作者
Niels Ramsing Holm,Lene Nyhus Andreasen,Omeed Neghabat,Peep Laanmets,Indulis Kumsārs,Johan Bennett,Niels Thue Olsen,Jacob Odenstedt,Pavel Hoffmann,Jo Dens,Saqib Chowdhary,Peter O’Kane,S. Rasmussen,Matthias Heigert,Ole Havndrup,J.P. van Kuijk,Simone Biscaglia,Lone Juul Hune Mogensen,Loghman Henareh,Francesco Burzotta,Christian Eek,Darren Mylotte,Margarita Sala Llinàs,Łukasz Kołtowski,Paul Knaapen,Slobodan Calic,Nils Witt,Irene Santos‐Pardo,Stuart Watkins,Jacob Lønborg,Andreas Torp Kristensen,Lisette Okkels Jensen,Fredrik Calais,James Cockburn,Andrew McNeice,Olli A. Kajander,Ton A.C.M. Heestermans,Stephan Kische,Ashkan Eftekhari,James C. Spratt,Evald Høj Christiansen
摘要
Imaging-guided percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is associated with better clinical outcomes than angiography-guided PCI. Whether routine optical coherence tomography (OCT) guidance in PCI of lesions involving coronary-artery branch points (bifurcations) improves clinical outcomes as compared with angiographic guidance is uncertain. Download a PDF of the Research Summary. We conducted a multicenter, randomized, open-label trial at 38 centers in Europe. Patients with a clinical indication for PCI and a complex bifurcation lesion identified by means of coronary angiography were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to OCT-guided PCI or angiography-guided PCI. The primary end point was a composite of major adverse cardiac events (MACE), defined as death from a cardiac cause, target-lesion myocardial infarction, or ischemia-driven target-lesion revascularization at a median follow-up of 2 years. We assigned 1201 patients to OCT-guided PCI (600 patients) or angiography-guided PCI (601 patients). A total of 111 patients (18.5%) in the OCT-guided PCI group and 116 (19.3%) in the angiography-guided PCI group had a bifurcation lesion involving the left main coronary artery. At 2 years, a primary end-point event had occurred in 59 patients (10.1%) in the OCT-guided PCI group and in 83 patients (14.1%) in the angiography-guided PCI group (hazard ratio, 0.70; 95% confidence interval, 0.50 to 0.98; P=0.035). Procedure-related complications occurred in 41 patients (6.8%) in the OCT-guided PCI group and 34 patients (5.7%) in the angiography-guided PCI group. Among patients with complex coronary-artery bifurcation lesions, OCT-guided PCI was associated with a lower incidence of MACE at 2 years than angiography-guided PCI. (Funded by Abbott Vascular and others; OCTOBER ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT03171311.) QUICK TAKE VIDEO SUMMARYOCT-Guided PCI in Complex Bifurcation Lesions 02:05