1. Optical coherence tomography and C-reactive protein in risk stratification of acute coronary syndromes.
- Author
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Fracassi, Francesco, Niccoli, Giampaolo, Vetrugno, Vincenzo, Russo, Michele, Rettura, Francesco, Vergni, Federico, Scalone, Giancarla, Montone, Rocco Antonio, Vergallo, Rocco, D'Amario, Domenico, Liuzzo, Giovanna, and Crea, Filippo
- Subjects
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OPTICAL coherence tomography , *ACUTE coronary syndrome , *C-reactive protein - Abstract
Patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) associated to high C-reactive protein (CRP) levels exhibit a higher risk of future acute ischemic events. Yet, the positive predictive value of CRP is too low to guide a specific treatment. Our study aims to identify a high-risk patient subset who might mostly benefit from anti-inflammatory treatment on the basis of the combination of optical coherence tomography (OCT) assessment of the culprit vessel and CRP serum levels. Patients admitted for ACS and undergoing pre-interventional OCT assessment of the culprit vessel were selected from "Agostino Gemelli" Hospital OCT Registry. The primary end-point was recurrent ACS (re-ACS). CRP levels ≥2 mg/L were considered abnormal. The overall study population consisted of 178 patients. Among these, 156 patients were included in the primary end-point analysis. The re-ACS rate was 23% at 3-year follow-up. High CRP (2.587, 95% CI:1.345–10.325, p = 0.031), plaque rupture (3.985, 95% CI:1.698–8.754, p = 0.009), macrophage infiltration (3.145, 95% CI:1.458–9.587, p = 0.012) and multifocal atherosclerosis (2.734, 95% CI:1.748–11.875, p = 0.042) were independent predictors of re-ACS. All patients (14/14) with high CRP and with all OCT high-risk features had re-ACS. At the other extreme, only 4 of the 82 patients with low CRP levels and lack of high-risk features at OCT examination exhibited re-ACS at follow-up. The combination of systemic evidence of inflammation and OCT findings in the culprit plaque identifies very high-risk ACS. Future studies are warranted to confirm these findings and to test an anti-inflammatory treatment in this patient subset. • High CRP and OCT features of the culprit vessel predict recurrent coronary events. • Patients with high-risk OCT features and high CRP experienced a recurrent ACS. • Our findings may contribute to individualize the secondary prevention of ACS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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