Cardiologia Croatica, Vol. 12 No. 1-2, 2017.
Original scientific paper
https://doi.org/10.15836/ccar2017.6
An Analysis of the Work of Croatian Invasive Cardiologic Laboratories between 2010 and 2014
Josip Lukenda
orcid.org/0000-0003-2740-1464
; University Hospital "Sveti Duh”, Zagreb, Croatia
Boris Starčević
; University Hospital Dubrava, Zagreb, Croatia
Edvard Galić
; University Hospital "Sveti Duh”, Zagreb, Croatia
Tomislav Krčmar
; University Hospital Centre "Sestre milosrdnice”, Zagreb, Croatia
Zrinka Biloglav
; University of Zagreb, School of Medicine, Andrija Štampar School of Public Health, Zagreb, Croatia
Abstract
With the advancements in interventional cardiology in the Republic of Croatia over the last two and a half decades, the goal of this study was to analyze the number and complexity of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) procedures in individual centers. Between 2010 and 2014, an average of 9,494 PCI procedures was performed annually in a total of 13 centers. Seven centers are classified as high-volume centers: the Magdalena Clinic with the highest number of PCI procedures performed annually, with an average annual increase of 6.2% (1545 to 1941 PCI over analyzed period), the University Hospital Centre (UHC) Zagreb with an average annual decrease of 1.8% in procedure numbers (1474 to 1308), UHC Rijeka with an average annual increase of 15.8% (1013 to 1632), University Hospital (UH) Dubrava with an average annual decrease of 5.7% (1153 to 905), and the UHC “Sestre milosrdnice” with an average annual increase of 2.3%; however this hospital experienced a decrease of procedures in the last year of period (1082 to 815). These are followed by the UHC Split with an average annual increase of 6.7% (662 to 821) and the UHC Osijek with an increase of 12.4% (677 to 905). Five centers are classified as medium-volume centers: the UH Merkur with an average annual decrease in PCI procedures of 3.7% (670 to 506), whereas the number of procedures increased in the rest of the medium-sized centers: in General Hospital (GH) Slavonski Brod by 29.1% annually (264 to 660), UH “Sveti Duh” by 7.5% annually (306 to 382), in the GH Zadar by as much as 70.5% annually (105 to 430), and in the GH Dubrovnik by 32.4% annually (84 to 232). In Croatia overall, the percentage of complex procedures on two or more vessels was 9.7%. It was highest in the UHC Rijeka (18.2%) and UH Dubrava (17.1%), followed by the GH Zadar (15.3%), UHC Split (11.0%), and the Magdalena Clinic (10.4%). The UHC Zagreb had a value similar to the national average (10.1%), as did the GH Dubrovnik (8.6%). Lower percentages of complex procedures were present in the UH “Sveti Duh” (7.9%), UHC “Sestre milosrdnice” (6.9%), and the GH Slavonski Brod (6.3%), whereas the lowest rate of complex procedures was found in the UHC Osijek (3.5%) and the UH Merkur (1.7%). With such advancements in coronary interventions and once the introduction of a registry of coronary interventions and certificates for centers and staff is completed, the next step in Croatia should be the introduction of a plethora of new procedures in patients with acquired or congenital structural heart diseases that are currently underdeveloped.
Keywords
Croatia; coronary angiography; percutaneous coronary interventions
Hrčak ID:
179869
URI
Publication date:
28.2.2017.
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