| Literature DB >> 34950239 |
Daniel Tze Yee Ang1,2, Colin Berry1,2.
Abstract
Ischaemia with non-obstructed coronary artery disease (INOCA) remains a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge. An anatomical investigationbased approach to ischaemic heart disease fails to account for disorders of vasomotion. The main INOCA endotypes are microvascular angina, vasospastic angina, mixed (both) or non-cardiac symptoms. The interventional diagnostic procedure (IDP) enables differentiation between clinical endotypes, with linked stratified medical therapy leading to a reduced symptom burden and a better quality of life. Interventionists are therefore well placed to make a positive impact with more personalised care. Despite adjunctive tests of coronary function being supported by contemporary guidelines, IDP use in daily practice remains limited. More widespread adoption should be encouraged. This article reviews a stratified approach to INOCA, describes a streamlined approach to the IDP and highlights some practical and safety considerations.Entities:
Keywords: Ischaemia with no obstructive coronary artery disease; angina; coronary; coronary microvascular dysfunction; interventional diagnostic procedure; ischaemic heart disease; vasospastic angina
Year: 2021 PMID: 34950239 PMCID: PMC8674629 DOI: 10.15420/icr.2021.16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Interv Cardiol ISSN: 1756-1485
INOCA Diagnosis
| Clinical Endotype | Diagnostic Criteria | Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Microvascular angina | 1. Symptoms of myocardial ischaemia | Effort or rest angina/angina-equivalent, including dyspnoea |
| 2. Absence of obstructive coronary artery disease (<50% stenosis or FFR >0.80) | CTCA or invasive coronary angiography ± FFR | |
| 3. Objective evidence of myocardial ischaemia | Ischaemic ECG during episode of chest pain and/or abnormal functional tests (e.g. myocardial perfusion or regional wall motion abnormality). | |
| 4. Evidence of impaired coronary microvascular function | CFR ≤2.0 (2.1–2.5 grey-zone result), IMR ≥25, HMR ≥2.5 mmHg/cm/s, and/or microvascular spasm (TIMI flow ≤2) during vasoreactivity testing | |
| Vasospastic angina | 1. ≥90% epicardial vasoconstriction | ≥90% reduction in coronary luminal diameter versus baseline during vasoreactivity testing |
| 2. Reproduction of usual anginal symptoms | Angina/ angina-equivalent symptoms including chest discomfort and dyspnoea | |
| 3. Ischaemic ECG changes | ST-segment deviation ≥0.1 mV or new negative U waves | |
| Mixed (microvascular and vasospastic) | Overlap condition meeting criteria for both microvascular angina and vasospastic angina | Evidence of microvascular dysfunction in the presence of significant (≥90%) epicardial vasoconstriction |
| Non-cardiac symptoms | Unobstructed coronary arteries with normal coronary function test results | <50% stenosis or FFR >0.80, with normal CFR, IMR/HMR and vasoreactivity testing |
Coronary Vasomotor Disorders International Study Group Diagnostic Criteria for INOCA. CFR = coronary flow reserve; CTCA = CT coronary angiography; FFR = fractional flow reserve; HMR = hyperaemic microvascular resistance; IMR = index of microcirculatory resistance; TIMI = thrombolysis in MI. Source: Ong et al. 2018.[
Guideline-recommended Treatments Based on Clinical Endotype
| Diagnosis | Treatment | Mechanism of Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Microvascular angina | β-blockers (nebivolol 2.5–10 mg once daily) |
↓ Myocardial oxygen consumption Antioxidant properties |
| Calcium-channel blockers (amlodipine 10 mg once daily) |
Vascular smooth muscle relaxation ↓ Myocardial oxygen consumption | |
| Nicorandil (10–20 mg twice daily) |
Coronary microvascular dilator | |
| Ranolazine (375–750 mg twice daily) |
Improves microvascular perfusion reserve index in microvascular angina with reduced CFR | |
| Trimetazidine (35 mg twice daily) |
Increases cellular tolerance to ischaemia by maintaining homeostasis | |
| ACE inhibitors (ramipril 2.5–10 mg once daily); angiotensin-receptor blockers if intolerant |
Improves CFR ↓ Workload May improve small vessel remodelling | |
| Vasospastic angina | Calcium channel blockers (verapamil 240 mg once daily or diltiazem 120–360 mg daily) |
↓ Spontaneous and inducible epicardial coronary spasm via smooth muscle relaxation ↓ Myocardial oxygen consumption |
| Nitrates (isosorbide mononitrate 20–120 mg daily) |
↓ Spontaneous and inducible coronary spasm via epicardial vasodilatation ↓ myocardial oxygen consumption | |
| Nicorandil (10–20 mg twice daily) |
Coronary vasodilator effect | |
| Mixed microvascular and vasospastic angina | Calcium channel blockers (amlodipine 10 mg once daily, diltiazem 90 mg twice daily or verapamil 240 mg once daily) |
Vascular smooth muscle relaxation ↓ Myocardial oxygen consumption |
| Nicorandil (10–20 mg twice daily) |
Coronary microvascular dilator | |
| Trimetazidine (35 mg twice daily) |
Increases cellular tolerance to ischaemia by maintaining homeostasis | |
| ACE inhibitors (ramipril 2.5–10 mg); angiotensin-receptor blockers if intolerant |
Improves CFR ↓ Workload May improve small vessel remodelling | |
| Non-cardiac symptoms | Discontinue antianginal medication; consider continuing cardiovascular risk reduction medication (e.g. statin) if coronary artery disease present |
Cessation of unnecessary polypharmacy Continue cardiovascular risk reduction Consider referral to alternative specialty if appropriate |
| Cardiovascular risk reduction | Statins (e.g. atorvastatin 20–80 mg) |
Improve coronary endothelial function Reduced vascular inflammation |
| Antihypertensives |
As per current hypertension guidelines | |
| Lifestyle: smoking cessation, exercise, cardiac rehabilitation, Mediterranean diet, cognitive behavioural therapy |
Improved exercise capacity and cardiac conditioning, weight reduction if overweight |
Summary of European Association of Percutaneous Cardiovascular Interventions expert consensus[