Coronary microevaginations characterize culprit plaques and their inflammatory microenvironment in a subtype of acute coronary syndrome with intact fibrous cap: results from the prospective translational OPTICO-ACS study

Author:

Seppelt Claudio12ORCID,Abdelwahed Youssef S12,Meteva Denitsa12,Nelles Gregor1ORCID,Stähli Barbara E1,Erbay Aslihan12ORCID,Kränkel Nicolle12ORCID,Sieronski Lara12ORCID,Skurk Carsten12ORCID,Haghikia Arash123ORCID,Sinning David1,Dreger Henryk24ORCID,Knebel Fabian245ORCID,Trippel Tobias D26,Krisper Maximilian6,Gerhardt Teresa123,Rai Himanshu789ORCID,Klotsche Jens10,Joner Michael27ORCID,Landmesser Ulf123ORCID,Leistner David M123

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiology, University Heart Centre Berlin and Charité University Medicine Berlin , Campus Benjamin-Franklin (CBF), Berlin 12203 , Germany

2. DZHK (German Centre for Cardiovascular Research) Partner Site Berlin , Berlin , Germany

3. Berlin Institute of Health (BIH) , 10117 Berlin , Germany

4. Department of Cardiology Campus Charité Mitte, Charité—Universitätsmedizin Berlin , Berlin , Germany

5. Department of Cardiology, Sana Klinikum Lichtenberg , Berlin , Germany

6. Department of Internal Medicine and Cardiology, Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin , Berlin 13353 , Germany

7. Department of Cardiology and ISAR Research Centre, German Heart Centre, Technical University Munich , Munich 80636 , Germany

8. Cardiovascular Research Institute Dublin, Imaging Core Lab, Mater Private Network , Dublin D07 YH66 , Ireland

9. School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences, RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences , Dublin D02 YN77 , Ireland

10. German Rheumatism Research Centre Berlin, and Institute for Social Medicine, Epidemiology and Health Economics, Charité University Medicine Berlin , Charité Mitte, Berlin 10117 , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Aims Coronary microevaginations (CMEs) represent an outward bulge of coronary plaques and have been introduced as a sign of adverse vascular remodelling following coronary device implantation. However, their role in atherosclerosis and plaque destabilization in the absence of coronary intervention is unknown. This study aimed to investigate CME as a novel feature of plaque vulnerability and to characterize its associated inflammatory cell–vessel–wall interactions. Methods and results A total of 557 patients from the translational OPTICO-ACS study programme underwent optical coherence tomography imaging of the culprit vessel and simultaneous immunophenotyping of the culprit lesion (CL). Two hundred and fifty-eight CLs had a ruptured fibrous cap (RFC) and one hundred had intact fibrous cap (IFC) acute coronary syndrome (ACS) as an underlying pathophysiology. CMEs were significantly more frequent in CL when compared with non-CL (25 vs. 4%, P < 0.001) and were more frequently observed in lesions with IFC-ACS when compared with RFC-ACS (55.0 vs. 12.7%, P < 0.001). CMEs were particularly prevalent in IFC-ACS-causing CLs independent of a coronary bifurcation (IFC-ICB) when compared with IFC-ACS with an association to a coronary bifurcation (IFC-ACB, 65.4 vs. 43.7%, P = 0.030). CME emerged as the strongest independent predictor of IFC-ICB (relative risk 3.36, 95% confidence interval 1.67–6.76, P = 0.001) by multivariable regression analysis. IFC-ICB demonstrated an enrichment of monocytes in both culprit blood analysis (culprit ratio: 1.1 ± 0.2 vs. 0.9 ± 0.2, P = 0.048) and aspirated culprit thrombi (326 ± 162 vs. 96 ± 87 cells/mm2, P = 0.017), while IFC-ACB confirmed the accumulation of CD4+ T cells, as recently described. Conclusion This study provides novel evidence for a pathophysiological involvement of CME in the development of IFC-ACS and provides first evidence for a distinct pathophysiological pathway for IFC-ICB, driven by CME-derived flow disturbances and inflammatory activation involving the innate immune system. Trial registration Registration of the study at clinicalTrials.gov (NCT03129503).

Funder

Berlin Institute of Health

German Centre for Cardiovascular Research

German Cardiac Society

Berlin Center for Translational Vascular Biomedicine

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

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

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