Use of Intravascular Imaging During Chronic Total Occlusion Percutaneous Coronary Intervention Insights From a Contemporary Multicenter Registry /

Background-Intravascular imaging can facilitate chronic total occlusion (CTO) percutaneous coronary intervention. Methods and Results-We examined the frequency of use and outcomes of intravascular imaging among 619 CTO percutaneous coronary interventions performed between 2012 and 2015 at 7 US cente...

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Elmentve itt :
Bibliográfiai részletek
Szerzők: Karácsonyi Judit
Alaswad Khaldoon
Jaffer Farouc A.
Yeh Robert W.
Patel Mitul
Bahadorani John
Karatasakis Aris
Danek Barbara A.
Doing Anthony H.
Grantham Aaron J.
Karmpaliotis Dimitri
Moses Jeffrey W.
Kirtane Ajay
Parikh Manish
Ungi Imre
Dokumentumtípus: Cikk
Megjelent: 2016
Sorozat:JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION 5 No. 8
doi:10.1161/JAHA.116.003890

mtmt:3336993
Online Access:http://publicatio.bibl.u-szeged.hu/16899
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490 0 |a JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION  |v 5 No. 8 
520 3 |a Background-Intravascular imaging can facilitate chronic total occlusion (CTO) percutaneous coronary intervention. Methods and Results-We examined the frequency of use and outcomes of intravascular imaging among 619 CTO percutaneous coronary interventions performed between 2012 and 2015 at 7 US centers. Mean age was 65.4 +/- 10 years and 85% of the patients were men. Intravascular imaging was used in 38%: intravascular ultrasound in 36%, optical coherence tomography in 3%, and both in 1.45%. Intravascular imaging was used for stent sizing (26.3%), stent optimization (38.0%), and CTO crossing (35.7%, antegrade in 27.9%, and retrograde in 7.8%). Intravascular imaging to facilitate crossing was used more frequently in lesions with proximal cap ambiguity (49% versus 26%, P<0.0001) and with retrograde as compared with antegrade-only cases (67% versus 31%, P<0.0001). Despite higher complexity (Japanese CTO score: 2.86 +/- 1.19 versus 2.43 +/- 1.19, P=0.001), cases in which imaging was used for crossing had similar technical and procedural success (92.8% versus 89.6%, P=0.302 and 90.1% versus 88.3%, P=0.588, respectively) and similar incidence of major cardiac adverse events (2.7% versus 3.2%, P=0.772). Use of intravascular imaging was associated with longer procedure (192 minutes [interquartile range 130, 255] versus 131 minutes [90, 192], P<0.0001) and fluoroscopy (71 minutes [44, 93] versus 39 minutes [25, 69], P<0.0001) time. Conclusions-Intravascular imaging is frequently performed during CTO percutaneous coronary intervention both for crossing and for stent selection/optimization. Despite its use in more complex lesion subsets, intravascular imaging was associated with similar rates of technical and procedural success for CTO percutaneous coronary intervention. 
700 0 1 |a Alaswad Khaldoon  |e aut 
700 0 1 |a Jaffer Farouc A.  |e aut 
700 0 1 |a Yeh Robert W.  |e aut 
700 0 1 |a Patel Mitul  |e aut 
700 0 1 |a Bahadorani John  |e aut 
700 0 1 |a Karatasakis Aris  |e aut 
700 0 1 |a Danek Barbara A.  |e aut 
700 0 1 |a Doing Anthony H.  |e aut 
700 0 1 |a Grantham Aaron J.  |e aut 
700 0 1 |a Karmpaliotis Dimitri  |e aut 
700 0 1 |a Moses Jeffrey W.  |e aut 
700 0 1 |a Kirtane Ajay  |e aut 
700 0 1 |a Parikh Manish  |e aut 
700 0 1 |a Ungi Imre  |e aut 
856 4 0 |u http://publicatio.bibl.u-szeged.hu/16899/1/2016_use_Intravascular_AmHeart.pdf  |z Dokumentum-elérés