| Literature DB >> 35261627 |
Jie Wang1, Shuo Yuan2,3, Jingjing Qi1, Qinggao Zhang3, Zheng Ji1.
Abstract
Coronary heart disease is the leading cause of mortality among all diseases globally. Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is a key method for the treatment of coronary heart disease. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is an optical diagnostic technology with a resolution of up to 10 µm, which is able to accurately assess the composition of the coronary arterial wall and determine the characteristics of atherosclerotic lesions. It is also highly consistent with pathological examinations, optimizing the effect of stent implantation and evaluation of the long-term effectiveness and safety of the stent, which has irreplaceable value in the field of precision and optimization of coronary intervention. The innovative OCT technology may help provide more comprehensive clinical research evidence. The application of OCT in clinical and basic research of coronary atherosclerosis, selection of treatment strategies for acute coronary syndromes, optimization of interventional treatment efficacy, evaluation of novel stents, intimal stent coverage and selection of dual antiplatelet drugs has become more widely used, affecting the current coronary interventional treatment strategies to a certain extent. The aim of the present review was to discuss the role of OCT in evaluating preoperative plaque characteristics, guiding PCI and evaluating the effects of postoperative stents or drug treatments. Copyright: © Wang et al.Entities:
Keywords: coronary heart disease; optical coherence tomography; percutaneous coronary intervention; vulnerable plaque
Year: 2022 PMID: 35261627 PMCID: PMC8855506 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2022.11180
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447
Comparison of several catheter technologies.
| Item | CAG | OCT | IVUS | Angioscopy | NIRS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plaque volume | - | - | ++ | + | - |
| Calcification | ++ | ++ | +++ | - | - |
| Fiber cap | - | +++ | + | + | + |
| Lipid core | - | +++ | ++ | + | ++ |
| Inflammation | - | + | - | - | - |
| Thrombus | + | ++ | + | +++ | + |
| Vascular remodeling | - | - | ++ | - | - |
| Stent expansion | - | ++ | ++ | + | - |
| Intimal hyperplasia | + | ++ | + | + | - |
OCT, optical coherence tomography; CAG, coronary angiography; IVUS, intravascular ultrasound; NIRS, near-infrared spectroscopy; -, no recognition ability; +, weak recognition; ++, fair recognition ability; +++, strong recognition.
Comparison of the characteristics of OCT and IVUS.
| A, IVUS modality | |
|---|---|
| Advantages | Limitations |
| The development of IVUS and the recognition of images are relatively mature | The currently developed IVUS imaging catheter has poor passing ability for more severe stenosis or twisted angular lesions |
| IVUS is able to clearly display the intravascular structure and evaluate the plaque composition | As different tissues may have the same acoustic properties, the same density value may be reflected in IVUS images |
| It may optimize and guide the treatment of coronary intervention | The current IVUS on the market has a low resolution and is not able to make accurate judgments for small structures and lesions in blood vessels, and corresponding changes in the lumen after stent implantation |
| It may be used to study the mechanism of plaque progression or regression prior to and after treatment, vascular remodeling and restenosis after stent implantation | |
| B, OCT modality | |
| Advantages | Limitations |
| It has an ultra-high resolution comparable to histology, allowing real-time observation of small structures and lesions in blood vessels | The OCT imaging process requires blocking or removal of the blood in the corresponding detection vessel, which increases the difficulty of the operation and limits its application in severe coronary ischemic diseases |
| It is able to accurately measure coronary luminal parameters, observe the morphological characteristics of arterial intima and plaques, and identify vulnerable plaques and macrophage infiltration prior to surgery | OCT has a weak penetrating ability and is not able to accurately analyze the whole picture of the lesion. It is also difficult to measure the diameter of larger blood vessels and evaluate vascular remodeling |
| It is able to make the percutaneous coronary intervention process more refined and optimize the immediate effect after stent implantation. It may accurately observe the postoperative situation of various types of stent implantation at the cross-sectional level | OCT is not able to clearly identify the internal tissue covered by the thrombus (particularly red thrombus) inside the blood vessel |
| In the detection after stent implantation, although OCT may clearly detect the stent intima, it is still unable to distinguish the histological characteristics of the stent surface covering the intima | |
OCT, optical coherence tomography; IVUS, intravascular ultrasound.
Figure 1Types of plaques in optical coherence tomography images. (A) Diagram of normal coronary arteries (scale bar, 1 mm). (B) Magnified image of normal coronary artery wall (scale bar, 0.5 mm). Representative images of (C) fibrous plaque, (D) calcified plaque, (E) lipid plaque, (F) cholesterol crystal, (G) macrophage infiltration and (H) microchannel (arrows, scale bar, 1 mm). EEM, external elastic membrane; IEM, internal elastic membrane.
Types of plaques in OCT images.
| Type of plaque | Feature | OCT image performance | Sensitivity and specificity (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fibrous plaque | The pathological feature is the pathological thickening of the intima, and an intimal thickness of 600 µm is regarded as the limit value between normal and pathological intimal thickening. In OCT, it is characterized by low attenuation, homogeneity and fine texture | It has a relatively uniform and highly reflective optical signal. If the inner elastic membrane and outer elastic membrane cannot be seen in the lesion, the lesion should be carefully considered as a fibrous plaque | 79, 97 |
| Calcified plaque[ | The pathological feature is that calcium salt is deposited in the necrosis and the fibrous cap, and the arterial wall becomes hard and brittle. In OCT, it is characterized by low back reflection and low attenuation, with sharp edges | It is manifested as a sharp-edged low signal or uneven signal area. This definition is suitable for large calcifications. It has not been determined whether the above OCT definition is suitable for micro-calcification | 95-96, 97 |
| Lipid plaque | Pathological characteristics: Lipid deposition in the fat streak, smooth muscle cells in the middle membrane migrate into the inner membrane, part of the proliferation forms a fibrous cap, part of the phagocytosis of lipids forms smooth muscle-derived foam cells, which evolve into lipid plaques. In OCT, the edges are blurred or features are illegible | The edge contour is blurred in the weak optical signal area and there is a high signal fiber cap on the surface of the low signal area. When diagnosing lipid plaques deep in tissues, caution is warranted, as the attenuation of OCT signal may also lead to the appearance of weak signal areas. Therefore, OCT is more accurate at identifying lipid plaques and lipid pools near the surface of the lumen. It is generally thought that when the external elastic membrane cannot be identified, OCT cannot measure the thickness, area or volume of the lipid pool. In OCT images, the angle of the lipid pool is frequently used to evaluate the size of the lipid pool | 90-94, 90-92 |
| Microstructure within plaque | |||
| Macrophage infiltration | The rich lipid components in macrophages may cause significant attenuation or blocking of OCT signals | Highly reflective, strongly attenuated dot or stripe structure, frequently forming radial shadows behind high-signal dotted areas. At present, OCT images mainly evaluate macrophages in fibrous plaques and lipid plaques | - |
| Microchannel | From the adventitia of the blood vessel to the intima, it communicates with the blood vessels around the adventitia and finally extends to the coronary artery lumen | A hole with a diameter of 50-300 µm, weak signal and sharp edges, and may usually be tracked in multiple consecutive frames. It has not yet been determined whether these blood vessels are connected to the surface of the lumen or originate from nourishing blood vessels | - |
| Cholesterol crystals | It is usually located in the fibrous cap and the core of lipid. necrosis | Thin linear regions with higher signal strength and lower. attenuation | - |
aIncludes four categories: Annular calcification (angle of calcification spots exceeding 270˚), spotty calcification (refers to calcification with an angle of calcification <90˚ and a length <10 mm), deep calcification (refers to the calcified plaque being >100 µm away from the lumen) and superficial calcification (refers to a distance between the calcified plaque and the lumen of 65-100 µm). OCT, optical coherence tomography.
Figure 2Vulnerable plaques. (A) Thin-cap fibroatheroma: The thinnest fiber cap (40 µm, point B; scale bar, 0.5 mm). (B) The plaque is ruptured, the continuity of the fiber cap is interrupted (arrow) and a cavity is formed (asterisk); (C) plaque erosion and complete fibrous cap continuity with mural thrombus (arrow); (D) red thrombus (arrow); (E) white thrombus (arrow; scale bars, 1 mm).
Histopathological definition and criteria of vulnerable plaque (10-12). A positive diagnosis was made when one of the main criteria and at least two of the secondary criteria were met.
| A, Main criteria | |
|---|---|
| Histopathological feature | Definition and characterisation |
| Active inflammation | Plaques with active inflammation frequently have a large number of monocytes, macrophages and T lymphocytes infiltrated and aggregated |
| Thin fiber cap and large lipid core | The thickness of the fibrous cap of these plaques is <100 µm and the lipid core accounts for more than 40% of the total plaque volume |
| Exfoliation of endothelium with platelet aggregation | These plaques are characterized by superficial erosion with platelet aggregation or cellulose deposition |
| Damaged or cracked plaque | Most of them are recent ruptures, which may be the cause of subacute thrombosis |
| Severe stenosis (>90%) | The surface shear force at severely narrowed areas has a vital role in the formation of thrombus and occlusion |
| B, Secondary criteria | |
| Histopathological feature | Definition and characterisation |
| Superficial calcified nodules | There are calcified nodules in or near the fiber cap of the plaque. These nodules will highlight the plaque and cause the plaque to rupture. This may not be related to the severity of the calcification |
| Yellow shiny patches | The yellow plaques under angioscopy suggest large lipid cores and thin fibrous caps, which are easier to rupture, but this indicator lacks sufficient specificity |
| Bleeding in the plaque | Red blood cell overflow or iron deposits in the plaque may reflect the instability of the plaque |
| Endothelial dysfunction | Occurring in a variety of acute and chronic disease states, active inflammation and oxidative stress in vulnerable plaques are thought to be related to endothelial dysfunction |
| Positive remodeling of blood vessels | Studies have indicated that positive vascular remodeling is an important sign of vulnerable plaque |
Advantages and disadvantages of several methods for evaluating vulnerable plaques (14-15).
| Modality | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| CAG | The method of CAG is simple, it requires a short time, has fewer complications and high diagnostic value. To a certain extent, the smoothness and stenosis of the lumen may be observed | The effect of foreshortening leads to underestimation of the length of the stenosis of the lesion and there are large errors in the measurement of the vascular structure at the bifurcation and the eccentric plaque, and it is impossible to clearly determine whether the plaque is a vulnerable plaque |
| Angioscopy | The surface of the thrombus and plaque may be directly observed and the fibrous cap rupture and thrombosis may be detected. At the same time, the color of the plaque may be observed (white indicates mostly a stable plaque and yellow mostly a vulnerable plaque) | The size of the device is large. It may only be used to observe limited blood vessels and is not able to observe the inside of the plaque and the blood vessel wall. In addition, the blood flow requires to be blocked, which may cause remote ischemia |
| IVUS | It is able to clearly distinguish the structure of each layer of the blood vessel wall, determine the diameter of the lumen, plaque volume, load and vascular remodeling, and may distinguish the properties of plaque such as lipid core, calcification and fibrous tissue | IVUS may only display image information of plaque subcomponents and not able to provide any quantitative detection. Only the calcified surface structure may be observed and the display effect is not optimal |
| With strong penetrating power, it may provide overall and comprehensive imaging information for plaque assessment | The thickness of the fiber cap cannot be accurately determined and the detection of thrombus is not sufficiently sensitive | |
| OCT | It has a high resolution, may accurately evaluate the microstructure close to the lumen, particularly in the unstable components of plaque, such as the thickness of the fiber cap, macrophage infiltration, lipid plaque size or plaque rupture. The fibrous cap thickness measurement is in good agreement with histology | The penetration ability is weak (1-2 mm) and its penetration depth is far less than that of IVUS (8-10 mm). OCT is not able to provide an accurate analysis of the full picture of the lesion. The lesion area covered by the thrombus may not be used for an accurate assessment |
OCT, optical coherence tomography; CAG, coronary angiography; IVUS, intravascular ultrasound.
Figure 3Evaluation after stent implantation. (A) The stent adheres well to the wall. (B) The stent is obviously poorly attached to the wall (indicated by the arrow). (C) Prolapse of the plaque (arrow). (D) Thrombus prolapse (arrow). (E) The stent trabeculae are embedded in the inner membrane and covered well (arrow). (F) Neoatherosclerosis in the stent. Hyperplastic endothelium within the stent is a high signal, followed by significant signal attenuation and blurred margins, suggesting lipid deposition, but not the formation of a true necrotic core (asterisk).
Treatment principles for vascular dissection after stent implantation and the main treatment principles for tissue prolapse in the stent after stent implantation.
| A, Principles of treatment of vascular dissection after stent implantation | |
|---|---|
| Type of vascular dissection | Processing principle |
| For intimal dissection with no clinical symptoms, no ischemic ECG changes, TIMI blood flow grade III | No special treatment |
| For dissection involving the vascular media, even intra-vascular hematoma or vascular rupture | Implant the stent immediately |
| The severity lies between the above two | If the edge of the stent dissection is >60˚, the length of the dissection is >3 mm, the distal TIMI blood flow is affected, and the MLA is <5.0 mm2, the stent should be further implanted to avoid serious clinical consequences |
| B, Major treatment principles of tissue prolapse in the stent after stent implantation | |
| Type of tissue prolapse | Processing principle |
| The amount of tissue prolapse in the stent is small, the protruding lumen is <200 µm, prolapsed area is <10% of the area in the stent, the stent expands well and the TIMI blood flow is grade III | Should not intervene temporarily, postoperative antiplatelet therapy should be strengthened |
| The amount of tissue prolapse in the stent is large, the protruding lumen >200 µm, the prolapsed area is ≥10% of the internal area of the stent and the stent is poorly expanded | Use of a balloon with the same diameter as the stent for high-pressure expansion |
| The effect of the above two methods is still not obvious | It may be considered to implant a stent in the prolapsed tissue to cover the prolapsed tissue to increase the effective lumen area |
TIMI, thrombolysis in myocardial infarction; MLA, minimal luminal area.
Several features used in the examination of left main lesions (4,27,41).
| A, CAG | |
|---|---|
| Consideration | Comments |
| Judement of the degree of stenosis | Surgeons have different judgments on the degree of stenosis of coronary angiography and they frequently underestimate the degree of stenosis of coronary artery disease |
| Diffuse left main disease | When the left main disease is diffuse, it is difficult for angiography to accurately reflect the diameter of the blood vessel, which affects the choice of stent diameter and ultimately affects the effect of PCI |
| Left main ostium imaging | During the left main ostium imaging, the contrast agent flows back to the aorta, resulting in unclear visualization of the coronary ostium |
| Left main artery emergence | When the left main artery emerges from the aorta with an acute angle or the left main body is curved, the severe stenosis is easily missed by coronary angiography |
| Coronary angiography | Coronary angiography is not able to provide any detailed information on plaque composition and immediate effects after PCI |
| B, IVUS | |
| Consideration | Comments |
| Preoperative IVUS examination | Preoperative IVUS examination may confirm stenosis of the left main lesion, the length of the lesion and the characteristics of the plaque |
| Intraoperative IVUS | Intraoperative IVUS may determine the position and accuracy of the reset side guidewire, exclude the guidewire from passing outside the stent and avoid serious deformation of the stent |
| Postoperative IVUS | Postoperative IVUS examination may clarify the immediate effect of the stent and postoperative complications, and reduce the occurrence of postoperative cardiovascular adverse events |
| IVUS in combination with FFR | IVUS combined with FFR may guide the choice of treatment strategies for borderline left main lesions |
| C, OCT | |
| Consideration | Comments |
| OCT scanning speed | The scanning speed of the left main disease is faster (25 mm/sec), which may reduce the inter ference of the cardiac cycle on coronary artery imaging |
| Accuracy of area and diameter measurement | Measurement of the smallest lumen area and diameter and the evaluation of the composition are more accurate ( |
| OCT evaluation of effects and OCT sensitivity | OCT may clearly evaluate the immediate effects, vascular wall damage and complications after PCI, and is more sensitive than IVUS |
| ILUMIEN™OPTIS™ system real-time three-dimensional imaging | The ILUMIEN™OPTIS™ system may perform real-time three-dimensional imaging of the left main lesion, which may finely determine the extent, length, stenosis and reference blood vessel diameter of the lesion, and it is convenient for the surgeon to observe and analyze the blood vessel from multiple angles to make a correct assessment |
| ILUMIEN™OPTIS™ system integration of FFR | The ILUMIEN™OPTIS™ system integrates the FFR function, so that it has both morphological and functional evaluation functions, so as to more comprehensively evaluate the coronary artery function |
| OCT transmission depth | OCT transmission depth is small and the remodeling changes of the blood vessels and the surrounding conditions of the blood vessels cannot be evaluated. This is the drawback in guiding PCI treatment of the left main disease |
OCT, optical coherence tomography; CAG, coronary angiography; IVUS, intravascular ultrasound; FFR, fractional flow reserve; PCI, percutaneous coronary intervention.
Figure 4Factors affecting OCT imaging results. (A) Branch vessel (asterisk). (B) Bubble artifacts (arrow). (C) Saturation artifacts (arrow; scale bar, 1 mm). (D) Incomplete image (scale bar, 2 mm). (E) Blood that was not washed away. (F) The guidewire is damaged. (G) Staggered layer artifacts. (H) The incorrect measurement method was used at the fault level. (I) The correct measurement method was used at the staggering level (scale bar, 1 mm). The A in G-I indicates the staggering layer. The green line indicates the measured lumen profile.