testing for CAD
MDedge Internal Medicine
VIDEO: Growing evidence supports prolonged DAPT for ACS
MDedge Internal Medicine
Long-term DAPT offers ongoing post-MI benefit
MDedge Internal Medicine
Evolocumab halved cardiovascular events in OSLER study
MDedge Internal Medicine
SCOT-HEART: CT angiography scores big in stable chest pain
MDedge Internal Medicine
PCI linked to higher rate of cardiovascular events than CABG
MDedge Internal Medicine