Rationale
The ACCRUE (Meta-Analysis of Cell-based CaRdiac stUdiEs) is the first prospectively declared collaborative multinational database including individual data of patients (IPD) with ischemic heart disease treated with cell therapy.
Objective
We analyzed the safety and efficacy of intracoronary cell therapy after acute myocardial infarction (AMI) including IPDs from 12 randomized trials (ASTAMI, Aalst, BOOST, BONAMI, CADUCEUS, FINCELL, REGENT, REPAIR-AMI, SCAMI, SWISS-AMI, TIME, LATE-TIME; n=1252).
Methods and Results
The primary endpoint was freedom from combined major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events (MACCE; including all-cause death, re-AMI, stroke, and target vessel revascularization). The secondary endpoint was freedom from hard clinical endpoints (death, re-AMI, or stroke), assessed with random-effects meta-analyses and Cox regressions for interactions. Secondary efficacy endpoints included changes in end-diastolic volume (ΔEDV), end-systolic volume (ΔESV), and ejection fraction (ΔEF), analyzed with random-effects meta-analyses and analysis of covariance. We reported weighted mean differences between cell therapy and control groups. No effect of cell therapy on MACCE (14.0% vs. 16.3%, hazard ratio 0.86, 95%CI: 0.63;1.18) or death (1.4% vs 2.1%) or death/re-AMI/stroke (2.9% vs 4.7%) was identified in comparison to controls. No change in ΔEF (mean difference: 0.96%, 95%CI: −0.2;2.1), ΔEDV, or ΔESV was observed compared to controls. These results were not influenced by anterior AMI location, reduced baseline EF, or the use of MRI for assessing left ventricular parameters.
Conclusions
This meta-analysis of IPD from randomized trials in patients with recent AMI revealed that intracoronary cell therapy provided no benefit, in terms of clinical events or changes in left ventricular function.