Coronary Flow Capacity to Identify Stenosis Associated With Coronary Flow Improvement After Revascularization: A Combined Analysis From DEFINE FLOW and IDEAL

Author:

Murai Tadashi1ORCID,Stegehuis Valérie E.1,van de Hoef Tim P.1,Wijntjens Gilbert W. M.1,Hoshino Masahiro2,Kanaji Yoshihisa2,Sugiyama Tomoyo2,Hamaya Rikuta2,Nijjer Sukhjinder S.3,de Waard Guus A.4,Echavarria‐Pinto Mauro5,Knaapen Paul4,Meuwissen Martijn6,Davies Justin E.3,van Royen Niels7,Escaned Javier8,Siebes Maria9ORCID,Kirkeeide Richard L.10,Gould K. Lance10,Johnson Nils P.10ORCID,Piek Jan J.1ORCID,Kakuta Tsunekazu2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Heart Center Amsterdam UMC Amsterdam The Netherlands

2. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine Tsuchiura Kyodo General Hospital Tsuchiura Ibaraki Japan

3. Department of Cardiology Hammersmith Hospital Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust London United Kingdom

4. Department of Cardiology Nuclear Medicine & PET Research Amsterdam UMCVrije Universiteit Amsterdam The Netherlands

5. Department of Cardiology Hospital General ISSSTE Querétaro México

6. Department of Cardiology Amphia Hospital Breda The Netherlands

7. Department of Cardiology Radboud University Medical Center Nijmegen The Netherlands

8. Department of Cardiology Hospital Clinico San Carlos IDISSC, and Universidad Complutense de Madrid Madrid Spain

9. Department of Biomedical Engineering and Physics Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences Amsterdam UMC University of Amsterdam The Netherlands

10. Division of Cardiology Department of Medicine Weatherhead PET Imaging Center University of Texas Medical School and Memorial Hermann Hospital Houston TX

Abstract

Background Coronary flow capacity (CFC), which is a categorical assessment based on the combination of hyperemic coronary flow and coronary flow reserve (CFR), has been introduced as a comprehensive assessment of the coronary circulation to overcome the limitations of CFR alone. The aim of this study was to quantify coronary flow changes after percutaneous coronary intervention in relation to the classification of CFC and the current physiological cutoff values of fractional flow reserve, instantaneous wave‐free ratio, and CFR. Methods and Results Using the combined data set from DEFINE FLOW (Distal Evaluation of Functional Performance With Intravascular Sensors to Assess the Narrowing Effect ‐Combined Pressure and Doppler FLOW Velocity Measurements) and IDEAL (Iberian‐Dutch‐English), a total of 133 vessels that underwent intracoronary Doppler flow measurement before and after percutaneous coronary intervention were analyzed. CFC classified prerevascularization lesions as normal (14), mildly reduced (40), moderately reduced (31), and severely reduced (48). Lesions with larger impairment of CFC showed greater increase in coronary flow and vice versa (median percent increase in coronary flow by revascularization: 4.2%, 25.9%, 50.1%, and 145.5%, respectively; P <0.001). Compared with the conventional cutoff values of fractional flow reserve, instantaneous wave‐free ratio, and CFR, an ischemic CFC defined as moderately to severely reduced CFC showed higher diagnostic accuracy with higher specificity to predict a >50% increase in coronary flow after percutaneous coronary intervention. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis demonstrated that only CFC has a superior predictive efficacy to CFR ( P <0.05). Multivariate analysis revealed lesions with ischemic CFC to be the independent predictor of a significant coronary flow increase after percutaneous coronary intervention (odds ratio, 10.7; 95% CI, 4.6–24.8; P <0.001). Conclusions CFC showed significant improvement of identification of lesions that benefit from revascularization compared with CFR with respect to coronary flow increase. Registration URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov ; Unique identifier: NCT02328820.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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