Aims
A registry mandated by the European Society of Cardiology collects data on trends in interventional cardiology within Europe.
Special interest focuses on relative increases and ratios in new techniques and their distributions across Europe. We report
the data through 2004 and give an overview of the development of coronary interventions since the first data collection in
1992.
Methods and results
Questionnaires were distributed yearly to delegates of all national societies of cardiology represented in the European Society
of Cardiology. The goal was to collect the case numbers of all local institutions and operators. The overall numbers of coronary
angiographies increased from 1992 to 2004 from 684 000 to 2 238 000 (from 1250 to 3930 per million inhabitants). The respective
numbers for percutaneous coronary interventions (PCIs) and coronary stenting procedures increased from 184 000 to 885 000
(from 335 to 1550) and from 3000 to 770 000 (from 5 to 1350), respectively. Germany was the most active country with 712 000
angiographies (8600), 249 000 angioplasties (3000), and 200 000 stenting procedures (2400) in 2004. The indication has shifted
towards acute coronary syndromes, as demonstrated by rising rates of interventions for acute myocardial infarction over the
last decade. The procedures are more readily performed and perceived safer, as shown by increasing rate of "ad hoc" PCIs and
decreasing need for emergency coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). In 2004, the use of drug-eluting stents continued to
rise. However, an enormous variability is reported with the highest rate in Switzerland (70%). If the rate of progression
remains constant until 2010 the projected number of coronary angiographies will be over three million, and the number of PCIs
about 1.5 million with a stenting rate of almost 100%.
Conclusion
Interventional cardiology in Europe is ever expanding. New coronary revascularization procedures, alternative or complementary
to balloon angioplasty, have come and gone. Only stenting has stood the test of time and matured to the default technique.
Facilitated access to PCI, more complete and earlier detection of coronary artery disease promise continued growth of the
procedure despite the uncontested success of prevention.
Key words coronary angiography - PTCA - PCI - coronary interventions - coronary stent - registry