| Literature DB >> 33523728 |
Stéphane Rinfret2, Gregg W Stone5,28, Luiz F Ybarra1, Stéphane Rinfret2, Emmanouil S Brilakis3, Dimitri Karmpaliotis4,5, Lorenzo Azzalini6, J Aaron Grantham7, David E Kandzari8, Kambis Mashayekhi9, James C Spratt10, Harindra C Wijeysundera11, Ziad A Ali4,5, Christopher E Buller12, Mauro Carlino13, David J Cohen14, Donald E Cutlip15, Tony De Martini16, Carlo Di Mario17, Andrew Farb18,19, Aloke V Finn20, Alfredo R Galassi21, C Michael Gibson22, Colm Hanratty23, Jonathan M Hill24, Farouc A Jaffer25, Mitchell W Krucoff26, William L Lombardi27, Akiko Maehara4,5, P F Adrian Magee20, Roxana Mehran28, Jeffrey W Moses4,5, William J Nicholson29, Yoshinobu Onuma30,31, Georgios Sianos32, Satoru Sumitsuji33, Etsuo Tsuchikane34, Renu Virmani18, Simon J Walsh35, Gerald S Werner, Masahisa Yamane36, Gregg W Stone5,28.
Abstract
Over the past 2 decades, chronic total occlusion (CTO) percutaneous coronary intervention has developed into its own subspecialty of interventional cardiology. Dedicated terminology, techniques, devices, courses, and training programs have enabled progressive advancements. However, only a few randomized trials have been performed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of CTO percutaneous coronary intervention. Moreover, several published observational studies have shown conflicting data. Part of the paucity of clinical data stems from the fact that prior studies have been suboptimally designed and performed. The absence of standardized end points and the discrepancy in definitions also prevent consistency and uniform interpretability of reported results in CTO intervention. To standardize the field, we therefore assembled a broad consortium comprising academicians, practicing physicians, researchers, medical society representatives, and regulators (US Food and Drug Administration) to develop methods, end points, biomarkers, parameters, data, materials, processes, procedures, evaluations, tools, and techniques for CTO interventions. This article summarizes the effort and is organized into 3 sections: key elements and procedural definitions, end point definitions, and clinical trial design principles. The Chronic Total Occlusion Academic Research Consortium is a first step toward improved comparability and interpretability of study results, supplying an increasingly growing body of CTO percutaneous coronary intervention evidence.Entities:
Keywords: clinical trial protocols as topic; clinical trials as topic; coronary occlusion; endpoint determination; myocardial revascularization
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33523728 DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.120.046754
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Circulation ISSN: 0009-7322 Impact factor: 29.690