| Literature DB >> 35976920 |
Yoshinobu Murasato1, Kyohei Meno1, Takahiro Mori1, Katsuhiko Tanenaka1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A coronary bifurcation stenting is still a challenging issue due to frequent restenosis and stent thrombosis even with drug-eluting stents. The bifurcation angle (BA) between a main vessel and a side branch is one of the crucial determinants of coronary flow and shear stress that affect the plaque distribution. Previous bench and clinical studies have evaluated the impact of the BA between the proximal main vessel and the side branch (Angle A) and the BA between the distal main vessel and the side branch (Angle B) on the clinical outcomes of bifurcation stenting. However, the impact has not yet been fully elucidated due to a lack of statistical power or different manner of the assessment of BA.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35976920 PMCID: PMC9385039 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0273157
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.752
Fig 1Flow chart of search strategy.
IF: Journal impact factor.
Fig 2Definition of bifurcation angle (BA).
A: Definition in in the Bifurcation Academic Research Consortium. Angle A: BA between proximal main vessel (MV) and side branch (SB), Angle B: BA between distal MV and SB, Angle C: BA between proximal and distal MV. B: Another assessment of BA related to MV and SB. BA-α: Angle between axis of proximal MV and SB. C: Discordance of BA assessments. In the case with large curvature on the MV side, the Angle B is assessed as a wide BA in which the angle change due to the curvature is included, although the BA-α is not affected by the curvature.
Fig 3Relation between bifurcation angle (BA) and side branch (SB) ostial geometry.
(A) Relation among BA (θ), SB ostial length (L) and reference diameter (D). See detail in text. (B) SB ostial circumferential length. Narrower BA is associated with longer length. Adapted from reference no. 36. (C) SB ostial shape. Narrower BA is associated with elliptical change in SB ostial shape.
Fig 4Favorable stenting technique in Y- and T- shape bifurcation lesions.
In the Y-shape bifurcation, culotte or crush stenting is favorable due to complete coverage of the extended SB ostium. In the T-shape bifurcation, stenting crossing from the proximal MV to the SB is not suitable due to more frequent stent malapposition in the carinal area. See detail in the text.
Fig 5Experiment of the SB stenting from the MV.
(A) Right-angled bifurcation. (B) Steeply angulated bifurcation at 45° angle between the proximal MV and the SB. (a) Initial position of the guide wire is on the inner side at the middle portion (black triangle) and towards the outer sides at both ends of the stents (white triangles). (b) In the initial phase of the inflation, the middle portion was dilated at the end (arrow). The stent was thus dumbbell shaped. (c) There was unstented area at the distal carina even after full expansion of the stents. (d) The guide wire position had not been changed during the stent expansion. Note the biased position of the wire which was in the central core in the balloon. (e) Scheme of cross section of the stent balloon inflation with the deviated position of the guide wire (black circle) at the SB ostium. Adapted from Fig 17 of reference no. 7.
Fig 6Micro-focus computed tomography images of the SB stents deployed from the MV (a: View from the inner side, b: Anterior—posterior view, c: View from the outer side). Experiments were performed using tube-slotted type stent (A) and coil type stent (B). There were restrictions of the stent expansions in both stents (A[a], B[a], arrows). The outer struts of the tube-slotted type stent were stretched (A[c], dotted arrow), whereas the coil type stent had wide opening between the coils at its outer side (B[b], [c], white triangles). Adapted from reference 7, Fig 18.
Previous reports concerning coronary bifurcation angle on cardiac computed tomography angiography.
| Bifurcation | Studies | Medrano-Gracia [ | Kawasaki [ | Ellwein [ | Juan [ | Cui [ | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subject | No CAD | N | CAD suspect | n | CAD suspect | n | LMCA disease (-) | n | LMCA disease (+) | n | LMCA stenosis <50% | n | LMCA stenosis >70% | n | |
| LMCA | Angle A | 126.1±21.1 | 300 | 143±13 | 209 | 147.6 [144.3,151.0] | 67 | ND | ND | 145.2 ± 14.7 | 37 | 145.5 ± 13.2 | 45 | ||
| Angle B | 78.9±23.1 | 72±22 | ND | 75.53 ± 14.71 | 40 | 87.34 ± 18.84 | 211 | 68.3 ± 18.0 | 80.0±19.2 | ||||||
| Angle C | 138.6±18.9 | 121±21 | ND | ND | ND | 140.5 ± 27.0 | 137.1 ± 20.6 | ||||||||
| Diagonal | Angle A | 145.1±14.8 | 242 | ND | 161.1 [158.3,163.9] | 67 | ND | ND | ND | ND | |||||
| Angle B | 51.9±16.4 | ND | 68.7 [64.1, 72.6] | ND | ND | ND | ND | ||||||||
| Angle C | 150.5±13.8 | 138±19 | 209 | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | |||||||
| OM | Angle A | 146.9±21.5 | 176 | ND | 148.0 [142.7,153.3] | 67 | ND | ND | ND | ND | |||||
| Angle B | 55.8±23.2 | ND | 71.4 [66.4, 76.3] | ND | ND | ND | ND | ||||||||
| Angle C | 145.0±15.7 | 134±23 | 209 | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | |||||||
| RCA | Angle A | ND | 152±15 | 209 | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | ||||||
| Angle B | ND | 137±20 | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | ||||||||
| Angle C | ND | 61±21 | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | ||||||||
LMCA: left main coronary artery, OM: Oblique marginal branch, RCA: Right coronary artery, CAD: Coronary artery disease, ND: Not described, Values are expressed as mean ± standard deviation or median [1st, 3rd quartile]
* p<0.05 in the comparison between the groups divided by the presence of LMCA stenosis.
Previous reports concerning impact of bifurcation angle on mid- to long-term clinical outcome after coronary bifurcation stenting.
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| Sample size | Angle measurement | Stenting treatment | Follow-up | Main finding | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Dzavik et al. [ | 133 | 2D QCA | 2-stent | 12 months | The high BA-α (low Angle A) group had worse MACE rate than the low BA-α (high Angle A) group (22.7% vs 6.2%). | |
| Collins et al. [ | 140 | 2D QCA | 2-stent (crush / culotte) | 27 months | low BA-α (high Angle A)was associated with better MACE-free survival rate (OR = 0.59, 95% CI 0.35–0.92) than the high BA-α (low Angle A). | |
| Freixa et al. [ | 360 | 2D QCA | 2-stent (crush 304/ culotte 56) | 49 months | BA-α <50°(Angle A >130°) was associated with a lower risk of MACE or CCS Class ≥ 2 angina (OR = 0.59, 95% CI 0.35–0.92) | |
| Adriaenssens et al. [ | 134 | 2D QCA | 2-stent (culotte) | 9 months | The Angle B over means of 52° was related to more frequent restenosis compared to lower Angle B with < 52° (24.1% vs. 19.6%). | |
| Chang et al. [ | 238 | 2D QCA | 2-stent (culotte) | 38 months | Higher Angle B was an independent predictor for target lesion failure (OR 3.484, CI 1.213–10.009) | |
| DK-CRUSH III [ | 419 | 2D QCA | 2-stent (DK-crush 210 / culotte 209) | 12 months | Higher Angle B (>70°) was associated with more frequent 1-year MACE in culotte stenting than in DK-crush stenting (OR 0.20, CI 0.08–0.49). | |
| COBIS [ | 462 | 2D QCA | 2-stent in LMCA | 35 months | Higher Angle C was an independent predictor of target lesion failure after crush stenting with the best cut-off value of 152°, while it was not after T-stenting. | |
| J-CYPHER [ | 945 | 2D QCA | 2-stent vs. 1-stent in LMCA | 12 months | Angiographic SB restenosis after 2-stent was more frequent compared to 1-stent (35.3% vs. 14.5%) in the LMCA bifurcation with higher prevalence of Angle B >70° (40%). | |
| NORDIC I & BBC-ONE [ | 913 | 2D QCA | Provisional vs. Complex stenting | 9 months | Higher Angle B (>60–70°) brought more MACE in complex stenting (simple 9.6% vs. complex 15.7%). | |
| Amemiya et al. [ | 170 | 3D QCA | 1-stent in LMCA | 12 months | Lower Angle C was associated with higher MACE rate (low 33.3%, middle 14.3%, high 8.9%). | |
| Konishi et al. [ | 177 | CCTA | LMCA stenting | 11 months | Patients with intra-stent restenosis presented smaller Angle A than those without the restenosis (52.2± 14.5° vs. 32.0± 18.1°). | |
| MITO [ | 300 | 3D QCA | 2-stent in LMCA | 36 months | Large Angle B change (>7.2°) between systolic and diastolic phase was associated with higher TLF rate compared to the small BA change. (Adjusted HR 5.85; 95%CI, 3.40–10.1). | |
| Watanabe et al. [ | 55 | OCT | 1-stent | 12 months | Angle B was negatively corelated with uncovered strut percentage and positively with neointimal thickness in the SB ostial region. | |
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| Collins et al. [ | 266 | 2D QCA | 1-stent | 27 months | No effect of BA on clinical outcome | |
| DK-CRUSH I [ | 220 | 2D QCA | 2-stent (DK-crush) | 8 months | No significant difference in the MACE between the low (<60°) and high Angle B (≥60°) in the lesion (low Angle B 17.61% vs. high Angle B 17.64%). | |
| COBIS [ | 1,432 | 2D QCA | All bifurcation stenting | 21 months | Higher Angle B (≥50°) group presented a similar MACE rate as lower Angle B (<50°) group (6.6 vs. 6.9%) | |
| SYNTAX [ | 226 | 3D QCA | LMCA stenting | 12 months | MACCE rate were 17.2%, 14.6%, and 18.9%, respectively in the three groups of <82°, 82°-106°, and >107° of diastolic Angle B (non-significant) | |
| SYNTAX [ | 185 | 3D QCA | LMCA stenting | 60 months | MACCE rate increased to 37.1%, 37.7%, and 35.6%, respectively in the three groups of <82°, 82°-106°, and >107° of diastolic Angle B (non-significant) | |
QCA: Quantitative coronary angiography, CCTA: Cardiac computed tomography angiography, OCT: Optical coherence tomography, LMCA: Left main coronary artery.
BA: Bifurcation angle, MACE: Major adverse cardiac events, OR: Odds ratio, CI: Confidential interval, CCS: Canadian Cardiovascular Society functional classification.
LAD: Left anterior descending artery, MACCE: Major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular adverse events.