One-year results of the ICON (ionic versus non-ionic contrast to obviate worsening nephropathy after angioplasty in chronic renal failure patients) Study

  • Gennaro Giustino
  • , Usman Baber
  • , Ioannis Mastoris
  • , Georgios J. Vlachojannis
  • , Jennifer Yu
  • , Paul S. Teirstein
  • , William E. Downey
  • , Wayne B. Batchelor
  • , Peter J. Casterella
  • , Eugenia Nikolsky
  • , S. Chiu Wong
  • , Kleanthis N. Theodoropoulos
  • , George D. Dangas
  • , Roxana Mehran

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background Long-term clinical outcomes after exposure to non-ionic iso-osmolar contrast medium (IOCM) or ionic low-osmolar CM (LOCM) in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) undergoing coronary angiography are unclear. Methods The ICON trial was a prospective, double-blinded, multicentre study that randomly assigned 146 patients with CKD undergoing coronary angiography with or without percutaneous coronary intervention to the non-ionic IOCM Iodixanol or the ionic LOCM Ioxaglate. We report the 1-year clinical outcomes. Results After randomization, baseline and procedural characteristics were well-matched between the two groups. At 1 year, three deaths (4.1%) occurred in the ioxaglate and nine deaths in the iodixanol group (13.6%, P = 0.07). The cardiac death rate at 1 year was 2.7% in the ioxaglate group and 9.1% in the iodixanol group (P = 0.07). There were no significant differences in the rates of myocardial infarction (1.4% vs. 1.5%; P = 1.00) and repeated revascularization (6.8% vs. 9.1%; P = 0.75). Conclusions The use of ionic LOCM ioxaglate was associated with a numerically lower mortality at 1 year as compared to iodixanol in patients who underwent cardiac catheterization. Future studies evaluating long-term safety following exposure to different types of CM are warranted.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)703-709
Number of pages7
JournalCatheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions
Volume87
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Mar 2016

Keywords

  • contrast media
  • contrast-induced nephropathy
  • iodixanol
  • ioxaglate
  • iso-osmolar
  • low-osmolar

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