The IC Chat

The IC Chat

ORBITA CTO: The Sham-Controlled Trial That Shook CTO-PCI

19 min · 10 de may de 2026
portada del episodio ORBITA CTO: The Sham-Controlled Trial That Shook CTO-PCI

Descripción

In this episode host Ashish Pershad reviews the ORBITA CTO randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled trial that compared CTO-PCI to a placebo procedure, explaining the rigorous design, patient selection, masking methods, and statistical approach. Pershad summarizes the results showing significant symptom improvement with CTO-PCI, discusses clinical implications—blinding, careful case selection, and specialist referral—and outlines how this trial advances evidence for procedural interventions for patients with stable angina.

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episode The IC CHAT episode 17 —Is the MFP necessary for all HR-PCI cases? CHIP-BCIS answers this very question artwork

The IC CHAT episode 17 —Is the MFP necessary for all HR-PCI cases? CHIP-BCIS answers this very question

Host Dr. Ashish Pershad introduces IC Chat’s mission to help clinicians interpret evidence-based medicine and translate trial data into everyday patient care. In this episode he appraises the CHIP-BCIS-3 randomized trial (ACC 2026 / NEJM) comparing prophylactic microaxial flow pump (Impella) versus standard care in very high‑risk elective PCI patients. The trial enrolled patients with low LVEF and high SYNTAX/BCIS scores and used a hierarchical win‑ratio primary endpoint. Results showed no overall benefit for Impella and a concerning signal of increased cardiovascular mortality at two years in the device group, despite similar completeness of revascularization and low bleeding/vascular complication rates. Dr. Pershad discusses implications: avoid routine prophylactic Impella in elective high‑risk PCI, consider staged revascularization, and call for reappraisal of device use and approval processes to prioritize patient safety.

20 de abr de 202620 min