| Literature DB >> 26860695 |
Georgios Sianos1, Nikolaos V Konstantinidis2, Carlo Di Mario3, Haralambos Karvounis4.
Abstract
Coronary chronic total occlusions (CTOs) represent the most technically challenging lesion subset that interventional cardiologists face. CTOs are identified in up to one third of patients referred for coronary angiography and remain seriously undertreated with percutaneous techniques. The complexity of these procedures and the suboptimal success rates over a long period of time, along with the perception that CTOs are lesions with limited scope for recanalization, account for the underutilization of CTO Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI). During the last years, dedicated groups of experts in Japan, Europe and United States fostered the development and standardization of modern CTO recanalization techniques, achieving success rates far beyond 90%, while coping with lesions of increasing complexity. Numerous studies support the rationale of CTO revascularization following documentation of viability and ischemia in the territory distal to the CTO. Successful CTO PCI provide better tolerance in case of future acute coronary syndromes and can significantly improve angina and left ventricular function. Randomized trials are on the way to further explore the prognostic benefit of CTO revascularization. The following review reports on the theory and the most recent advances in the field of CTO recanalization, in an attempt to promote a more balanced approach in patients with chronically occluded coronary arteries.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26860695 PMCID: PMC4746803 DOI: 10.1186/s12872-016-0209-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord ISSN: 1471-2261 Impact factor: 2.298
Fig. 1The continuum of CTO PCI
Fig. 2The Parallel Wire Technique. a: Right coronary artery (RCA) chronic total occlusion (CTO); blunt proximal stump and bifurcation at the CTO site. b Contralateral contrast injection revealing CC2 septal and epicardial collaterals from the Left Anterior Descending (LAD) coronary artery. c Bilateral contrast injection with the distal vessel opacified indicating a short and straight occluded segment. d, e To prevent dislodgment of the guiding catheter while advancing wire and microcatheter through the occlusion, a 2.5 × 20 mm balloon is inflated in an atrial branch proximal to the occlusion (anchoring technique). The wire (Fielder XT, Asahi Intecc, Japan) made progress through the body of the occlusion but appears to have deflected from the target. f A Confianza Pro 12 wire (Asahi Intecc, Japan) supported by a Corsair microcatheter (Asahi Intecc, Japan) is advanced towards the distal end of the occlusion parallel to the Fielder XT wire which is left in place. At the insert the distal segments of the two wires. g Successful chronic total occlusion (CTO) crossing; dissection at the site of the occlusion after predilatation. g Final angiographic result after implantation of 3.5 × 38 mm and 3.0 × 38 mm everolimus eluting stents with (Thrombolysis In Myocardial Infarction) TIMI III flow and no residual stenosis
Fig. 3The Reverse Controlled Antegrade Retrograde Subintimal Tracking (CART) Technique. a Right coronary artery (RCA) with shepherd’s crook morphology occluded proximally; severely calcified chronic total occlusion (CTO) with blunt stump. b Contralateral injection revealing retrograde filling of the distal vessel via septal and epicardial collaterals. c After failure to cross the septal collaterals, switch to epicardial connections. Selective contrast injection through a Corsair microcatheter (Asahi Intecc, Japan) better delineates the course of the epicardial collaterals from the Left Circumflex Coronary (LCX) artery. d, e A tortuous continuous epicardial collateral (Werner CC2) is selected and crossed with a Fielder FC wire (Asahi Intecc, Japan). f Corsair microcatheter advanced into the distal true lumen over the Fielder FC wire; selective contrast tip injection confirms intraluminal position. g Retrograde wiring of the occlusion with a Gaia second wire (Asahi Intecc, Japan) and an Ultimate wire (Asahi Intecc, Japan); vessel course ambiguity. h Bilateral wiring of the occlusion with a Gaia second wire antegradely and an Ultimate wire (Asahi Intecc, Japan) retrogradely. i Retrograde wire knuckle in the subintimal space. j Antegrade balloon dilatations enlarging the subintimal space to facilitate retrograde wire crossing (reverse CART technique). k Retrograde wire (Ultimate) crosses the lesion and enters the ascending aorta; the Corsair is advanced through the body of the occlusion but the wire cannot be advanced in the antegrade guiding catheter. l Snaring of the retrograde wire into the antegrade guiding catheter. m Advancement of the Corsair into the antegrade guiding catheter. n Externalization of an RG3 wire (Asahi Intecc, Japan) allows antegrade insertion of balloons and stents. o Final angiographic result after implantation of 3.5 × 18 mm, 3.0 × 33 mm and 2.75 × 38 mm everolimus eluting stents. p Contralateral injection revealing intact collateral circulation. o Bilateral Injection confirming (Thrombolysis In Myocardial Infarction) TIMI III flow and no residual stenosis in the RCA
Milestones in the CTO guidewire technology
| Year | Milestone | Product |
|---|---|---|
| 1995 | Polymeric coating | SCIMED Choice PT |
| 1996 | Hydrophilic coating | TERUMO Crosswire |
| 1997 | Incremental tip load (drilling concept) | ASAHI Miracle family (3.5 up to 12 gr) |
| 1998 | Tapered Tip Design | GUIDANT HT CROSS-IT XT |
| 1998 | Combination of tapering with hydrophilic coating in high tip stiffness (>9 gr) (penetration concept) | ASAHI Confianza/Pro |
| 2008 | Combination of tapering with polymer and hydrophilic coating in low tip stiffness (<1 gr) (sliding concept) | ASAHI Fielder XT |
| 2010/2011 | Composite core tip in low tip stiffness | ASAHI SION/Fielder XTA/XTR |
| 2013 | Combination of composite core tapering polymeric and hydrophilic coating in intermediate stiffness (>1.5gr, <5 gr) (Deflection and rotation concept) | ASAHI GAIA family |
The CTO wire toolbox
| Tapered, soft (~1) plastic jacketed GW (XT/XT-A/XTR) |
| ➢ Antegrade/Retrograde microchannel/soft plaque probing |
| ➢ Facilitation of quick wiring Dissection Re-entry in abmbigous vessel anatomy/soft plaque (Knuckle wire technique) |
| ➢ Very small and tortuous collateral chanel crossing epicardial and septal(retrograde access) |
| Non-tapered, soft plastic jacketed GW (Fielder FC/Pilot 50/Whisper) |
| ➢ Multi-tasting (Mainly work in the body of the occlusion-getting less fashionable) |
| Non tapered, medium gram force plastic jacketed wire (Pilot 150/200) |
| ➢ Body of the occlusion |
| ➢ Facilitation quick wiring in complex lesions and/or dissection-reentry in ambiguous vessel anatomy |
| Non-tampered, soft, composite core, hydrophilic coated CW (SION) |
| ➢ Multitasking |
| ➢ Access to difficult take-off collaterals |
| ➢ Crossing of non challenging collaterals channels |
| ➢ Subintinal spaces connection and GC engagement in retrograde techniques (CART/XCART) |
| Non-tapered, medium gram force (<6g), non coated, sliding wires (Miracle 3/4.5/6) |
| ➢ Used to be workhorse wires for lesion crossing-tend to be abandoned |
| None-tapered, medium gram force (<6g), hydrophilic coated, sliding wires (Miracle Ultimate) |
| ➢ For lesion crossing (body of the occlusion) in hard but not severely calcified plaques and non tortuous anatomy |
| Tapered, medium gram (<6g), composite core, hydrophilic coated GW (GAIA family) |
| ➢ Are becoming the workhorse wires for lesion crossing (body of the occlusion) in the hard but not severely calcified plaques even in tortuous anatomy |
| ➢ Subintima space connection in Retrograde techniques |
| Tapered and not tapered w-w/o hydrophilic coating, high gram (>9) GW penetration wires (Confianza fm, PROGRESS 200T) |
| ➢ Crossing of severely calcified spots, exchanged to other categories afterwards |
Fielder FC (Asahi Intecc, Japan), Fielder XT (Asahi Intecc, Japan), Fielder XTA (Asahi Intecc, Japan), Fielder XTR (Asahi Intecc, Japan), SION (Asahi Intecc, Japan), Gaia 1st/2nd/3rd (Asahi Intecc, Japan), Miracle 3/4.5/6 (Asahi Intecc, Japan), Miracle Ultimate (Asahi Intecc, Japan), Pilot 50/150/200 (Abbot Vascular, USA), Confianza family (Asahi Intecc, Japan), Whisper (Abbot Vascular, USA), Progress 200 T (Abbot Vascular, USA)
Contemporary basic CTO PCI toolbox
| Sheaths | 45 cm long sheaths |
|---|---|
| Guiding catheters | 7 and 8 Fr 90 cm long Guiding Catheters |
| Microcatheters | Corsair, Finecross, Venture, Tornus, Crusade, Multicross, Prodigy, Twinpass |
| Dissection and reentry | Crossboss coronary catheter, Stingray balloon |
| Guiding Catheter extensions | Guideliner, Guidezilla |
| Snares | Ensnare, Atrieve, Amplatz Gooseneck |
| Balloon uncrossable occlusions | Tornus, Laser, Rotational Atherectomy |
| Intravascular imaging | Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) (Eagle Eyes, Volcano, USA), Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) |
| Complication managements | Jostent Graftmaster, Graftmaster Rx and Coil embolization |
| Radiation safety | Radpad |
| Stents | Drug Eluting Stents |
Corsair (Asahi Intecc, Japan), Finecross (Terumo, Japan), Venture (Vascular Solutions), Tornus (Asahi Intecc, Japan), Multictoss (Roxwood Medical, USA), Prodigy (Radius Medical, USA), Crusade (kaneka, Japan), Twinpass (Vascular Solutions, USA), CrossBoss coronary catheter (Boston Scientific, USA), Sting-Ray (Boston Scientific, USA), Guideliner (Vascular Solutions, USA), Guidezilla (Boston Scientific, USA), Ensnare (Merit Medical, USA), Atrieve (Angiotech, USA), Amplatz Gooseneck, (Covidien, USA), IVUS (Εagle Eye, Volcano, USA), Jostent Graftmaster, Graftmaster Rx (Abbott Vascular, USA), RadPad (Worldwide Innovations & Technologies, USA)