Abstract
The treatment of acute coronary occlusion with Primary PCI has been a major factor in improving outcomes of patients suffering STEMI in the last 15 years, and is the standard treatment for patients suffering STEMI in the UK.
Treatment is beneficial for patients presenting within 12 hours of the onset of symptoms, with the goal being opening of the occluded artery within 150 min of the call for help.
Opening of the occluded artery is typically completed with a drug-eluting stent followed by administration of antiplatelet medications for 12 months. Procedures are performed using the radial artery which is associated with improved outcomes compared to vascular access via the femoral artery.
Evidence is growing to support full revascularisation including the treatment of severe narrowing in other blood vessels as well as the culprit vessel.
There have been considerable developments in the last 15 years in the treatment of patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), including the widespread application of emergency primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PPCI). In this article, we are going to describe STEMI, its pathophysiology and advances in its management.
Diagnosis of STEMI
Criteria for the diagnosis of STEMI are:
Presentation with clinical symptoms consistent with an acute coronary syndrome (typically acute onset of chest pain) together with S-T segment elevation on ECG. ECG changes of Left Bundle Branch (LBBB) with additional criteria suggesting STEMI (Sgarbossa criteria) and Posterior STEMI may be included in this sub-heading as the treatment approach is similar; however, this needs to be correlated with patient symptoms.1,2 Recent ESC guidelines have also included other ECG criteria for consideration of urgent angiography.
3
Pathophysiology:
An ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) most commonly occurs when plaque rupture and thrombus formation results in complete occlusion of a major epicardial coronary vessel. STEMI is a life-threatening, time-sensitive emergency that must be diagnosed and treated promptly. This is because heart muscle starts to be lost once a coronary artery is occluded, and the sooner reperfusion therapy is delivered, the better the outcome for the patient. Nearly half of potentially salvageable myocardium may be permanently damaged within 1 hours (h) of the coronary artery being occluded, and two-thirds within 3 h. 4 The extent of myocardial damage may be affected by the presence of any collateral supply to the ischaemic territory from other coronary arteries.
History of emergency coronary reperfusion therapy:
Complete coronary occlusion causing STEMI was demonstrated more than 35 years ago using coronary angiography. 5 This resulted in clinical trials of ‘clot-busting’ (thrombolytic, fibrinolytic) and other drugs being undertaken to reopen the affected coronary arteries, and thereby limit myocardial damage. 6
During the 1980s and 1990s, the optimal means of achieving restoration of flow was to administer a fibrinolytic drug. The UK introduced a comprehensive system for delivering fibrinolysis following the publication of the National Service Framework (NSF) for Coronary Heart Disease in 2000. 7 However, whilst shown to be much more effective than placebo, fibrinolysis was not without its limitations. Around 30% of cases were unsuitable for fibrinolysis (e.g. because of high bleeding risk): failure of coronary reperfusion occurred in around 20% - 30%: and in a few (1.0%) it caused a haemorrhagic stroke. Even if the vessel was successfully reopened, the rate of re-occlusion, causing a further MI, was high.
Rationale behind primary percutaneous intervention (PPCI):
The above deficiencies in thrombolytic treatment led to attempts to improve outcomes through mechanical techniques as a means of restoring coronary flow (coronary angioplasty, thrombus extraction catheters, stenting), that are grouped under the overarching term ‘primary percutaneous coronary intervention’ (PPCI).
The use of percutaneous coronary angioplasty to treat narrowing and blockages in epicardial vessels dates back to the late 1970s. The first angioplasty was performed by Dr A Gruentziq in Sept 1977 on a patient with a left anterior descending artery (LAD) stenosis. Nine years later, Puel implanted the first (self-expanding) coronary stent and one year later, in 1987, Palmaz and Schatz presented the first balloon-expandable stent. Over the subsequent 33 years, stent technology has developed rapidly enabling the use of primary percutaneous intervention (PPCI) in the way we know it today.
Primary percutaneous coronary intervention VS thrombolysis:
Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) had been used by individual centres for the treatment of acute ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) for many years, but it was not until the DANAMI-2 and PRAGUE-2 trials, and the ensuing meta-analysis by Keeley et al. that PPCI became more widely acknowledged as the preferred method of reperfusion. These studies showed both a reduction in short term mortality (7% vs 9%, P 0.0002) and a combined endpoint of death, stroke and re-infarction (8% vs 14%, P 0.0003).8–10 While the evidence from these trials had demonstrated the superiority of PPCI over fibrinolysis, implementation in the UK at that time required major infrastructural and organisational changes, and an assessment of the cost-effectiveness and sustainability of a 24/7 PPCI reperfusion strategy assessment was needed.
PPCI guidelines and best practice
Like thrombolysis, studies had clearly shown that the effectiveness of PPCI as a reperfusion therapy is time-dependent. 10 Reflecting this evidence, the European Society of Cardiology and European Association of Cardiothoracic Surgery (ESC/EACTS) 2018 Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) guidelines give a class I recommendations with level of evidence A indication for treatment of STEMI patients with PPCI within 12 h, a I level of evidence C recommendation for PPCI beyond 12 h and lla level of evidence B recommendation for a routine primary PCI strategy in patients presenting late (12–48 h) after the onset of symptoms.3,11
As well as time from onset of symptoms, multiple studies have shown the importance of minimising the delay from the call for help to the opening of the occluded artery.

Flow chart showing STEMI timeline. FMC- First Medical contact. CTB-call to balloon time. DTB- Door to balloon time(after arrival at PPCI centre).
Implementation and assessment of effectiveness and feasibility of primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PPCI) in the UK:
To investigate the potential for PPCI to be delivered in England, from April 2005 to March 2006 the Department of Health undertook a feasibility study (National Infarct Angioplasty Project - NIAP). This was an observational study set up in collaboration with the British Cardiovascular Society (BCS) and BCIS to test the feasibility of developing angioplasty services as the initial treatment for STEMI across England. This study reported in 2008 and concluded that PPCI is both feasible and cost-effective and that it should become the treatment of choice for STEMI, provided it could be delivered in a timely fashion. 15 Central to this PPCI strategy is emergency access to specialist cardiac catheter laboratories and staff.
The issue of ‘timeliness’ formed a key part of this guideline. As a part of NIAP, an analysis of expected ambulance travel times was undertaken and estimated that approximately 95% of the population lived close enough to a PPCI centre for this to be their routine reperfusion treatment and that therefore around 5% might still require fibrinolysis.
Current UK PPCI services and performance
There has been a substantial improvement in PPCI services across the UK over the last two decades. During the third quarter of 2008, only 46% of those STEMI patients in the UK who received reperfusion treatment were being treated by PPCI, while the remaining 54% were treated with thrombolysis. Following the publication of the NIAP report in August 2008, there was a coordinated rollout of PPCI services in England. The use of primary angioplasty continued to increase between 2008 and 2011. By the second quarter of 2011, 94% of STEMI patients in England were being treated with PPCI. By 2017/18, 58 out of 98 NHS PCI hospitals/centres offered primary PCI for the emergency treatment of STEMI, 24/7 every day of the year, and a further ten linked to form hybrid services. The changes to treatment of STEMI treatment over time are illustrated in Table 1.
Changes to PPCI practice 2008-2018/19 based on yearly BCIS audits.
As described in the 2019 NICOR report; in the last 5 years, DTB times (hospital performance) have remained the same, but there has been a lengthening of CTB times implying that ambulance response times have become slower. The reasons for this deterioration in the pre-hospital phase are unclear and are being investigated at national level, but are likely to reflect the increasing pressures on the system as a whole and the ambulance service in particular
Key aspects of optimal STEMI treatment by PPCI:
Primary PCI has been the focus of many research studies in the last 20 years, resulting in improvements in all aspects of care as summarised below;
A. Institutional standards
Although PCI has been used as a mainstay of STEMI treatment for many years, BCIS published a formal standards/guidance document for PCI and PPCI in 2015:
A1. Institutional facilities
Two cardiac dedicated catheter laboratories are the minimum requirement for a PCI service undertaking emergency cases.
Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine archiving of images.
Physiological assessment facilities are needed in all interventional laboratories.
Radiation protection monitoring is mandatory
A2. Institutional volume
Minimum centre volume is 400 cases/year.
Minimum of three interventional cardiologists per centre.
PPCI centres should have at least two catheter laboratories and 24/7 provision of service for STEMI.
PPCI centres should perform an absolute minimum of 100 STEMI/PPCI cases/year 16
A3. Surgical cover
The AHA/ACC 2011 guidelines include a Class IIa recommendation for PPCI in hospitals without on-site surgery
In the UK the number and proportion of centres performing PCI without on-site surgery continue to increase year-on-year, and is now in the majority. About 40% of total UK PPCI cases are performed in non-surgical centres. Reassuringly two major trials Cardiovascular Patient Outcomes Research Team Trial (CPORT-E) and Massachusetts Hospitals with Cardiac Surgery On-Site and Community Hospitals without Cardiac Surgery On-Site (MASS COMM) published in 2012 and 2013 respectively showed no difference in safety and mortality between surgical and non-surgical sites.17,18
B. Patient preparation:
Wherever possible, patients undergoing PPCI need to be appropriately consented for the procedure. In some UK centres this is a verbal consent process, due to concerns about the validity of asking patients to sign standard consent forms whilst suffering an MI and after receiving opiate analgesia. This approach was validated as part of the HEAT study. 19 Patients need to be loaded with dual antiplatelet therapy as per STEMI guidelines. Patients who are unable to take oral medications (unwell, intubated ventilated or those with severe bystander CAD requiring urgent coronary bypass grafting) may need a period of bridging with an intravenous antiplatelet such as cangrelor or glycoprotein 2B3A inhibitors.
C. Vascular Access:
Accessing the heart from the upper limb is not new, having been originally done in 1929 by Dr Werner Forssmann who performed the first human cardiac catheterisation via a brachial vein. Dr Frank Mason Sones performed the first coronary catheterization through the brachial artery by the arterial cut-down technique in 1958. In 1989, 100 trans-radial angiography cases were reported by Lucien Campeau and the first radial intervention was done by Kiemeneij and Laarman in 1993. 20
In the early days of angiography and angioplasty, femoral artery access was the preferred vascular access. However, more recently the radial artery access has become the default procedural access route. The clinical advantages of the radial over femoral are mainly due to less access site bleeding. As the radial artery is small, superficial and easily compressible, bleeding complications associated with radial arterial access are rare. Its safety has been established in both STEMI21,22 as well as ACS.23,24 In STEMI patients there is also clear evidence of improved outcomes from the use of radial compared to femoral access. 25 In selective cases such as weak or absent radial pulses (following usage as a graft), tortuous radial or subclavian anatomy, or cardiogenic shock, femoral assess may be used as an alternative. The availability of ultrasound-guided access has reduced femoral related bleeding events and increased first-pass success 26 which may be helpful in cases like cardiogenic shock, where additional large-bore access may be required to insert mechanical support such as an Intra-aortic balloon pump (IABP) or Impella depending on availability in the centre.
According to current BCIS data, radial artery access has increased from just over 10% in 2004 to 87.2% in 2017–2018 for all cases and almost 86% of PPCI cases are performed through radial access. The current ESC and American guidelines have an IA recommendation for radial access in PPCI.
D. Choice of balloon or stent treatment in PPCI
Following vascular access, the Right or Left Infarct Related Artery (IRA) is intubated with respective guide catheters, the occlusion is crossed with a guidewire, pre-dilated with an angioplasty balloon and treated with the appropriate size (length and diameter) stent or drug-coated balloon.
There have been dramatic improvements in balloon and stent technology since angioplasty was started. The initial era of balloon angioplasty or POBA (1970–1980) was later replaced by the implantation of bare metal stents(BMS) (1980–1999), and finally by drug-eluting stents (1999 onwards) and drug-coated balloons (DCB). Geoffrey Hartzler in 1979 used the first balloon angioplasty and Cannon and Roubin in 1991 used the first stent to treat AMI. The downsides of POBA were acute vessel closure due to dissection or elastic recoil, and restenosis of coronary arteries from late vascular remodelling and neo-intimal proliferation. Elastic recoil occurred within minutes to hours in 5–10% of POBA cases and often led to severe complications, including acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and the need for emergency coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). This led to the development of metal scaffolds to reduce the risk of vessel recoil and restenosis. Initial self-expandable, and later FDA approved balloon-expandable bare-metal stents, were developed in the late 1980s and early 1990s. In 1993, two landmark trials, the Belgium Netherlands Stent Arterial Revascularization Therapies Study (BENESTENT) 27 and the North American Stent Restenosis Study (STRESS) 28 demonstrated the superiority of the bare-metal stents (BMS) over POBA. This established coronary stent implantation as an accepted standard of care for PCI and the FDA approved the use of stents to treat AMI (STEMI and NSTEMI) after failed balloon angioplasty. The use of coronary stents increased exponentially over the next few years and by 1999, stents were used in nearly 85% of PCI procedures. However, the medium and longer-term follow-up of BMS revealed in-stent restenosis (ISR) in 20–30% of cases, due to proliferation and migration of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) within the stents. ISR may be associated with significant morbidity and mortality, and drug-eluting stents (DES) were developed specifically to address the problems of ISR encountered with BMS. 29 Dr Eduardo Sousa in 1999 performed angioplasty using the first drug (sirolimus) eluting stent in a human coronary artery, and between 2002 and 2004 Cypher and Taxus stents were approved for use across Europe and the USA.30–32 From early 2000 onwards, the use of DES became the standard of care in all contemporary PCI procedures, with BMS reserved for high bleeding risk patients, or patients requiring short duration antiplatelet treatment for any other reason eg undergoing any urgent major surgical procedure. Since the development of new generation stents (including polymer-free stents) and drug-coated balloons, BMS are rarely used in the UK now.33,34 POBA may still be used in selected PPCI cases with severe bystander coronary disease to restore flow to the infarct artery as a bridge to emergency CABG. Given the success of DES, angioplasty balloons coated with drugs/drug-eluting balloons (DCB/DEB), have also been developed to treat small <2.5 mm diameter coronary arteries and any form of in-stent restenosis. 35 DEB-only treatment is also an option during PPCI, such as in patients with contra-indications to drug-eluting stents. 36
E. Primary Angioplasty and Antiplatelet/antithrombotic therapy
Periprocedural use of unfractionated heparin (UFH) is standard in PPCI cases to avoid the development of in situ thrombus in vessels and catheters (class IC recommendation by ESC 2017 STEMI guidelines). The use of Bivalirudin has been compared to UFH, but there was no evidence of benefit, so this medication is reserved for cases of Heparin allergy or Heparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia. 37
Dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) is recommended for 12 months after PPCI irrespective of stent type, while in patients at high ischaemic risk with low bleeding risk, DAPT may be extended beyond 12 months. 38 If dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) cannot be sustained beyond 1-month post-intervention, treatment with short-duration DAPT stents or other modalities such as POBA, DEB may be considered. 39 DAPT regimens tested in clinical trials for PPCI include Aspirin with Clopidogrel, Prasugel and Ticagrelor. Recent NICE guidance has recommended Prasugrel as the agent of first choice predominantly on the basis of safety and efficacy data and ease of use as a once daily drug.40–42
Some STEMI patients will have an additional indication for anticoagulation (usually Atrial Fibrillation). Multiple large RCTs have shown this cohort of patients now can safely be treated with an oral anticoagulant and two antiplatelet agents, followed by a period of anticoagulant with single antiplatelet.43–47 The current ESC 2020 guidelines recommend between 0–6 months of triple therapy based on individual patient ischaemic and bleeding risk, though durations of triple therapy of less than 3 months are more common in UK practice.
F - Adjunctive procedures and therapy in PPCI
In selective STEMI cases with a high thrombus burden, aspiration of thrombus with a catheter may be performed (thrombectomy) to improve coronary flow and reduce the risk of distal embolization. Recommended in the 2008 TAPAS study with 1027 STEMI patients, thrombus aspiration resulted in better reperfusion and clinical outcomes than conventional PCI, irrespective of clinical and angiographic characteristics at baseline. 48 However the TOTAL study (2015) of more than 10,000 patients with STEMI showed that routine thrombectomy, as compared with PCI alone, did not reduce the risk of cardiovascular death, recurrent myocardial infarction, cardiogenic shock, or NYHA class IV heart failure within 180 days but was associated with an increased rate of stroke within 30 days. 49 Current guidelines do not recommend routine use of thrombectomy (III level of evidence A), but it is reserved as a bailout in selective high-risk cases only.
Patients with a heavy thrombus burden are at risk of developing no-reflow in the culprit vessel, potentially due to embolization of clot into the coronary microcirculation, which is associated with poorer outcomes. 50 Whilst some small scale studies have suggested that additional treatment with agents including intracoronary nitrates, adenosine, calcium channel blocker (verapamil, diltiazem and nicardipine) or sodium nitroprusside could potentially improve flow, there is a paucity of clear randomised evidence in this area. 51
Those patients with previous bypass grafts presenting with STEMI due to an occluded graft are at high risk of no-reflow or distal embolization. Studies have indicated that an Embolic protection Device could help reduce this risk during PCI.52–54 ESC guidelines recommend embolic protection as II level of evidence B. In addition, direct stenting and smaller stent size in the graft vessel have been shown to reduce the risk of distal embolization. 55 Adjunctive use of adenosine could also help with no-reflow. 56
The use of intracoronary imaging has been proven to improve outcomes in elective PCI in a number of studies, but its routine use has not been proven in STEMI to date.57,58 Intracoronary imaging may be particularly helpful in selected cases to clarify the underlying pathology e.g. Spontaneous Coronary artery dissection (SCAD) or Myocardial Infarction in Non-Obstructive Coronary Arteries (MINOCA).
In STEMI patients presenting with MI complicated by shock, additional mechanical circulatory support may be required. The use of the Intra-Aortic Balloon Pump has been studied and found not to be of significant benefit. Randomised trials supporting the use of LV assist devices such as Impella are awaited.59–62
G. Deferred VS immediate PCI in STEMI patients
Several observational studies have suggested that deferred stenting (initial opening of the occluded vessel with a balloon followed by stenting after 24–72 h) was associated with higher rates of procedural success, higher 6-month left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), and lower rates of adverse events compared with immediate stenting.63–65 Recently, findings from new randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have shown inconsistent results compared to previous observational studies.66,67 A comparative meta-analysis showed that a deferred-stenting strategy did not reduce the occurrence of no-reflow or slow flow, death, MI, or repeat revascularization compared with immediate stenting in patients with STEMI, but did show improved LV function in the long term. Following this meta-analysis, the majority of vessels are treated with immediate stenting. 68
H. Single versus multivesse(MV)l PCI
Around 30%-40% of patients presenting with STEMI have significant bystander coronary artery disease (CAD). We know that the presence of significant disease in vessels other than the infarct-related artery (IRA) has an adverse prognosis following primary PCI. 69
Four major RCTs have shown a benefit of complete revascularization (performed immediately or staged) as compared with Infarct Related Artery (IRA) only PCI in patients with STEMI and multi vessl disease (MVD).70–74 The Complete Revascularisation with MV PCI for Myocardial infarction (COMPLETE) study was a much larger RCT than those previously undertaken to assess this issue. This study and previous meta-analysis of 10 trials has shown that complete revascularization is associated with a lower risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), due to a lower risk of urgent revascularization, with no significant difference in mortality.74,75 These studies support the concept of full revascularization, and this has now been adopted into modern practice.
In terms of optimal timing of complete revascularisation, the COMPLETE study showed no difference in outcomes whether the procedure was performed during the indexed hospital stay for STEMI or a staged admission within 45 days. Further studies are needed to clarify how clinicians can identify which lesions should be revascularized beyond the culprit lesion.
In patients with multi-vessel disease and AMI with cardiogenic shock, the CULPRIT-SHOCK trial showed that a strategy with PCI of the culprit lesion only with possible staged revascularization determined a lower 30 day and one year risk of the composite of all-cause mortality or severe renal failure compared with immediate multi-vessel PCI.76,77 In the light of Culprit- Shock trial, In the setting of cardiogenic shock, immediate MV PCI is not now recommended by ESC guidelines.
I. Thrombolysis/Thrombolysis facilitated PCI
In busy PPCI centres, multiple patients arriving at the same time may affect door-balloon times, and so outcomes for individual patients. In these infrequent situations, thrombolysis facilitated or pharmaco- invasive PCI strategy is a useful alternative. In this strategy, patients with a possible delay in CTB/DTB may receive a half dose of the thrombolytic agent to minimise myocardial damage prior to definitive PCI. Trials have shown this is a safe and effective second-line pathway which can be considered.78.79
J. Primary PCI in patients with out of hospital cardiac arrest (OOHCA):
CAD remains the leading cause of OOHCA. Where there is ST Elevation on the ECG in OOHCA patients, PPCI is the treatment of choice in PPCI centres in the UK. The ESC 2017 guidelines recommend performing immediate/emergent coronary angiography and angioplasty in survivors of OOHCA with ST-segment elevation on the ECG (I level of evidence B). These guidelines also advocate urgent angiography and PCI in patients without ST elevation but on-going ischaemia (IIaC). There are limited data to guide the treatment of OOHCA patients without ST Elevation after the return of spontaneous circulation and no clear ongoing ischaemia. Two recently published studies have not supported early angiography in patients without ST Elevation on their ECG..80–82
Secondary prevention treatment in STEMI patients:
In addition to PPCI and the antiplatelet medications described above, a number of other interventions are recommended in guidelines for STEMI patients. Modern PPCI services also ensure the delivery of these additional investigations, such as echocardiography to assess LV function, and treatments including statins, ACE inhibitors and aldosterone antagonists. A key post-MI therapy is Cardiac rehabilitation, which has some of the greatest benefits to patients of all MI treatments. Clinical trials have shown both physical and psychological benefits with areas of focus including health education, post MI stress management, sexual health, drivig advice and lifestyle changes after an MI. 83
Summary
The treatment of acute coronary occlusion with Primary PCI has been a major factor in improving outcomes of patients suffering STEMI in the last 15 years, and is the standard treatment for patients suffering STEMI in the UK.
Treatment is beneficial for patients presenting within 12 h of the onset of symptoms, with the goal being opening of the occluded artery within 150 min of the call for help.
Opening of the occluded artery is typically completed with a drug-eluting stent followed by administration of antiplatelet medications for 12 months. Procedures are performed using the radial artery which is associated with improved outcomes compared to vascular access via the femoral artery.
Evidence is growing to support full revascularisation including the treatment of severe narrowing in other blood vessels as well as the culprit vessel.
Footnotes
Declaration of conflicting interests
The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The author(s) received no financial support for the research, authorship and/or publication of this article.
