Venous coronary artery bypass grafting: late results of a 15-year actuarial follow-up in 486 patients.
Objective: The aim of this study was to clarify the long-term results of venous coronary artery bypass grafting in Japanese patients.
Methods: The study population included 492 patients who underwent venous coronary artery bypass procedures at the Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery of Juntendo University from January 1984 to December 1989. The great majority of patients, 420 of 492 (85.4%), were males, and the mean patient age was 61.1 years (range: 32-82 years). The disease conditions included single-vessel disease in 32 patients (6.5%), double-vessel disease in 111 patients (22.6%), triple-vessel disease in 251 patients (51.2%), and 50% or more stenosis of the left main coronary artery in 98 patients (19.9%). A mean of 2.4 grafts was used per patient.
Results: The 15-year survival rate was 57.7%. The 15-year actuarial cardiac survival and cardiac event-free survival were 81.3% and 51.3%, respectively. The 15-year actuarial freedom from reoperation and myocardial infarction were 87.5% and 92.1%, respectively. Of 192 patients who died during the follow-up period, 62 deaths were due to cardiac causes (32.3%), 43 were due to malignant neoplasms (22.4%), and 25 were due to cerebral vascular accidents (13.0%).
Conclusions: The prognosis of Japanese patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting may therefore be more favorable than that of Western patients. In addition, diabetes mellitus was an independent risk factor for both cardiac death and cardiac events.