The First and Final Answer: Left Internal Thoracic Artery-to-Left Anterior Descending Artery Bypass and the Reappraisal of Coronary Revascularization
Katsuhiko Oda, Makoto Takahashi, Ryuichi Taketomi, Kota Itagaki, Takehiro Sato, Shintaro KatahiraMedical intervention for ischemic heart disease began approximately 150 years ago with nitrates, and for nearly a century thereafter, little fundamental progress was made. With the advent of the left internal thoracic artery to the left anterior descending artery (LITA-LAD) bypass in the 1960s, treatment entered a new stage; however, its essential significance remained insufficiently recognized for many years. Numerous studies were subsequently conducted to evaluate alternative or parallel treatment strategies, but these investigations also helped bring the durable capacity of LITA-LAD to perfuse ischemic myocardium into sharper focus. Over the past quarter century, the treatment of ischemic heart disease has remained in a state of uncertainty, and its central prognostic foundation has often been obscured, although in recent years this uncertainty has begun to resolve. In this review, we reexamine the historical process by which the significance of LITA-LAD remained incompletely appreciated in parts of the cardiology and cardiac surgical communities. We further outline how the principal basis of the long-term prognostic benefit conferred by LITA-LAD gradually became evident and define the contemporary roles of medical therapy and percutaneous coronary intervention in relation to LITA-LAD-based coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG).