Third-generation computed tomography angiography after coronary chronic total occlusion intervention in ruling out significant in-stent restenosis at long-term follow-up.
Lauri Mansikkaniemi, Juhani A Stewart, Juha Sinisalo, Petri Laine, Miia Holmström
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background. Invasive coronary angiography (ICA) is the gold standard in evaluating stent patency after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), but it carries a risk of potentially life-threatening complications. Third-generation coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) offers a non-invasive, safer follow-up method, but real-world data are lacking. This study evaluated the ability of CCTA to rule out in-stent restenosis (ISR) in long stents at long-term follow-up. Methods. This prospective, single-centre study (NCT06543641) included consecutive patients treated with PCI for coronary chronic total occlusion with long stents (left anterior descending coronary artery and right coronary artery ≥38 mm, left circumflex coronary artery ≥30 mm) in 2014-2019. All patients underwent third-generation dual-source CCTA. Patients with CCTA showing significant ISR, inconclusive results, or symptomatic native artery lesions underwent ICA. Results. The study included 45 patients (median age 67 (IQR 62-73) years, 87% males) with 47 stents (median length 51 mm, range 36-132 mm). CCTA ruled out significant ISR in 87% (n = 39) of the patients. CCTA indicated five ISRs and one inconclusive result in six (13%) patients, all of whom underwent ICA. Additionally, ICA was conducted for five patients due to a native artery lesion(s) on CCTA and angina. ICA showed significant stenosis in all six patients (100%) with ISR or inconclusive CCTA finding in the long stent. Conclusions. Third-generation CCTA could rule out significant ISR in a vast majority of cases (87%, n = 39) and without a risk of complications associated with ICA. CCTA provides a non-invasive, lower risk method for long-term revascularization follow-up.
期刊介绍:
The principal aim of Scandinavian Cardiovascular Journal is to promote cardiovascular research that crosses the borders between disciplines. The journal is a forum for the entire field of cardiovascular research, basic and clinical including:
• Cardiology - Interventional and non-invasive
• Cardiovascular epidemiology
• Cardiovascular anaesthesia and intensive care
• Cardiovascular surgery
• Cardiovascular radiology
• Clinical physiology
• Transplantation of thoracic organs