| Literature DB >> 24816741 |
David Maresca1, Samantha Adams2, Bruno Maresca3, Antonius F W van der Steen4.
Abstract
Intravascular ultrasound is a catheter-based imaging modality that was developed to investigate the condition of coronary arteries and assess the vulnerability of coronary atherosclerotic plaques in particular. Since its introduction in the clinic 20 years ago, use of intravascular ultrasound innovation has been relatively limited. Intravascular ultrasound remains a niche technology; its clinical practice did not vastly expand, except in Japan, where intravascular ultrasound is an appraised tool for guiding percutaneous coronary interventions. In this qualitative research study, we follow scholarship on the sociology of innovation in exploring both the current adoption practices and perspectives on the future of intravascular ultrasound. We conducted a survey of biomedical experts with experience in the technology, the practice, and the commercialization of intravascular ultrasound. The collected information enabled us to map intravascular ultrasound controversies as well as to outline the dynamics of the international network of experts that generates intravascular ultrasound innovations and uses intravascular ultrasound technologies. While the technology is praised for its capacity to measure coronary atherosclerotic plaque morphology and is steadily used in clinical research, the lack of demonstrated benefits of intravascular ultrasound guided coronary interventions emerges as the strongest factor that prevents its expansion. Furthermore, most of the controversies identified were external to intravascular ultrasound technology itself, meaning that decision making at the industrial, financial and regulatory levels are likely to determine the future of intravascular ultrasound. In light of opinions from the responding experts', a wider adoption of intravascular ultrasound as a stand-alone imaging modality seems rather uncertain, but the appeal for this technology may be renewed by improving image quality and through combination with complementary imaging modalities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24816741 PMCID: PMC4016260 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0097215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Respondents' perception of intravascular ultrasound resolution.
Early experts are indicated with a star. Experts that were the least central in the network, who declared a limited level of interaction with other members, appear at the bottom of the diagram. The diagram can be subdivided as follows: a base of peripheral experts that are the least central in the network, a middle group, including early IVUS experts, with an intermediate centrality level, and finally the leading group of the network gathering the most central experts.
Ongoing IVUS controversies conveyed by the respondents.
| Controversy | Positive responses | Negative responses |
|
| “Minimally invasive”; “The technique is invasive but I am an interventional cardiologist. IVUS takes 30 seconds” | “IVUS is very invasive to find the site of interest”; “A major disadvantage is that IVUS is invasive” |
|
| “High resolution and similarity to pathology”; “It has good penetration through blood and soft tissue, enabling estimation of vessel dimension, vessel remodeling, and plaque burden with high sensitivity and specificity in identifying coronary calcifications” | “Unacceptably poor resolution”; “Resolution is not enough for some particular purpose (Thin Cap Fibroatheroma)” |
|
| “In order to understand the local problem, a catheter is the best”; “Large investigation range in combination with pull-back”; “Relatively quick, you can see obstruction, size and shape of the lesion (morphology)”; “Well validated quantitative measurements, many related outcome evidence by IVUS measurements (example, minimum stent area to predict future revascularization), easy to learn/use”; “Resolves ambiguous anatomy on angiogram, especially at left main” | “Intra-coronary imaging is too invasive and too late to use”; “most information not needed in daily practice unless complication”; “Lack of clarity of the images (I think I know what I'm looking at but not entirely sure) and the difficulty of acquiring those images”; “A catheter does not provide a complete view of the vascular tree” |
|
| “Inadequacy of angiography to guide clinical decision making in complex anatomy”; “Clinical trials have shown that the use of IVUS is reasonable during PCI for several indications. The medical literature continues to demonstrate limitation of angiographic-only guidance for PCI” | “Clinical impact on decision making is limited”; “There is no large clinical trial to show the benefit of using IVUS”; “Absence of evidence based medicine guidelines/Competition with FFR&OCT” |
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| “Separate reimbursement exists in Japan, where IVUS penetration is widely viewed as the deepest in any part of the world. This is not circumstantial”; “Japan has reimbursement even for diagnostic IVUS. If not, the usage will decrease to half of now” | “Reimbursable for appropriate use”; “I think the biggest limit is the lack of investment in academic research”; “It affects the clinical use. Institutions like the Thoraxcenter simply supply the difference, but in peripheral hospitals the clinical use is affected. The IVUS innovation is an academic/industrial process and is financed by other means” |
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| “A focused educational program is needed for realizing the potential of this technique” | “Today it's a niche technology, teaching efforts questionable given poor penetration” |
Figure 2Future perspective of intravascular ultrasound according to the respondents.
Figure 3Room for innovation in intravascular ultrasound according to the respondents.
Early experts are indicated with a star. Least central experts in the network appear at the bottom of the diagram and most central experts at the top.