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Impact of CT-angiography derived plaque characteristics on cardiac events in patients with a negative invasive fractional flow reserve

  • Reina Ozaki
  • , Sadako Motoyama
  • , Yukio Ozaki
  • , Masayoshi Sarai
  • , Hideki Kawai
  • , Tevfik F. Ismail
  • , Wakaya Fujiwara
  • , Keiichi Miyajima
  • , Yasuomi Nagahara
  • , Noriya Uchida
  • , Scot Garg
  • , Naoyuki Kawashima
  • , Yudai Niwa
  • , Hidemaro Takatsu
  • , Yu Yoshiki
  • , Masaya Ohta
  • , Takashi Muramatsu
  • , Masahide Harada
  • , Hiroyuki Naruse
  • , Ayaka Matsui
  • Haruo Kamiya, Akihiko Tobe, Tsai Tsung-Ying, Yasuko Bando, Yoshinobu Onuma, Hiroshi Takahashi, Hideo Izawa, Patrick W. Serruys, Toyoaki Murohara
  • Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine
  • Fujita Health University School of Medicine
  • Guys and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust
  • Fujita Health University Bantane Hospital
  • Royal Blackburn Hospital
  • Nagoya First Red Cross Hospital
  • University of Galway

Research output: Contribution to a Journal (Peer & Non Peer)Articlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Fractional flow reserve (FFR)-guided percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for chronic coronary syndromes (CCS) improves outcomes compared with angiography-guided PCI, however cardiac events still occur during long-term follow-up of FFR-negative patients. In the PREVENT study preventive PCI reduced cardiac-events in lesions which were FFR-negative (FFR > 0.80) and had intracoronary imaging defined vulnerable plaque. Coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA)-defined high risk plaque (HRP) is known to predict future cardiac events. We hypothesized that CTA defined HRP would identify which FFR-negative patients were at greatest risk of future cardiac events. Methods and results: We examined 373 consecutive CCS patients undergoing CTA followed not more than 90 days later by invasive FFR. Cardiac events were defined as cardiac death, non-fatal acute coronary syndromes, and ischemia-driven revascularization. Clinical follow-up was performed in all patients at a median of 32 months. Revascularization was performed in 131 of the 373 patients due to an FFR ≤ 0.80 (Treat group), with the remaining 242 having revascularization deferred (Defer group) due to an FFR > 0.80. In the Treat group the cardiac event rates between patients with and without HRP on CTA were similar (9.4 % versus 10.1 %, p = 0.90), whilst in the Defer group they were higher in patients with HRP (21.1 % versus 4.7 %, Log-rank-p < 0.0001). In multivariate Cox hazard analysis the presence of HRP (Hazard-ratio 12.79, 95 %confidence-intervals: 3.57–45.83, p < 0.0001) was an independent predictor for cardiac events in the Defer group. Conclusions: HRP on CTA was associated with future cardiac events in patients in whom revascularization was deferred due to a negative invasive-FFR (UMIN000054067; CAPTURE).

Original languageEnglish
Article number132895
JournalInternational Journal of Cardiology
Volume421
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Feb 2025

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Keywords

  • CCS
  • CT-angiography
  • Deferral lesion
  • FFR
  • High-risk plaque
  • MACE

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