Sunwon Kim,Hyeong Soo Nam,Dong Oh Kang,Jeongmoo Han,Hyokee Kim,Joon Woo Song,Eun Jin Park,Ryeong Hyun Kim,Hyun Jung Kim,Jin Hyuk Kim,Sunki Lee,Young Su Kim,Pyoungjae Park,Man-Jong Baik,Hongki Yoo,Jin Won Kim
{"title":"冠状动脉内结构-分子成像用于高风险斑块的多靶点表征:首次用于人类的oct - film。","authors":"Sunwon Kim,Hyeong Soo Nam,Dong Oh Kang,Jeongmoo Han,Hyokee Kim,Joon Woo Song,Eun Jin Park,Ryeong Hyun Kim,Hyun Jung Kim,Jin Hyuk Kim,Sunki Lee,Young Su Kim,Pyoungjae Park,Man-Jong Baik,Hongki Yoo,Jin Won Kim","doi":"10.1001/jamacardio.2025.0928","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Importance\r\nFluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIm) is a molecular imaging technique used to visualize the biochemical composition of atherosclerosis. Novel dual-modal imaging using optical coherence tomography (OCT)-FLIm has the potential to provide both microstructural and biocompositional information on coronary plaques; however, it needs validation for clinical application.\r\n\r\nObjective\r\nTo investigate the clinical feasibility and safety of OCT-FLIm for characterizing plaque compositions in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) undergoing revascularization therapy.\r\n\r\nDesign, Setting, and Participants\r\nA prospective, open-label, single-center diagnostic feasibility study involving 40 patients with significant CAD requiring coronary revascularization. This first-in-human clinical study of the novel intracoronary OCT-FLIm imaging was conducted between February and August 2022. The analyses were performed from August 2022 to July 2023.\r\n\r\nInterventions\r\nAn OCT-FLIm system with 2.6-F catheters was constructed. All patients underwent OCT-FLIm for target/culprit and nontarget/nonculprit lesions during coronary revascularization. Intravascular ultrasound imaging was performed for comparison.\r\n\r\nMain Outcomes and Measures\r\nThe primary outcome was to assess the FLIm-derived molecular readouts of prespecified plaque compositions. The secondary outcome was the feasibility of OCT-FLIm in determining target/culprit plaque compositions across different subsets of atherosclerotic disease activity: (1) acute coronary syndrome (ACS) vs chronic stable angina (CSA) and (2) angiographic rapid disease progression vs nonprogressive controls.\r\n\r\nResults\r\nWe prospectively enrolled 40 patients (mean [SD] age, 63.1 [8.1] years; 32 men [80.0%]), of whom 20 presented with ACS and 20 with CSA. OCT provided the structural features of plaques, and FLIm characterized the molecular signatures of atheroma compositions, including macrophages, healed plaques, superficial calcification, and fibrosis, in a reproducible manner. Fluorescence lifetime (FL) values of the plaque compositions correlated with findings from prior autopsy studies. Plaque inflammation was significantly greater in patients with ACS than those with CSA. The mean (SD) of inflammation-FL was 7.59 (0.96) nanoseconds for patients with ACS vs 6.46 (0.87) nanoseconds for patients with CSA (P < .001). The healed plaque phenotype was more prominently distributed in the segments of rapid disease progression than in nonprogressive controls. The mean (SD) healed plaque-FL was 5.31 (0.20) nanoseconds for the rapidly progressive lesions vs 4.81 (0.30) nanoseconds for the rapidly nonprogressive lesions (P < .001). All patients underwent OCT-FLIm safely without adverse clinical events.\r\n\r\nConclusions and Relevance\r\nThis diagnostic feasibility study found that an OCT-FLIm structural-molecular intracoronary imaging is clinically feasible and safe for the comprehensive characterization of human atheromas, supporting its potential role in the diagnosis and biological understanding of high-risk plaques.","PeriodicalId":14657,"journal":{"name":"JAMA cardiology","volume":"26 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":14.8000,"publicationDate":"2025-05-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Intracoronary Structural-Molecular Imaging for Multitargeted Characterization of High-Risk Plaque: First-in-Human OCT-FLIm.\",\"authors\":\"Sunwon Kim,Hyeong Soo Nam,Dong Oh Kang,Jeongmoo Han,Hyokee Kim,Joon Woo Song,Eun Jin Park,Ryeong Hyun Kim,Hyun Jung Kim,Jin Hyuk Kim,Sunki Lee,Young Su Kim,Pyoungjae Park,Man-Jong Baik,Hongki Yoo,Jin Won Kim\",\"doi\":\"10.1001/jamacardio.2025.0928\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Importance\\r\\nFluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIm) is a molecular imaging technique used to visualize the biochemical composition of atherosclerosis. Novel dual-modal imaging using optical coherence tomography (OCT)-FLIm has the potential to provide both microstructural and biocompositional information on coronary plaques; however, it needs validation for clinical application.\\r\\n\\r\\nObjective\\r\\nTo investigate the clinical feasibility and safety of OCT-FLIm for characterizing plaque compositions in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) undergoing revascularization therapy.\\r\\n\\r\\nDesign, Setting, and Participants\\r\\nA prospective, open-label, single-center diagnostic feasibility study involving 40 patients with significant CAD requiring coronary revascularization. This first-in-human clinical study of the novel intracoronary OCT-FLIm imaging was conducted between February and August 2022. The analyses were performed from August 2022 to July 2023.\\r\\n\\r\\nInterventions\\r\\nAn OCT-FLIm system with 2.6-F catheters was constructed. All patients underwent OCT-FLIm for target/culprit and nontarget/nonculprit lesions during coronary revascularization. Intravascular ultrasound imaging was performed for comparison.\\r\\n\\r\\nMain Outcomes and Measures\\r\\nThe primary outcome was to assess the FLIm-derived molecular readouts of prespecified plaque compositions. The secondary outcome was the feasibility of OCT-FLIm in determining target/culprit plaque compositions across different subsets of atherosclerotic disease activity: (1) acute coronary syndrome (ACS) vs chronic stable angina (CSA) and (2) angiographic rapid disease progression vs nonprogressive controls.\\r\\n\\r\\nResults\\r\\nWe prospectively enrolled 40 patients (mean [SD] age, 63.1 [8.1] years; 32 men [80.0%]), of whom 20 presented with ACS and 20 with CSA. OCT provided the structural features of plaques, and FLIm characterized the molecular signatures of atheroma compositions, including macrophages, healed plaques, superficial calcification, and fibrosis, in a reproducible manner. Fluorescence lifetime (FL) values of the plaque compositions correlated with findings from prior autopsy studies. Plaque inflammation was significantly greater in patients with ACS than those with CSA. The mean (SD) of inflammation-FL was 7.59 (0.96) nanoseconds for patients with ACS vs 6.46 (0.87) nanoseconds for patients with CSA (P < .001). The healed plaque phenotype was more prominently distributed in the segments of rapid disease progression than in nonprogressive controls. The mean (SD) healed plaque-FL was 5.31 (0.20) nanoseconds for the rapidly progressive lesions vs 4.81 (0.30) nanoseconds for the rapidly nonprogressive lesions (P < .001). 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Intracoronary Structural-Molecular Imaging for Multitargeted Characterization of High-Risk Plaque: First-in-Human OCT-FLIm.
Importance
Fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIm) is a molecular imaging technique used to visualize the biochemical composition of atherosclerosis. Novel dual-modal imaging using optical coherence tomography (OCT)-FLIm has the potential to provide both microstructural and biocompositional information on coronary plaques; however, it needs validation for clinical application.
Objective
To investigate the clinical feasibility and safety of OCT-FLIm for characterizing plaque compositions in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) undergoing revascularization therapy.
Design, Setting, and Participants
A prospective, open-label, single-center diagnostic feasibility study involving 40 patients with significant CAD requiring coronary revascularization. This first-in-human clinical study of the novel intracoronary OCT-FLIm imaging was conducted between February and August 2022. The analyses were performed from August 2022 to July 2023.
Interventions
An OCT-FLIm system with 2.6-F catheters was constructed. All patients underwent OCT-FLIm for target/culprit and nontarget/nonculprit lesions during coronary revascularization. Intravascular ultrasound imaging was performed for comparison.
Main Outcomes and Measures
The primary outcome was to assess the FLIm-derived molecular readouts of prespecified plaque compositions. The secondary outcome was the feasibility of OCT-FLIm in determining target/culprit plaque compositions across different subsets of atherosclerotic disease activity: (1) acute coronary syndrome (ACS) vs chronic stable angina (CSA) and (2) angiographic rapid disease progression vs nonprogressive controls.
Results
We prospectively enrolled 40 patients (mean [SD] age, 63.1 [8.1] years; 32 men [80.0%]), of whom 20 presented with ACS and 20 with CSA. OCT provided the structural features of plaques, and FLIm characterized the molecular signatures of atheroma compositions, including macrophages, healed plaques, superficial calcification, and fibrosis, in a reproducible manner. Fluorescence lifetime (FL) values of the plaque compositions correlated with findings from prior autopsy studies. Plaque inflammation was significantly greater in patients with ACS than those with CSA. The mean (SD) of inflammation-FL was 7.59 (0.96) nanoseconds for patients with ACS vs 6.46 (0.87) nanoseconds for patients with CSA (P < .001). The healed plaque phenotype was more prominently distributed in the segments of rapid disease progression than in nonprogressive controls. The mean (SD) healed plaque-FL was 5.31 (0.20) nanoseconds for the rapidly progressive lesions vs 4.81 (0.30) nanoseconds for the rapidly nonprogressive lesions (P < .001). All patients underwent OCT-FLIm safely without adverse clinical events.
Conclusions and Relevance
This diagnostic feasibility study found that an OCT-FLIm structural-molecular intracoronary imaging is clinically feasible and safe for the comprehensive characterization of human atheromas, supporting its potential role in the diagnosis and biological understanding of high-risk plaques.
JAMA cardiologyMedicine-Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
CiteScore
45.80
自引率
1.70%
发文量
264
期刊介绍:
JAMA Cardiology, an international peer-reviewed journal, serves as the premier publication for clinical investigators, clinicians, and trainees in cardiovascular medicine worldwide. As a member of the JAMA Network, it aligns with a consortium of peer-reviewed general medical and specialty publications.
Published online weekly, every Wednesday, and in 12 print/online issues annually, JAMA Cardiology attracts over 4.3 million annual article views and downloads. Research articles become freely accessible online 12 months post-publication without any author fees. Moreover, the online version is readily accessible to institutions in developing countries through the World Health Organization's HINARI program.
Positioned at the intersection of clinical investigation, actionable clinical science, and clinical practice, JAMA Cardiology prioritizes traditional and evolving cardiovascular medicine, alongside evidence-based health policy. It places particular emphasis on health equity, especially when grounded in original science, as a top editorial priority.