Treatment for Angina Refractory to Medical Therapy
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Abstract
Enhanced external counterpulsation (EECP) is effective
in patients with angina refractory to medical therapy or
revascularization. However, as a noninvasive treatment
it should perhaps be considered the first-line treatment
with invasive revascularization reserved for EECP failures
or high-risk patients. The International EECP Patient
Registry was used to analyze a cohort of patients with
prior percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and/or
coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) (n = 4,454) compared
with a group of patients (PUMPERS) who were
candidates for PCI and/or CABG and chose EECP as their
initial revascularization treatment (n = 215). The PUMPERS
responded to treatment with EECP with decreased
anginal episodes and nitroglycerin use and with improvement
in their Canadian Cardiovascular Society
functional class, similarly to previously revascularized
patients. Treatment with EECP resulted in sustained, and
often progressive, reduction in angina over the succeeding
6 months. Given the findings of this study, it is interesting
to speculate on the possibility of using EECP as
the primary revascularization intervention after medical
therapy proves unsatisfactory.
Background
Enhanced external counterpulsation (EECP) has become
increasingly used as a noninvasive treatment option
for angina pectoris patients refractory to medical therapy
who are not candidates for revascularization. Patients
treated with EECP therapy have demonstrated an improvement
in Canadian Cardiovascular Society (CCS) functional
angina class, increased exercise tolerance, and a reduction
in nitroglycerin use. Objective measures of coronary ischemia
have demonstrated improved time to ST segment
depression, stress myocardial perfusion [1–4], PET scan
myocardial perfusion at rest and after dipyridamole [5].
These benefits have been demonstrated to be durable in
many patients for up to 5 years after treatment [6, 7].
EECP studies have demonstrated a greater improvement
in stress myocardial perfusion in patients with single-
or double-vessel disease or multiple conduits with
prior coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) compared to
patients with unrevascularized severe triple-vessel disease
[8, 9]. Also, patients undergoing EECP after prior CABG
demonstrate improvement equal to post-percutaneous
coronary intervention (PCI) patients. This is noted despite
the post-CABG patients having more extensive disease
and greater left ventricular dysfunction at the time of
EECP treatment [10]. These findings support an ‘openvessel
hypothesis’, i.e. that a patent vessel is necessary to
transmit the increased diastolic pressure and flow gener ated by
EECP to the distal coronary circulation and promote
the recruitment or development of collaterals.
Current health care policies usually limit reimbursement
for EECP to patients with angina refractory to medical
therapy who are not candidates for CABG or PCI. Because
of this, the patients currently selected for EECP treatment
tend to be those with extensive severe disease, a group
in which it has been historically hardest to show benefit.
There are no data evaluating the strategy of EECP used
as the primary revascularization (no prior CABG or PCI)
for patients with medically refractory angina. As an effective
and noninvasive treatment, EECP should perhaps be
considered prior to invasive revascularization procedures,
particularly in limited coronary disease with preserved
left ventricular function where the main benefit of
revascularization is angina relief and improved quality of
life.
Patients selecting EECP as primary revascularization,
often with limited coronary disease, may demonstrate a
greater benefit than the more commonly treated refractory
angina patient with extensive coronary artery disease.
The effect of EECP in decreasing oxidative stress, normalizing
endothelial dysfunction, and promoting favorable
remodeling may be particularly beneficial in the earlier
stages of atherosclerotic disease [11]. Less extensive disease
might favor collateral formation or recruitment as
per the patent-vessel hypothesis. It is also possible, however,
that the absence of the additional conduits provided
by prior CABG might limit the potential for distal transmission
of the increased pressure and flow generated by
EECP, thus limiting recruitment and development of collaterals.
Primary treatment with EECP might also, in a
fashion analogous to angioplasty compared to CABG,
lead to an increased infarct mortality when compared to
CABG due to fewer distal conduits and less well developed
collaterals resulting in larger infarcts.
The International EECP Patient Registry (IEPR) was
initiated in 1998 to determine the baseline characteristics,
safety and acute and long-term outcome of EECP therapy
in consecutive series of patients undergoing treatment for
chronic angina in a wide variety of clinical settings [12].
Patients are being followed for 3 years after a course of
treatment. As of July 2001 there were 89 clinical sites,
both in the United States and abroad that had enrolled
over 5,000 patients into the registry. While most patients
treated in the International EECP registry have angina
refractory to medical therapy and are not revascularization
candidates, the IEPR also includes patients who were
candidates for CABG and/or PCI and chose EECP as
their primary revascularization therapy. This subgroup of
patients were given the acronym ‘PUMPER’ representing
Primary Utilization to improve Myocardial Perfusion
with Enhanced external counterpulsation Revascularization,
and the effectiveness of this approach was analyzed
in the following report.
Results
Of the 4,454 patients in the registry suitable for analysis,
4,239 (95%) had undergone revascularization at some
time prior to EECP (non-PUMPER). Of those who had
previously undergone revascularization, 79.3% had prior
CABG, 75% had prior PCI, 54% had both. Only 16% of
these patients were considered suitable for further invasive
revascularization at the time of beginning EECP. In
contrast, 215 patients (5%) had no previous revascularization
(PUMPER), and were usually also considered suitable
either for CABG (90%) or PCI (70%) at the time of
beginning EECP. Demographics, medical history and risk
factors are shown in table 1. Both groups were composed
of predominantly white males with a mean age of 66.5
years for the non-PUMPER and 67.4 years for the
PUMPER. PUMPER were significantly more likely to be
nonwhite, had significantly fewer risk factors than the
non-PUMPER group, and had fewer concomitant conditions
such as congestive heart failure and diabetes. As
shown in table 1, the PUMPER group had coronary artery
disease of more recent onset

and less multivessel disease (52.0 vs. 78.2%, p ! 0.001).
PUMPER had less severe angina (class III/IV angina in
57.2 vs. 83.9%, p ! 0.001) and less nitroglycerin use (46.9
vs. 71.4%, p ! 0.001). Angina characteristics and nitroglycerin
use are summarized in table 1.
Patients underwent a mean treatment time of 34 h.
There was no significant difference in the course of treatment
completion rates of PUMPER versus non-PUMPER
(88.8 vs. 82.8%). The magnitude of the hemodynamic
effect produced by EECP was significantly higher in the
PUMPER group as assessed by the effectiveness ratio
[13], which is defined as the ratio of peak diastolic to systolic
pressure as measured by finger plethysmograph
(peak ratio at end of treatment 1.33 vs. 1.09, p ! 0.001).
Table 2 summarizes the details of the treatment and of
angina class and nitroglycerin use after treatment. Immediately
after treatment course completion, a reduction of
CCS angina class was seen in 75.0% of PUMPER vs.
72.7% of non-PUMPER, a nonsignificant difference. Episodes
of angina, nitroglycerin use and frequency of nitroglycerin
use were reduced substantially in both groups.
Six-month follow-up data were completed for 79.9% of
non-PUMPER and 76.7% of PUMPER. Table 3 summarizes
the angina characteristics and nitroglycerin use at 6
months. A significant difference was found in the proportion
of patients who had maintained their angina reduction.
For PUMPER, 89% reported angina that was less
than or the same as that immediately post-EECP, and

83.9% reported less angina than they had before EECP.
For the non-PUMPER group, the figures were 79.4 and
77.1% (p ! 0.01 and p ! 0.05, respectively). Adverse cardiac
events occurring both during the treatment period
and out to 6 months are shown in table 4. The frequency
of major events (death/myocardial infarction/CABG/
PCI) during the treatment period was very low for both
groups, and although higher during the 6 months’ followup
period (6.3% for PUMPER, 10.8% for non-PUMPER,
p = NS) was not significantly different between the two
groups. At 6 months, revascularization had been performed
in 6.1% of non-PUMPER and 5% of PUMPER.
Interestingly, the non-PUMPER group patients were
more likely to undergo PCI (4.2 vs. 0.6%, p ! 0.05) and
the PUMPER group was more likely to undergo CABG
(4.4 vs. 1.9%, p ! 0.05) despite the significantly higher
prevalence of multivessel coronary artery disease in the
non-PUMPER group. There was no significant difference
in the revascularization rates at 6 months despite 100% of
the PUMPER being candidates for revascularization versus
only 16% of the non-PUMPER. At the end of the 6-
month follow-up, myocardial infarctions (1.0 vs. 3.3%,
p ! 0.05) and hospitalizations (8.8 vs. 21.9%, p ! 0.001)
were significantly lower for the PUMPER group; mortality
was similar in both groups.
Discussion
Trials comparing medical versus surgical revascularization
for coronary artery disease have focused on survival.
Surgical revascularization has demonstrated benefit in the
patient with three-vessel disease and in one- or two-vessel
disease involving the proximal left anterior descending
artery. The greatest absolute reduction in mortality is seen
in patients with depressed left ventricular function. Those
patients with preserved left ventricular function and oneor
two-vessel disease not involving the left descending
anterior artery would be expected to demonstrate only a
marginal survival benefit from CABG. Extensive algorithms
have been developed using clinical and angiographic
variables to estimate surgical survival benefit, but are
consistent with little evidence of benefit in the low-risk (1%
annual mortality) patient [14]. Evidence-based survival
benefit from angioplasty is even more problematic.
In view of the above, EECP may have a role in the
patient who continues to have disabling angina refractory
to medical therapy but who, on the basis of limited coronary
artery disease and preserved left ventricular function,
would not be expected to show a mortality benefit
with surgery. It may also have a role in the patient who
does not wish to be exposed to the risks of CABG or PCI
(e.g., cognitive deficits, stroke, death, perioperative myocardial
infarction). Depending on its effectiveness in improving
myocardial perfusion, EECP revascularization
may also benefit patients in moderate or higher cardiac
risk groups. EECP is a noninvasive technique, potentially
widely accessible, and robust in its effectiveness in relieving
angina.Though there were initial concerns regarding the potential
for exacerbating peripheral arterial insufficiency,
precipitating heart failure, and in causing pulmonary emboli,
clinical follow-up of over 5,000 patients has shown
EECP to be safe and effective. Indeed, EECP has been
successfully used in patient groups at increased risk for
traditional revascularization (women, elderly including
patients 1100 years old [15], diabetics [16], end-stage
renal disease, depressed left ventricular function [17]).
While the PUMPER group would be expected, from
the clinical and angiographic information collected, to
have a lower annual cardiac mortality than the non-
PUMPER group, they are still largely a moderate-risk
group, and as such, they still may not represent the lowrisk
medically refractory patient who would demonstrate
the greatest benefit/risk from EECP. The comparison of
the PUMPER and non-PUMPER groups can, however,
provide information regarding the relative efficacy, durability
and morbidity and mortality of the two groups.
While PUMPERs demonstrated a significantly greater
hemodynamic effect from EECP during treatment, immediate
post-treatment benefits in angina reduction and
improvement in angina functional class were similar in
both groups. However, at 6 months’ follow-up the PUMPER
were found to be significantly more likely to maintain
or further reduce their angina (fig. 1). While no significant
differences were found in major adverse cardiac events between the groups,
there were significantly greater and
more durable relief of angina, less myocardial infarctions,
and fewer hospitalizations in the PUMPER group at 6
months. These findings may support there being a greater
success in revascularization in the PUMPER group,
which had less extensive coronary disease.
Conclusions
Previously unrevascularized angina patients who are
candidates for elective CABG or PCI respond to treatment
with EECP with decreased anginal episodes and
nitroglycerin use and with improvement in their CCS
functional class, similarly to previously revascularized
patients. Treatment with EECP resulted in sustained, and
often progressive, reduction in angina over the succeeding

6 months. It is interesting to speculate, given the findings
of this study, on the proper role of EECP in treating angina
patients. Should EECP, a noninvasive therapy, be used
as the primary ‘revascularization’ intervention after medical
therapy proves unsatisfactory? Does EECP ‘revascularization’
alter the risk of cardiac events and mortality
sufficiently to justify its use as an alternative in moderateor
high-risk patients? Or should EECP continue to be
reserved for patients refractory to medical therapy who
are poor candidates for surgical revascularization? While
the current study leaves these questions unanswered, it
will hopefully promote interest in the appropriately designed
study to test these questions. Long-term follow-up
will be performed on current study participants to evaluate
the duration of benefit and the impact on morbidity,
mortality and resource utilization associated with using
EECP as the initial treatment for angina.