Kostantinis S, Simsek B, Karacsonyi J, Alaswad K, Krestyaninov O, Khelimskii D, Karmpaliotis D, Jaffer FA, Khatri JJ, Poommipanit P, Jaber WA, Rinfret S, Nicholson W, Patel MP, Mahmud E, Koutouzis M, Tsiafoutis I, Benton SM Jr, Davies RE, Toma C, Kerrigan JL, Haddad EV, Abi-Rafeh N, ElGuindy AM, Goktekin O, Mastrodemos OC, Rangan BV, Burke MN, and Brilakis ES
Coronary artery perforation is a feared complication of chronic total occlusion (CTO) percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Our objective was to describe the incidence, mechanisms, treatment, and outcomes of coronary artery perforation during CTO PCI. We analyzed the baseline clinical and angiographic characteristics and procedural outcomes of 10,454 CTO PCIs performed in 10,219 patients between 2012 and 2022. The incidence of coronary perforation was 4.9% (n = 503). Patients who experienced coronary perforation were older and were more likely to have had previous coronary artery bypass graft surgery. Procedures that resulted in perforation were more complex, with higher Japanese CTO and Prospective Global Registry for the Study of Chronic Total Occlusion Intervention (PROGRESS-CTO) scores. Technical (66% vs 87%, p <0.001) and procedural (55% vs 87%, p <0.001) success rates were lower in perforation cases. The CTO target vessel was the most common perforation site (66%). The retrograde approach was responsible for the perforation in 47% of cases, and guidewire exit was the most common perforation mechanism. The proportion of Ellis class 1, 2, 3, and 3 -"cavity spilling" coronary perforations was 20%, 41%, 28%, and 11%, respectively. In 52% of perforations, 1 or more interventions were required: prolonged balloon inflation (23%), covered stent deployment (21%), coil embolization (6%), and/or autologous fat embolization (4%). Tamponade requiring pericardiocentesis occurred in 69 patients (14%). The incidence of major adverse cardiovascular events was higher in perforation cases (18% vs 1.3%, p <0.001). In conclusion, coronary artery perforation occurred in 4.9% of CTO PCIs performed by experienced operators and was associated with lower technical success and higher in-hospital major adverse cardiovascular events., Competing Interests: Disclosures Dr. Alaswad: Consultant and speaker for Boston Scientific, Abbott Cardiovascular, Teleflex, and Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Dr. Karmpaliotis: Honoraria - Boston Scientific and Abbot Vascular; Equity: Saranas, Soundbite, Traverse Vascular. Dr. Jaffer: Sponsored research: Canon, Siemens, Shockwave, Teleflex, Mercator, and Boston Scientific; Consultant: Boston Scientific, Siemens, Magenta Medical, International Medical Device Solutions, Asahi Intecc, Biotronik, Philips, Intravascular Imaging Inc. Equity interest: Intravascular Imaging Inc, DurVena. Massachusetts General Hospital - licensing arrangements: Terumo, Canon, and Spectrawave, for which Dr. Jaffer has the right to receive royalties. Dr. Khatri: Personal Honoria for proctoring and speaking: Abbott Vascular, Asahi Intecc Co., Ltd., Terumo, and Boston Scientific. Dr. Poommipanit: Asahi Intecc Co., Ltd., Abbott, Vascular-Consultant. Dr. Jaber: Medtronic and proctoring fees from Abbott. Dr. Rinfret: Abbott Vascular, Abiomed, Boston Scientific Corporation, SoundBite Medical, Teleflex consultant. Dr. Nicholson: Is a proctor and on the speakers' bureau and the advisory board for Abbott Vascular, Boston Scientific, and Asahi Intecc Co., Ltd.; he reports intellectual property with Vascular Solutions. Dr. Patel: Consulting Honoraria from Abbott, Medtronic, Terumo, and Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. Dr. Mahmud: Consultant for Abiomed, Medtronic, and Boston Scientific, and chairs multiple Data, Safety, and Monitoring Boards. Dr. Davies: Honoraria from Asahi Intecc Co., Ltd., Boston Scientific, Medtronic, and Siemens Healthineers, in addition to being a member of an advisory board for Shockwave Medical. Dr. Kerrigan: Consultant to Abiomed, Asahi Intecc Co., Ltd., Biotronik, Cordis, Boston Scientific, Ischemaview Inc., Osprey Medical, Penumbra, Philips, and Teleflex. Dr. Abi-Rafeh: Proctor and speaker honoraria for Boston Scientific and Abbott Vascular. Dr. ElGuindy: Consulting honoraria: Medtronic, Boston Scientific, Asahi Intecc Co., Ltd., Abbott; Proctorship fees: Medtronic, Boston Scientific, Asahi Intecc Co., Ltd., and Terumo; Educational grants: Medtronic. Dr. Brilakis: Consulting/speaker honoraria from Abbott Vascular, American Heart Association (Associate Editor: Circulation), Amgen, Asahi Intecc Co., Ltd., Biotronik, Boston Scientific, Cardiovascular Innovations Foundation (Board of Directors), ControlRad, CSI, Elsevier, GE Healthcare, IMDS, InfraRedx, Medicure, Medtronic, Opsens, Siemens, and Teleflex; Research support: Boston Scientific, GE Healthcare; owner at Hippocrates LLC; shareholder at Minneapolis Heart Institute Ventures, Cleerly Health, and Stallion Medical. The remaining authors have no conflicts of interest to declare., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)