| Literature DB >> 35887819 |
Piotr Baruś1, Jakub Modrzewski1, Karolina Gumiężna1, Piotr Dunaj1, Marcin Głód1, Adrian Bednarek1, Wojciech Wańha2, Tomasz Roleder3, Janusz Kochman1, Mariusz Tomaniak1.
Abstract
Although coronary angiography has been well established as a standard modality for percutaneous coronary intervention guidance, recent developments in intravascular imaging techniques, such as intravascular ultrasound and optical coherence tomography, have become increasingly adopted, enabling direct detailed lesion visualization, including lesions beyond the scope of assessment using exclusively angiography. Intravascular imaging modalities have been reported to potentially improve both short- and long-term percutaneous intervention outcomes. This review aims to provide a comparative summary of recent advancements in research regarding the clinical applications and outcomes of intravascular ultrasound and optical coherence tomography.Entities:
Keywords: intravascular imaging; intravascular ultrasound; optical coherence tomography; percutaneous coronary interventions
Year: 2022 PMID: 35887819 PMCID: PMC9324054 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11144055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.964
Figure 1IVUS image of the right coronary artery—diameters’ measurements.
Most important IVUS and OCT characteristics.
| IVUS | Characteristic | OCT |
|---|---|---|
| Ultrasound | Type of wave | Infrared |
| 5–6 mm | Tissue penetration depth | Up to 2.5 mm |
| Easily possible | Ability to visualize EEL | Very hard |
| Low | Resolution | High |
| No | Contrast usage | Yes |
| Possible | Ability of left main lesions assessment | Impossible |
| Medium | Repeatability of measurement | High |
Figure 2Examples of optical coherence tomography imaging: (a) demonstrating normal artery wall comprising three-layered architecture: highly backscattering thin layer-intima, low backscattering-media and heterogeneous layer-adventitia (b) an example of thin-cap fibroatheroma (blue arrows) visible in one-year follow-up after bioresorbable vascular scaffold implantation.
A summary of recent studies comparing OCT vs. IVUS.
| Study | Study Type | Aims of Investigation | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ramasamy et al. [ | Meta-analysis | IVUS vs. OCT in detection of functionally significant intermediate non-left main coronary artery stenoses. |
IVUS and OCT have similar sensitivity in predicting haemodynamically significant lesions (IVUS-MLA: 0.747 vs. OCT-MLA 0.732, OCT-MLA had a higher specificity (0.763 vs. 0.665, |
| Habara et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial | Evaluation of FD-OCT guidance for coronary stent implantation compared with IVUS guidance in patients with stable and unstable angina. |
Smaller stent expansion in the FD-OCT guided stent implantation in comparison to the IVUS guided group (minimum and mean stent area, focal and diffuse stent expansion were smaller in the FD-OCT group, Frequency of significant residual reference segment stenosis at the proximal edge was higher in the FD-OCT group ( No significant differences in pre-baloon dilatation and stent size. |
| OPINION
| Randomized controlled trial | Comparison of OFDI-guided PCI compared with IVUS-guided PCI in terms of clinical outcomes. |
12-month clinical outcome in patients undergoing OFDI-guided PCI was non-inferior to that of patients undergoing IVUS-guided PCI, defined by target vessel failure (composite of cardiac death, target-vessel related myocardial infarction, and ischaemia-driven target vessel revascularization). stent diameter was smaller in the OCT group ( |
| ILUMIEN III: OPTIMIZE PCI
| Randomized controlled trial | Investigation of OCT and IVUS guided stent sizing in comparison with coronary angiography. |
OCT guidance was non-inferior to IVUS guidance (one-sided 97.5% lower CI—0.70 mm2; OCT guidance was also found not to be superior to angiography guidance ( At a 12-month follow up there was no statistical difference in clinical outcomes between IVUS and OCT. Acute stent malapposition was detected two times more frequently by OCT than IVUS (38.5% vs. 19.3%). |
| OPUS-CLASS
| Prospective study | Investigation of reliability of frequency domain optical coherence tomography (FD-OCT) for coronary measurements compared with quantitative coronary angiography (QCA) and intravascular ultrasound (IVUS). |
The minimum lumen area measured byI VUS was significantly greater than that by FD-OCT (3.68 2.06 mm2 vs. 3.27 2.22 mm2, Acute stent malapposition was detected two times more frequently by OCT than IVUS (39% vs. 14%). |
| Jones et al. [ | Cohort study | Determination of the effect on long-term survival of patients who underwent an OCT- or an IVUS-guided PCI. |
OCT-guided procedures were associated with greater procedural success rates and reduced in-hospital MACE rate. A significant difference in mortality was observed between patients who underwent OCT-guided PCI (7.7%) compared with patients who underwent either IVUS-guided (12.2%) or angiography-guided (15.7%; Both intravascular modalities were predictors of survival, proving the superiority of clinical outcomes when the new imaging techniques were part of the diagnostic process |
| Saleh et al. [ | Meta-analysis | Comparison of the clinical outcomes between OCT-guided and IVUS-guided low risk percutaneous coronary intervention. |
The analysis showed a similar risk of major cardiac adverse events (OCT 5.0% vs. IVUS 4.7%, |
Figure 3OCT vs. IVUS measurement outcomes.
Figure 4An example of a comparison between OCT- and IVUS-derived images and measurements of the same lesion in the circumflex coronary artery. The minimal lumen area was 2.75 mm2 in OCT and 3.50 mm2 by IVUS. Adapted with permission from [40]. Under an Elsevier User license, copyright year 2013.
Figure 5A comparison between the same calcified plaque. To the left an OCT image, to the right an IVUS image. The calcium angle (curved arrow) can be measured by both modalities and is 130°; however, calcium thickness (double-headed straight arrow) can only be measured by OCT. Adapted with permission from [1]. Under Elsevier User license, copyright year 2017.
Comparison of visualization and assessment capabilities between IVUS and OCT.
| OCT | Visualization and Assessment of | IVUS |
|---|---|---|
| = | Non-complex lesions | = |
| Left main assessment and stenting optimization | + | |
| + | Acute stent malapposition | |
| + | Neoatherosclerosis | |
| + | Stent thrombosis | |
| + | Plaques prone to rupture | |
| + | Calcified plaques |
Figure 6An example of vessel sizing in relation to external elastic lamina (EEL). IVUS (below) was able to show the full EEL diameter (arrow heads), whereas OCT did not visualize the EEL border due to the plaque attenuation and consequently lower signal penetration. Adapted with permission from [1]. Under Elsevier User license, copyright year 2017.