Literature DB >> 31631499

Assessment of intermediate coronary lesions by fractional flow reserve and quantitative flow ratio in patients with small-vessel disease.

Aslihan Erbay1,2, Julia Steiner1,2, Alexander Lauten1,2, Ulf Landmesser1,2,3, David M Leistner1,2,3, Barbara E Stähli1,2,4.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Quantitative flow ratio (QFR) has recently been introduced as a novel, less-invasive, adenosine-free measure for functional coronary lesion assessment. Whether reference vessel dimensions affect functional lesion assessment is uncertain.
METHODS: A total of 436 patients with 516 interrogated coronary vessels by means of FFR were included in the study. Patients were dichotomized according to the median reference vessel diameter (group 1: ≤2.8 mm and group 2: >2.8 mm). QFR analyses were performed offline at the institution's core laboratories.
RESULTS: Reference vessel diameter was 2.5 [2.3-2.7] mm in group 1 and 3.3 [3.0-3.6] mm in group 2. Diameter stenosis (41.4 [36.4-47.6] % vs. 41.4 [36.4-45.7] %, p = .20) did not differ among groups. Median FFR values were lower in group 1 (0.87 [0.81-0.92]) as compared with group 2 (0.89 [0.84-0.93], p = .001). Consistently, QFR values were lower in group 1 (0.88 [0.82-0.92]) than in group 2 (0.91 [0.85-0.94], p = .001). The proportions of functionally significant coronary lesions as defined by FFR ≤0.80 were 24.1% and 14.2% in groups 1 and 2 (p = .005), and as defined by cQFR ≤0.80 20.4% and 11.8% (p = 0.009), respectively. In ROC analysis for an FFR ≤.80, the AUC was 0.89 (95% CI 0.85-0.93, p < .001) in group 1 and 0.81 (95% CI 0.76-0.86, p < .001) in group 2.
CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that QFR measurements are accurate irrespective of the reference vessel diameter. Future studies are needed to elucidate the higher percentage of functionally significant lesions observed in small vessels despite a similar angiographic lesion severity.
© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  coronary artery disease; hemodynamic assessment; percutaneous coronary intervention

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31631499     DOI: 10.1002/ccd.28531

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Catheter Cardiovasc Interv        ISSN: 1522-1946            Impact factor:   2.692


  3 in total

Review 1.  Small vessel coronary artery disease: How small can we go with myocardial revascularization?

Authors:  Maciej T Wybraniec; Paweł Bańka; Tomasz Bochenek; Tomasz Roleder; Katarzyna Mizia-Stec
Journal:  Cardiol J       Date:  2020-09-28       Impact factor: 2.737

2.  Fractional flow reserve, quantitative flow ratio, and instantaneous wave-free ratio: a comparison of the procedure-related dose of ionising radiation.

Authors:  Greta Ziubryte; Gediminas Jarusevicius
Journal:  Postepy Kardiol Interwencyjnej       Date:  2021-03-27       Impact factor: 1.426

3.  QFR Predicts the Incidence of Long-Term Adverse Events in Patients with Suspected CAD: Feasibility and Reproducibility of the Method.

Authors:  Andrea Buono; Annika Mühlenhaus; Tabitha Schäfer; Ann-Kristin Trieb; Julian Schmeißer; Franziska Koppe; Thomas Münzel; Remzi Anadol; Tommaso Gori
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2020-01-14       Impact factor: 4.241

  3 in total

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