作者
Seung Hun Lee,Ju‐Won Kim,Adrien Lefieux,David Molony,Doosup Shin,Doyeon Hwang,Ki Hong Choi,Ha-Sung Chang,Ki‐Hyun Jeon,Hyun‐Jong Lee,Ho‐Jun Jang,Hyun Kuk Kim,Sang Jin Ha,Taek Kyu Park,Jeong Hoon Yang,Young Bin Song,Joo‐Yong Hahn,Seung‐Hyuk Choi,Joon‐Hyung Doh,Eun‐Seok Shin,Chang‐Wook Nam,Bon‐Kwon Koo,Hyeon‐Cheol Gwon,Joo Myung Lee
摘要
Abstract Objectives This study sought to evaluate clinical implications of the residual fractional flow reserve (FFR) gradient after angiographically successful percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Background Recent studies have demonstrated FFR measured after PCI is associated with clinical outcome after PCI. Although post-PCI FFR pull back tracings provide clinically relevant information on the residual FFR gradient, there are no objective criteria for assessing post-PCI FFR pull back tracings. Methods A total of 492 patients who underwent angiographically successful PCI and post-PCI FFR measurement with pull back tracings were analyzed. The presence of the major residual FFR gradient after PCI was assessed by both conventional visual interpretation of the pull back tracings and objective analysis using the instantaneous FFR gradient per unit time (dFFR(t)/dt) with a cutoff value of dFFR(t)/dt ≥0.035. Classification agreement between 2 independent operators for the presence of the major residual FFR gradient was compared before and after providing dFFR(t)/dt results. Target vessel failure (TVF), a composite of cardiac death, target vessel myocardial infarction, or clinically driven target vessel revascularization at 2 years, was compared according to the presence of the major residual FFR gradient. Results Among the study population, 33.9% had the major residual FFR gradient defined by dFFR(t)/dt. The classification agreement between operators’ assessments for the major residual FFR gradient increased with dFFR(t)/dt results compared with conventional visual assessment (Cohen’s kappa = 0.633 to 0.819; P Conclusions Objective analysis of post-PCI FFR pull back tracings using dFFR(t)/dt improved classification agreement on the presence of the major residual FFR gradient among operators. Presence of the major residual FFR gradient defined by dFFR(t)/dt after angiographically successful PCI was independently associated with an increased risk of TVF at 2 years. (Automated Algorithm Detecting Physiologic Major Stenosis and Its Relationship with Post-PCI Clinical Outcomes [Algorithm-PCI]; NCT04304677 ; Influence of FFR on the Clinical Outcome After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention [COE-PERSPECTIVE]; NCT01873560 )