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Original article

Minimally invasive coronary artery bypass (MICS CABG) in Bosnia and Herzegovina: a single centre, single surgeon cohort experience

Authors
  • Nermir Granov orcid logo (University of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Clinical Centre, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Armin Šljivo (University of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Clinical Centre, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Ermina Mujičić (University of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Clinical Centre, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Damir Rebić (University of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Clinical Centre, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Alen Džubur (University of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Clinical Centre, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Edin Begić (General Hospital “Prim. Dr Abdulah Nakaš“, Sarajevo, Department of Cardiology, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Tarik Selimović (University of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Clinical Centre , Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Zlatan Zvizdić (University of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Clinical Centre, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Almir Fajkić (University of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, School of Medicine, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Asmir Jonuzi (University of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Clinical Centre, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Edin Kabil (University of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Clinical Centre , Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Slavenka Štraus (University of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Clinical Centre, Bosnia and Herzegovina)

Abstract

Aim: This is the first research in Bosnia and Herzegovina presenting minimally invasive coronary artery bypass grafting surgery (MICS CABG) experience, advantages, and outcomes as compared to conventional surgery (OPEN CABG).

Methods: This retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted between January 2019 and November 2022 and included patients with indication for surgical revascularization.

Results: Among 237 patients, males predominated, 182 (76.7%), with a mean body mass index (BMI) of 28.4±3.9, median The Society of Thoracic Surgery Risk (STS) score of 1.55 (0.8, 4.0), short term STS score of 11.2 (6.8, 23.7), mean age of 64.8±8.7 (ranging 41-83) years, 122 (51.4%) underwent OPEN CABG and 115 (48.6%) MICS CABG. MICS CABG took less time (p<0.001; OPEN 3.5±0.8h; MICS 2.8±0.8h) and needed less mechanical ventilation (p<0.001, OPEN 17.3±11.9h; MICS 13.0±12.5h) than OPEN CABG. Even though there was no difference in hospitalization length between groups (OPEN (7.5±3.2), MICS (7.1±4.0)), patients receiving MICS (2.9±1.5) spent less time in the ICU (p=0.0013) than OPEN CABG (3.6±2.8). OPEN CABG used also more blood derivatives, red blood cells (OPEN 292 vs MICS 55), plasma (OPEN 270 vs MICS 86) and platelets (OPEN 71 vs MICS 28).

Conclusion: Patients undergoing MICS CABG in Bosnia and Herzegovina had less mechanical ventilation hours and less ICU duration compared to OPEN CABG even though the hospitalization duration was very similar. MICS CABG takes less time to be conducted, has fewer CPRs postoperatively, uses less blood derivatives including red blood cells, plasma and platelets.

Keywords: cardiovascular diseases, cardiac surgical procedures, coronary artery disease

How to Cite:

Granov, N., Šljivo, A., Mujičić, E., Rebić, D., Džubur, A., Begić, E., Selimović, T., Zvizdić, Z., Fajkić, A., Jonuzi, A., Kabil, E. & Štraus, S., (2023) “Minimally invasive coronary artery bypass (MICS CABG) in Bosnia and Herzegovina: a single centre, single surgeon cohort experience”, Medicinski glasnik 20(2), 122-127. doi: https://doi.org/10.17392/1571-23

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Published on
2023-12-01

Peer Reviewed

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CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0