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One-year optical coherence tomography findings in patients with late and very-late stent thrombosis treated with intravascular imaging guided percutaneous coronary intervention.

Authors :
Ñato M
Gomez-Lara J
Romaguera R
Roura G
Ferreiro JL
Teruel L
Gracida M
Fuentes L
Vandeloo B
Gomez-Hospital JA
Cequier A
Source :
The international journal of cardiovascular imaging [Int J Cardiovasc Imaging] 2018 Oct; Vol. 34 (10), pp. 1511-1520. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 May 22.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Patients with late/very-late stent thrombosis (ST) are at high risk of recurrent-ST. The mechanisms of recurrent-ST are largely unknown. The objective is to describe the 1-year optical coherence tomography (OCT) findings of patients suffering from late/very-late ST treated with intravascular imaging guided percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). All consecutive patients with late/very-late ST undergoing intravascular imaging guided PCI were screened to undergo coronary angiography and OCT examination at 1 year. Patients were classified according to the observation of stent malapposition as most contributing cause of the ST. Thirty-four patients were included. Stent malapposition was observed in 17 (50%) and the remaining 17 cases were classified as: neoatherosclerosis (n = 9), underexpansion (n = 3) and unknown mechanism (n = 5). Patients with malapposition had a remarkable reduction of the malapposition volume (from 6.4 to 1.3 mm <superscript>3</superscript> ; p = 0.02) during the ST procedure, but this was not fully corrected in 13 (76.5%). At 12 months, two patients of the malapposition group presented with uneventful target vessel re-occlusion. Persistent malapposition was observed in nine patients (60.0%). Major coronary evaginations (46.7 vs. 0%; p = 0.001) and uncovered struts (6.3 vs. 1.0%; p < 0.001) were also more frequent in patients with malapposition than without malapposition. None of the patients had thin-cap fibroatheroma neoatherosclerosis. Contributing causes of late/very-late ST are diverse and have different healing patterns at 12 months. Patients with stent malapposition treated with intravascular imaging guided PCI showed poor re-healing; but patients with other causes of the ST showed optimal stent healing as assessed by OCT.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1875-8312
Volume :
34
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The international journal of cardiovascular imaging
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29790037
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10554-018-1372-7