1. Impact of coronary calcium morphology on intravascular lithotripsy.
- Author
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McInerney A, Travieso A, Jerónimo Baza A, Alfonso F, Del Val D, Cerrato E, Garcia de Lara J, Pinar E, Perez de Prado A, Jimenez Quevedo P, Tirado-Conte G, Nombela-Franco L, Brugaletta S, Cepas-Guillén P, Sabaté M, Cubero Gallego H, Vaquerizo B, Jurado A, Varbella F, Jimenez M, Garcia Escobar A, de la Torre JM, Amat Santos I, Jimenez Diaz VA, Escaned J, and Gonzalo N
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Prospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Stents, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention methods, Coronary Vessels diagnostic imaging, Coronary Vessels pathology, Calcium, Lithotripsy methods, Tomography, Optical Coherence, Vascular Calcification diagnostic imaging, Vascular Calcification therapy, Coronary Artery Disease therapy, Coronary Artery Disease diagnostic imaging, Coronary Angiography
- Abstract
Background: Coronary calcification negatively impacts optimal stenting. Intravascular lithotripsy (IVL) is a new calcium modification technique., Aims: We aimed to assess the impact of different calcium morphologies on IVL efficacy., Methods: This was a prospective, multicentre study (13 tertiary referral centres). Optical coherence tomography (OCT) was performed before and after IVL, and after stenting. OCT-defined calcium morphologies were concentric (mean calcium arc >180°) and eccentric (mean calcium arc ≤180°). The primary outcomes were angiographic success (residual stenosis <20%) and the presence of fracture by OCT in concentric versus eccentric lesions., Results: Ninety patients were included with a total of 95 lesions: 47 concentric and 48 eccentric. The median number of pulses was 60 (p=1.00). Following IVL, the presence of fracture was not statistically different between groups (79.0% vs 66.0% for concentric vs eccentric; p=0.165). The number of fractures/lesion (4.2±4.4 vs 2.3±2.8; p=0.018) and ≥3 fractures/lesion (57.1% vs 34.0%; p=0.029) were more common in concentric lesions. Angiographic success was numerically but not statistically higher in the concentric group (87.0% vs 76.6%; p=0.196). By OCT, no differences were noted in final minimum lumen area (5.9±2.2 mm
2 vs 6.2±2.1 mm2 ; p=0.570), minimum stent area (5.9±2.2 mm² vs 6.25±2.4 mm2 ; p=0.483), minimum stent expansion (80.9±16.7% vs 78.2±19.8%), or stent expansion at the maximum calcium site (100.6±24.2% vs 95.8±27.3%) (p>0.05 for all comparisons of concentric vs eccentric, respectively). Calcified nodules were found in 29.5% of lesions; these were predominantly non-eruptive (57%). At the nodule site, dissection was more common than fracture with stent expansion of 103.6±27.2%., Conclusions: In this prospective, multicentre study, the effectiveness of IVL followed by stenting was not significantly affected by coronary calcium morphology.- Published
- 2024
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