Heart Asia   /     Orbita trial implications in patients from developing nations

Description

“It’s good news” for developing countries where angioplasty as first line of treatment for ischaemic symptoms is not an option. “When angioplasty can not be offered as early on as in the developed countries, giving patients antianginal therapies is a very valid alternative”. Dr. Rasha Al-Lamee tells Heart Asia social media editor Robin Chung the implications of her unprecedented trial in more remote parts of the world. ORBITA is a blinded, multicentre randomised trial of percutaneous coronary intervention versus a placebo procedure for angina relief that was done at five study sites in the UK. Link to the original paper: http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(17)32714-9

Subtitle
“It’s good news” for deve...
Duration
23:37
Publishing date
2018-03-27 16:13
Link
http://feeds.bmj.com/~r/heartasia/podcasts/~3/RxL-21QiVoc/orbita-trial-implications-in-patients-from-developing-nations
Contributors
  BMJ talk medicine
author  
Enclosures
http://feeds.bmj.com/~r/heartasia/podcasts/~5/avxFdfuNHwI/420877596-bmjgroup-orbita-trial-implications-in-patients-from-developing-nations.mp3
audio/mpeg