External validation of the PROGRESS‐CTO perforation risk score: Individual patient data pooled analysis of three registries

Author:

Simsek Bahadir1ORCID,Tajti Peter2ORCID,Carlino Mauro3ORCID,Ojeda Soledad4ORCID,Pan Manuel4,Rinfret Stephane5,Vemmou Evangelia6ORCID,Kostantinis Spyridon1ORCID,Nikolakopoulos Ilias6ORCID,Karacsonyi Judit1,Rempakos Athanasios1ORCID,Dens Joseph A.7,Agostoni Pierfrancesco8ORCID,Alaswad Khaldoon9,Megaly Michael10,Avran Alexandre11,Choi James W.12ORCID,Jaffer Farouc A.13ORCID,Doshi Darshan13,Karmpaliotis Dimitri14,Khatri Jaikirshan J.15ORCID,Knaapen Paul16ORCID,La Manna Alessio17,Spratt James C.18ORCID,Tanabe Masaki19,Walsh Simon20,Mastrodemos Olga C.1,Allana Salman1ORCID,Rangan Bavana V.1,Goktekin Omer21,Gorgulu Sevket22ORCID,Poommipanit Paul23,Kearney Kathleen E.24,Lombardi William L.24,Grantham J. Aaron25,Mashayekhi Kambis2627,Brilakis Emmanouil S.1ORCID,Azzalini Lorenzo24ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Minneapolis Heart Institute and Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation Minneapolis Minnesota USA

2. The Gottsegen National Cardiovascular Center Budapest Hungary

3. Interventional Cardiology Division, Cardio‐Thoracic‐Vascular Department San Raffaele Scientific Institute Milan Italy

4. Division of Interventional Cardiology, Reina Sofia Hospital, Maimonides Institute for Research in Biomedicine of Cordoba (IMIBIC) University of Cordoba Cordoba Spain

5. Emory Heart and Vascular Center Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta Georgia USA

6. Department of Internal Medicine Yale University School of Medicine New Haven Connecticut USA

7. Department of Cardiology Ziekenhuis Oost‐Limburg Genk Belgium

8. Hartcentrum Ziekenhuis Netwerk Antwerpen Middelheim Antwerp Belgium

9. Henry Ford Health System Detroit Michigan USA

10. Division of Cardiology Willis Knighton Heart Institute Shreveport Louisiana USA

11. Department of Interventional Cardiology Clinique Pasteur, Essey‐lès‐Nancy Toulouse France

12. Division of Cardiology Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas Texas USA

13. Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

14. Morristown Medical Center Morristown New Jersey USA

15. Cleveland Clinic Foundation Cleveland Ohio USA

16. Department of Cardiology VU University Medical Center Amsterdam the Netherlands

17. University of Catania Catania Italy

18. St. George's University Healthcare NHS Trust London UK

19. Department of Cardiology Nozaki Tokushukai Hospital Osaka Japan

20. Belfast Health Belfast UK

21. Division of Cardiology Memorial Bahcelievler Hospital Istanbul Turkey

22. Division of Cardiology Biruni University School of Medicine Istanbul Turkey

23. University Hospitals Cleveland Ohio USA

24. Division of Cardiology University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

25. Saint Luke's Mid America Heart Institute Kansas City Missouri USA

26. Division of Cardiology and Angiology II University Heart Center Freiburg ‐ Bad Krozingen Bad Krozingen Germany

27. Department for Internal Medicine and Cardiology Heart center Lahr Lahr Germany

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundCoronary artery perforation is one of the most feared and common complications of chronic total occlusion (CTO) percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI).MethodsTo assess the usefulness of the recently developed PROGRESS‐CTO (NCT02061436) perforation risk score in independent cohorts. Individual patient‐level data pooled analysis of three registries was performed.ResultsOf the 4566 patients who underwent CTO PCI at 25 centers, 196 (4.2%) had coronary artery perforation. Patients with perforations were older (69 ± 10 vs. 65 ± 10, p < 0.001), more likely to be women (19% vs. 13%, p = 0.009), more likely to have a history of prior coronary artery bypass graft (34% vs. 20%, p < 0.001), and unfavorable angiographic characteristics such as blunt stump (62% vs. 48%, p < 0.001), proximal cap ambiguity (52% vs. 34%, p < 0.001), and moderate‐severe calcification (60% vs. 49%, p = 0.002). Technical success was lower in patients with perforations (73% vs. 88%, p < 0.001). The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of the PROGRESS‐CTO perforation risk model was 0.76 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.72−0.79), with good calibration (Hosmer‐Lemeshow p = 0.97). We found that the CTO PCI perforation risk increased with higher PROGRESS‐CTO perforation scores: 0.3% (score 0), 2.3% (score 1), 3.1% (score 2), 5.5% (score 3), 7.5% (score 4), 14.6% (score 5).ConclusionGiven the good discriminative performance, calibration, and the ease of calculation, the PROGRESS‐CTO perforation score may facilitate assessment of the risk of perforation in patients undergoing CTO PCI.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine

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