Literature DB >> 30418166

Comparison Between Traditional and Guide-Catheter Extension Reverse Controlled Antegrade Dissection and Retrograde Tracking: Insights From the PROGRESS-CTO Registry.

Iosif Xenogiannis, Dimitri Karmpaliotis, Khaldoon Alaswad, Farouc A Jaffer, Robert W Yeh, Mitul Patel, Ehtisham Mahmud, James W Choi, M Nicholas Burke, Anthony H Doing, Phil Dattilo, Catalin Toma, A J Conrad Smith, Barry Uretsky, Oleg Krestyaninov, Dmitrii Khelimskii, Elizabeth Holper, Srinivasa Potluri, R Michael Wyman, David E Kandzari, Santiago Garcia, Michalis Koutouzis, Ioannis Tsiafoutis, Wissam Jaber, Habib Samady, Jeffrey W Moses, Nicholas J Lembo, Manish Parikh, Ajay J Kirtane, Ziad A Ali, Darshan Doshi, Peter Tajti, Bavana V Rangan, Shuaib Abdullah, Subhash Banerjee, Emmanouil S Brilakis1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The most common re-entry technique during retrograde chronic total occlusion (CTO) percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is reverse controlled antegrade and retrograde tracking (rCART). The use of guide-catheter extensions can facilitate rCART, but has received limited study.
METHODS: We compared the clinical and procedural characteristics and outcomes of traditional rCART vs guide-catheter extension rCART vs cases in which both techniques were used (combined rCART) in patients with successful retrograde CTO crossing in a contemporary multicenter CTO-PCI registry.
RESULTS: Between 2012 and 2018, rCART was used in 467 of 1336 retrograde CTO-PCI cases. Guide-catheter extension rCART was used in 60/467 cases (13%; use increased from 0% in 2012 to 26% in 2017). The traditional rCART group, guide-catheter extension rCART group, and combined rCART group had similar target lesion J-CTO scores (3.3 ± 1.1 vs 3.2 ± 1.2 vs 3.6 ± 0.8, respectively; P=.28), technical success rates (99% vs 100% vs 96.4%, respectively; P=.36), procedural success rates (93.2% vs 93.8% vs 96.3%, respectively; P=.82), and major in-hospital adverse cardiac event (MACE) rates (6.4% vs 9.4% vs 3.6%, respectively; P=.66). Total procedural time was longer in the combined rCART group (196 min [IQR, 146-256 min] vs 200 min [IQR, 164-293 min] vs 255 min [IQR, 195-280 min], respectively; P<.01), with a trend for lower patient air kerma radiation dose in the guide-catheter extension groups (4.11 Gray [IQR, 2.49-5.77 Gray] vs 3.19 Gray [IQR, 1.29-4.74 Gray] vs 3.47 Gray [IQR, 2.89-5.56 Gray]; P=.07).
CONCLUSIONS: Guide-catheter extension rCART is increasingly being used for retrograde CTO crossing and is associated with similar success and MACE rates as traditional rCART.

Entities:  

Keywords:  chronic total occlusion; guide-catheter extension; percutaneous coronary intervention; retrograde approach; reverse controlled antegrade and retrograde tracking

Year:  2018        PMID: 30418166

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


  1 in total

Review 1.  Overview of Contemporary Chronic Total Occlusion Percutaneous Coronary Intervention Techniques: A Narrative Systematic Review.

Authors:  Talal Aljabbary; Andriy Katyukha; Gabby Elbaz-Greener; Kassandra Gressmann; Akshay Bagai; John J Graham; Ram Vijayaraghavan; Sanjog Kalra; Minh Vo; Harindra C Wijeysundera
Journal:  CJC Open       Date:  2021-06-06
  1 in total

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