Angiography-derived physiological patterns of coronary artery disease: implications with post-stenting physiology and long-term clinical outcomes
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Published:2024-08-05
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ISSN:1861-0684
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Container-title:Clinical Research in Cardiology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Clin Res Cardiol
Author:
Fezzi Simone, Del Sole Paolo Alberto, Burzotta Francesco, Leone Antonio Maria, Ding Daixin, Terentes-Printzios Dimitrios, Trani Carlo, Bonizzi Luca, Sgreva Sara, Andreaggi Stefano, Huang Jiayue, Pesarini Gabriele, Tavella Domenico, Prado Guy, Vicerè Andrea, Oikonomou Dimitrios, Gkini Konstantia Paraskevi, Galante Domenico, Tsioufis Konstantinos, Vlachopoulos Charalambos, Wijns William, Ribichini Flavio, Tu Shengxian, Scarsini RobertoORCID
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Physiological patterns of coronary artery disease (CAD) have emerged as potential determinants of functional results of percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI) and of vessel-oriented clinical outcomes (VOCE).
Objectives
In this study, we evaluated the impact of angiography-derived physiological patterns of CAD on post-PCI functional results and long-term clinical outcomes.
Methods
Pre-PCI angiography-derived fractional flow reserve (FFR) virtual pullbacks were quantitatively interpreted and used to determine the physiological patterns of CAD. Suboptimal post-PCI physiology was defined as an angiography-derived FFR value ≤ 0.91. The primary endpoint was the occurrence of VOCE at the longest available follow-up.
Results
Six hundred fifteen lesions from 516 patients were stratified into predominantly focal (n = 322, 52.3%) and predominantly diffuse (n = 293, 47.7%). Diffuse pattern of CAD was associated with lower post-PCI angiography-derived FFR values (0.91 ± 0.05 vs. 0.94 ± 0.05; p = 0.001) and larger rate of suboptimal post-PCI physiology (43.0 vs. 22.7%; p = 0.001), as compared to focal CAD. At the median follow-up time of 37 months (33–58), post-PCI suboptimal physiology was related to a higher risk of VOCE (16.2% vs. 7.6%; HR: 2.311; 95% CI 1.410–3.794; p = 0.0009), while no significant difference was noted according to baseline physiological pattern. In diffuse disease, the use of intracoronary imaging was associated with a lower incidence of long-term VOCE (5.1% vs 14.8%; HR: 0.313, 95% CI 0.167–0.614, p = 0.030).
Conclusions
Suboptimal post-PCI physiology is observed more often in diffusely diseased arteries and it is associated with higher risk of VOCE at follow-up. The use of intravascular imaging might improve clinical outcomes in the setting of diffuse CAD.
Funder
Science Foundation Ireland Research Professorship Award Università degli Studi di Verona
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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