CorrespondenceWe thank Drs Habib and Schwann for their careful and insightful review of our article demonstrating the long-term survival advantage of bilateral (BIMA) over single internal mammary artery in diabetics undergoing surgical revascularization.1 As the commentators note, there may well be a difference between insulin-dependent and non-insulin-dependent diabetics in clinical outcome. Indeed, recent results of the Synergy between PCI with Taxus and Cardiac Surgery (SYNTAX) trial show that percutaneous coronary intervention patients with insulin-dependent diabetes suffered a cardiac death rate of 12.5% compared with 4.5% with coronary artery bypass surgery, whereas the differences for patients requiring only oral hypogycemic agents were more modest, 11.5% versus 8.4%.2 It is therefore likely that insulin dependence represents a more severe form of the disease, which likely manifests a more severe form of cardiovascular sequellae. From a vascular perspective, the survival advantage of BIMA grafting would likely be more profound. However, the clinical question must also address whether or not the additional morbid burden of diabetes mellitus truncates the potential survival advantage of BIMA grafting. Although Puskas et al's 3 recent work corroborates very closely our findings in a more recent surgical experience, their data also did not permit them to distinguish between insulinand non-insulin-dependent diabetics. The commentators' reference to their work recently presented at the European Association of CardioThoracic Surgery meeting 4 is appreciated, but not directly relevant to this topic, because the second arterial graft in their work was a radial artery, which has a markedly different clinical and physiological behavior than that of an in situ internal mammary artery. In fact, the commentators' findings may even serve to emphasize the importance of internal mammary artery usage in diabetic patients. In short, despite reasonable speculation either way, the absence of data does not permit us to make any a priori assumptions regarding the application of our findings to these 2 subsets of diabetic patients.The commentators are certainly correct that the age-based subgroups in our Figure 2 1 are from propensity-matched groups but are not themselves specifically risk-adjusted. Unfortunately, the limitations of sample size did not permit effective or meaningful multiple propensity matching algorithms to address this issue. However, the important information that can reasonably be gleaned from the data available is that age >65 years per se should not be considered a contraindication to BIMA grafting in diabetic patients. This finding corroborates our experience with the general surgical population.
Broadly applied BITA compared with SITA grafting in propensity-matched patients provides enhanced long-term survival with no increase in operative mortality or morbidity for patients with normal and reduced EF. The expanded use of BITA grafting should be seriously considered.
When liberally applied, BIMA grafting ameliorates both the increased perioperative mortality in female patients and the reduced long-term survival of male patients, effectively reversing the negative influence of gender on both short- and long-term outcomes of CABG surgery.
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