Aim To analyze results of changing the management tactics in patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) in clinical practice from 2004 through 2018 expressed as improvement in prognosis.Material and methods Results of two observational studies were analyzed: ORACLE I (2004-2007), which included 1193 patients with ACS (mean age, 61.1±11.69 years; men, 63.3 %) and ORACLE II (2014-2017), which included 1652 patients from 4 vascular centers (mean age, 64.61±12.67 years; men, 62.3 %).Results Patients included into the ORACLE II study in 2014 were significantly older and the proportion of patients with diabetes mellitus was greater than in the ORACLE I study (14.7 and 22.6 %, respectively). After matching the groups by major clinical characteristics, it was found that introducing the invasive management tactics for ACS patients was associated with a reduced rate of all-cause death (from 8.2 to 6.1 % for one year), a tendency towards decreased number of coronary death cases (from 5.6 to 4.0 %), and a decrease in risk of recurrent coronary complications (from 17.4 to 7.7 %).Conclusion Implementing the vascular program statistically significantly decreased the total death rate for at least one-year observation in comparable patient groups.