Association between interventional cardiologist practice characteristics, CABG use, and clinical outcomes
Justin Blackman, Stephanie Quon, Darrel P Francis, James P Howard, Aaryan Dwivedi, Kevin Makasoff, Yousif Ahmad, Kanwal Kumar, Laura Arbour, Andrew D Krahn, Markus B SikkelAbstract
Objective
Quantify inter-operator variation in referred coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) following angiography and evaluate associations with practice patterns and long-term outcomes.
Methods
Observational study using administrative health data in British Columbia, Canada (2010–2024). Interventional cardiologist level CABG Rate was defined as the proportion of referred CABGs to total angiograms performed. Variation across Interventionalists was correlated with other practice characteristics. Among patients undergoing angiography followed by revascularization, associations between operator CABG Rate and all-cause mortality, major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), and repeat revascularization were evaluated using hierarchical Cox regression.
Results
Among 252,408 angiograms by 40 Interventionalists, CABG Rate varied 13-fold (2.03%–26.4%) and was not explained by hospital-level factors alone (ICC: 0.358; 95% CI: 0.054-0.621). Higher CABG Rates were associated with lower percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) utilization (R=–0.60;P<.001), lower PCI extensiveness (R=–0.52;P<.001), and lower procedural volume (R=–0.36;P=.022). In 73,603 first-time revascularized patients, CABG Rate was associated with reduced repeat revascularization (HR = 0.075;P<.001), without differences in mortality or MACE.
Conclusions
Referred CABG varies markedly between Interventionalists and reflects operator practice style. Higher CABG utilization is associated with more durable revascularization without impact on survival or MACE. Broader implementation of multidisciplinary Heart Teams may improve consistency of care.