| Literature DB >> 33194488 |
Arunima Kaul1, Paramvijay Singh Dhalla2, Anusha Bapatla1, Raheela Khalid3, Jian Garcia1, Ana S Armenta-Quiroga1, Safeera Khan1.
Abstract
The coronary artery calcium score is considered the most useful marker for predicting coronary events. The high score reflects heavy calcification in the vessel, which is more challenging to treat with the percutaneous intervention (PCI). To prepare this type of heavily calcified lesion intravascular lithotripsy (IVL) technology can be used prior to PCI, which is based on the concept of converting electrical energy into mechanical energy. It harmlessly and selectively disrupts both the shallow and deep deposits of calcium. The balloon-based catheters of this system emit sonic waves that transfer to the adjacent tissue resulting in improvement in vessel compliance with the slightest soft tissue loss. Therefore, making the treatment of calcified lesions more feasible, effective, and also simplify complex lesions. The lesions considered for lithotripsy-enhanced balloon dilation include calcified coronary lesions and peripheral vasculature lesions. This article reviews the use of IVL in calcified coronary artery disease, its advantages, and disadvantages while comparing it with other techniques like high-pressure balloons and rotational atherectomy devices. A thorough search of databases like PubMed and Google Scholar was performed, which uncovered 35 peer review articles. Keywords utilized in the data search were calcified coronary artery disease, coronary lithotripsy, calcification, and calcified atherosclerotic plaque. According to rotational atherectomy and intravascular lithotripsy trials, the latter was safer, mainly by decreasing atheromatous embolization risk. Deciphering these studies, it seems like IVL is better at parameters like procedural and clinical success rate, acute lumen gain, and less residual stenosis except in-hospital major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), which was better in rotational atherectomy (RA). However, when lesion crossings are present, the atherectomy technique is still considered as first-line therapy. In clinical practice, despite these encouraging data for treating calcified lesions, IVL is grossly underutilized because of substantial costs and perceived significant procedural risk effects on the cardiac rhythm like causing 'shock topics' and asynchronous cardiac pacing. More longer-term clinical data and extensive researches are required to validate its safety and efficiency.Entities:
Keywords: cad; calcified plaque; coronary artery intervention; intravascular lithotripsy; pad; rotablator; rotational atherectomy; rotaxus
Year: 2020 PMID: 33194488 PMCID: PMC7657441 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.10922
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Intravascular lithotripsy equipment
Figure 2Decisional algorithms for the treatment of calcified coronary lesions
IVUS, intravascular ultrasound; OCT, optical coherence tomography; OA, orbital atherectomy; RA, rotational atherectomy
Comparison of intravascular lithotripsy studies with rotational atherectomy study
ABI, ankle brachial index; MACE, major adverse cardiovascular events; MI, myocardial infarction; RVD, reference vessel
| Multicentre-Single-arm | Disrupt CAD I | Disrupt CAD II | Disrupt PADI/II | Disrupt PAD III (RCT) | ROTAXUS |
| No. of patients, No. of sites | 60 patients, 7 sites | 120 patients,15 sites | PAD I: 35 patients, 3 sites PAD II:60 patients, 8 sites | 400 patients at 54 sites | 240 patients |
| Inclusion criteria | -De novo moderate/severe calcific coronary lesions -stenosis >50% -RVD 2.5-4.0 mm | -Stabilized acute coronary syndrome -Severe calcification -Diameter stenosis ≥50%, -RVD-2.5-4.0mm -Lesion length ≤32 mm | -Intermittent claudication (Rutherford Class 2-4) -ABI<0.9 -Moderate/severe calcification -SFA/popliteal lesions >70% stenosis -RVD 3.5-7.0 mm -lesion length <150 mm | -Intermittent claudication (Rutherford 2 to 4) -Moderate and severely calcified -Femoropopliteal arteries -RVD 4-7, -Stenosis ≥70%, -Lesion length ≤18 cm occlusive or ≤10 cm CTO | -Stable coronary artery disease -Angina II to IV -Severe calcification -RVD-3.25 -Mean diameter stenosis by visual estimate 83.02 -Lesion length- ≤32 mm |
| Procedural success | 98.3% | 100% | 100% | 100% | 92.5% |
| Clinical success | 95% | 95.7% | 98.9% | - | 91.9% |
| Acute gain | 1.7mm | 1.6mm | PAD I - 2.9mm PAD II - 3.0mm | 3.4-mm | 1.56mm |
| 30-day MACE/MAE | 5.0% | 4.3 | PAD I - 0% PADII - 1.7% | - | 5% |
| 6-month MACE/MAE | 8.3% | - | PAD I - 0% PAD II - 1.1% | - | - |
| 9-month MACE/MAE | - | - | - | - | 24.2% |
Comparison of rotational atherectomy and intravascular lithotripsy in severe coronary calcification
| Rotablator | Intravascular Lithotripsy | |
| Guidewire Size | 0.09” Proprietary wire | 0.014” Wire of choice |
| Wire bias | Calcium modification wire-bias dependent | Balloon inflation eliminates wire bias, providing circumferential calcium modification |
| Lesion crossing | 1st line for balloon uncrossable lesions | Higher crossing profile than contemporary balloons |
| Side branch protection | Side branch wire must be removed during atherectomy | No interaction with side branch wire |
| Perforation | Accepted risk for atherectomy, higher in tortuous anatomy | No recorded perforations |
| Distal embolizations | Atherectomy actively liberated atherosclerotic debris | Theoretically same risk as contemporary angioplasty balloon |
| Plaque ablation | Dependent on selected burr size. | No plaque ablation |
| Bradyarrhythmias | Temporary pacemaker standard of care in dominant coronary atherectomy | No recorded arrhythmia |
| Effect of deep calcium | Atherectomy impacts on superficial calcium only | Theoretically modifies deep calcium |