| Literature DB >> 34934324 |
Joyce Peper1,2, Leonie M Becker1,2, Jan-Peter van Kuijk1, Tim Leiner2, Martin J Swaans1.
Abstract
The aim of this review was to discuss the current practice and patient selection for invasive FFR, new techniques to estimate invasive FFR and future of coronary physiology tests. We elaborate on the indication and application of FFR and on the contraindications and concerns in certain patient populations.Entities:
Keywords: coronary artery disease; fractional flow reserve; patient selection; revascularisation
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34934324 PMCID: PMC8684425 DOI: 10.2147/VHRM.S286916
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vasc Health Risk Manag ISSN: 1176-6344
Current Guidelines for FFR
| Guideline | Recommendations | Recommendation Class |
|---|---|---|
| ACCF/AHA | FFR is reasonable to assess angiographically intermediate coronary artery stenosis (50–70%). | Class IIa Level of evidence A |
| FFR can be useful for guiding revascularization decisions in patients with stable ischemic heart disease (SIHD). | ||
| ESC/EACTS | FFR to identify hemodynamically relevant coronary lesion(s) in stable patients when evidence of ischemia is not available. | Class I Level of evidence A |
| FFR to guide PCI in patients with MVD. | ||
| SCAI | Definitely beneficial: | Class IIa Level of evidence B |
| In SIHD, when non-invasive stress imaging is contraindicated, non-diagnostic or unavailable, FFR should be used to assess functional significance of intermediate and severe coronary stenosis (50–90%). | ||
| In SIHD, PCI of lesions with FFR < 0.80 improves symptom control and decreases the need for hospitalization requiring urgent revascularization compared to medical therapy. | ||
| In SIHD, medical therapy is indicated for an angiographically intermediate stenosis of unclear significant when FFR > 0.80. | ||
| In patients with multivessel CAD, FFR-guided PCI improves outcomes and saves resources when compared to angiographic-guided PCI. | ||
| In patients with three vessel CAD, FFR allows for reclassification of number of vessels diseased and/or SYNTAX score. | ||
| No proven benefit | ||
| FFR measurement of culprit vessel in patient with acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction or unstable acute coronary syndrome presentation should not be performed. |
Abbreviations: CAD, coronary artery disease; FFR, fractional flow reserve; MVD, multivessel disease; PCI, percutaneous coronary intervention; SIHD, stable ischemic heart disease.
Figure 1Overview of the different non and less invasive FFR techniques. (A) Example of a non-hyperemic pressure ratio measurement (iFR) of the RCA. (B) Example of angiography-based FFR (QFR) of the LAD. (C) Two examples of CT based FFR (left panel: HeartFlow FFR-CT, right panel: Philips CT-FFR).