Literature DB >> 15282411

Should we treat patients with moderately severe stenosis of the left main coronary artery and negative FFR results?

Manuel Jiménez-Navarro1, José Maria Hernández-García, Juan H Alonso-Briales, Birgit Kühlmorgen, Juan José Gómez-Doblas, José Manuel García-Pinilla, Raúl López-Salguero, Eduardo de Teresa Galván.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The prognostic importance of significant left main coronary artery disease is unequivocal. However, moderate lesions of the left main coronary artery (LMCA) are sometimes found in patients presenting significant stenosis in other coronary arteries or equivocal symptoms. The ability of myocardial fractional flow reserve (FFR) to predict coronary events could be useful in the decision-making process in these patients. The present study was designed to investigate the occurrence of cardiac events in patients with coronary syndromes and LMCA stenosis of moderate severity in whom FFR failed to show an haemodynamic significant repercussion of the LMCA. METHODS AND
RESULTS: We studied 27 consecutive patients (mean age 62.7 +/- 10.5 years) with moderate stenoses (30-50%) of the LMCA. In seven patients who presented significantly reduced FFR (< 0.75) at the LMCA level (Group A), coronary revascularization of this vessel was performed. In 20 patients with negative FFR (greater than or equal to 0.75) at the LMCA level (Group B), the LMCA stenosis was not revascularized, being the revascularization procedures (if any) limited to other arteries with significant obstructions. During a mean follow-up period of 26.2 +/- 12.1 months, clinical events occurred in 3 patients in the whole group. One patient with positive FFR died during coronary bypass surgery. Two group B patients were surgically revascularized 4 months and 4 years after the initial coronariography.
CONCLUSIONS: Patients with coronary lesions of moderate severity on the LMCA and negative FFR may constitute a subgroup of good prognosis in the follow-up. Our findings suggest that negative FFR is a potentially useful indicator of the likelihood of cardiac events, and thus represents a useful aid in clinical decision-making in the hemodynamics laboratory.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15282411

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Invasive Cardiol        ISSN: 1042-3931            Impact factor:   2.022


  3 in total

1.  Coronary pressure measurement to determine treatment strategy for equivocal left main coronary artery lesions.

Authors:  Shunji Suemaru; Kohichiro Iwasaki; Keizo Yamamoto; Shozo Kusachi; Kazuyoshi Hina; Satoshi Hirohata; Minoru Hirota; Masaaki Murakami; Shigeshi Kamikawa; Takashi Murakami; Yasushi Shiratori
Journal:  Heart Vessels       Date:  2005-11       Impact factor: 1.814

2.  Evaluating the impact of fractional flow reserve-guided percutaneous coronary intervention in intermediate coronary artery lesions on the mode of treatment and their outcomes: An Iranian experience.

Authors:  Alireza Khosravi; Mohammad Reza Pourbehi; Masoud Pourmoghaddas; Afshin Ostovar; Mohammad Reza Akhbari; Fereshteh Ziaee-Bideh; Jafar Golshahi; Shahin Shirani
Journal:  ARYA Atheroscler       Date:  2015-03

Review 3.  Physiology-Based Revascularization of Left Main Coronary Artery Disease.

Authors:  Peter Kayaert; Mathieu Coeman; Sofie Gevaert; Michel De Pauw; Steven Haine
Journal:  J Interv Cardiol       Date:  2021-02-10       Impact factor: 2.279

  3 in total

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