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High-Risk Morphological and Physiological Coronary Disease Attributes as Outcome Markers After Medical Treatment and Revascularization

Authors
 Seokhun Yang  ;  Bon-Kwon Koo  ;  Doyeon Hwang  ;  Jinlong Zhang  ;  Masahiro Hoshino  ;  Joo Myung Lee  ;  Tadashi Murai  ;  Jiesuck Park  ;  Eun-Seok Shin  ;  Joon-Hyung Doh  ;  Chang-Wook Nam  ;  Jianan Wang  ;  Shaoliang Chen  ;  Nobuhiro Tanaka  ;  Hitoshi Matsuo  ;  Takashi Akasaka  ;  Hyuk-Jae Chang  ;  Tsunekazu Kakuta  ;  Jagat Narula 
Citation
 JACC-CARDIOVASCULAR IMAGING, Vol.14(10) : 1977-1989, 2021-10 
Journal Title
JACC-CARDIOVASCULAR IMAGING
ISSN
 1936-878X 
Issue Date
2021-10
MeSH
Coronary Angiography ; Coronary Artery Disease* / diagnostic imaging ; Coronary Artery Disease* / therapy ; Fractional Flow Reserve, Myocardial* ; Humans ; Percutaneous Coronary Intervention* / adverse effects ; Predictive Value of Tests
Keywords
atherosclerosis ; coronary artery disease ; fractional flow reserve ; lesion-specific ischemia ; plaque characteristics
Abstract
Objectives: This study sought to evaluate the prognostic impact of plaque morphology and coronary physiology on outcomes after medical treatment or percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI).

Background: Although fractional flow reserve (FFR) is currently best practice, morphological characteristics of coronary artery disease also contribute to outcomes.

Methods: A total of 872 vessels in 538 patients were evaluated by invasive FFR and coronary computed tomography angiography. High-risk attributes (HRA) were defined as high-risk physiological attribute (invasive FFR ≤0.8) and high-risk morphological attributes including: 1) local plaque burden (minimum lumen area <4 mm2 and plaque burden ≥70%); 2) adverse plaque characteristics ≥2; and 3) global plaque burden (total plaque volume ≥306.5 mm3 and percent atheroma volume ≥32.2%). The primary outcome was the composite of revascularization, myocardial infarction, or cardiac death at 5 years.

Results: The mean FFR was 0.88 ± 0.08, and PCI was performed in 239 vessels. The primary outcome occurred in 54 vessels (6.2%). All high-risk morphological attributes were associated with the increased risk of adverse outcomes after adjustment for FFR ≤0.8 and demonstrated direct prognostic effect not mediated by FFR ≤0.8. The 5-year event risk proportionally increased as the number of HRA increased (p for trend <0.001) with lower risk in the PCI group than the medical treatment group in vessels with 1 or 2 HRA (9.7% vs. 14.7%), but not in vessels with either 0 or ≥3 HRA. Of the vessels with pre-procedural FFR ≤0.8, ischemia relief by PCI (pre-PCI FFR ≤0.8 and post-PCI FFR >0.8) significantly reduced vessel-oriented composite outcome risk compared with medical treatment alone in vessels with 0 or 1 high-risk morphological attributes (hazard ratio: 0.33; 95% confidence interval: 0.12 to 0.93; p = 0.035), but the risk reduction was attenuated in vessels with ≥2 high-risk morphological attributes.

Conclusions: High-risk morphological attributes offered additive prognostic value to coronary physiology and may optimize selection of treatment strategies by adding to FFR-based risk predictions (CCTA-FFR Registry for Development of Comprehensive Risk Prediction Model; NCT04037163).
Full Text
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1936878X2100348X
DOI
10.1016/j.jcmg.2021.04.004
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Internal Medicine (내과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Chang, Hyuk-Jae(장혁재) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6139-7545
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/187834
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