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Relationship between arterial remodelling and serial changes in coronary atherosclerosis by intravascular ultrasound: an analysis of the IBIS-4 study.

Authors :
Koskinas, Konstantinos C.
Maldonado, Rafaela
Garcia-Garcia, Hector M.
Yamaji, Kyohei
Taniwaki, Masanori
Ueki, Yasushi
Otsuka, Tatsuhiko
Zanchin, Christian
Karagiannis, Alexios
Jensen, Maria D. Radu Juul
Losdat, Sylvain
Zaugg, Serge
Windecker, Stephan
Räber, Lorenz
Source :
European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging; Sep2021, Vol. 22 Issue 9, p1054-1062, 9p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Aims Arterial remodelling is an important determinant of coronary atherosclerosis. Assessment of the remodelling index, comparing a lesion to a local reference site, is a suboptimal correlate of serial vascular changes. We assessed a novel approach which, unlike the local-reference approach, uses the entire artery's global remodelling as reference. Methods and results Serial (baseline and 13 months) intravascular ultrasound was performed in 146 non-infarct-related arteries of 82 patients treated with high-intensity statin. Arteries were divided into 3-mm segments (n  = 1479), and focal remodelling was characterized in individual segments at both timepoints applying the global arterial reference approach. First, we compared preceding vascular changes in relation to follow-up remodelling. Second, we examined whether baseline remodelling predicts subsequent plaque progression/regression. At follow-up, segments with constrictive vs. compensatory or expansive remodelling had greater preceding reduction of vessel area (−0.67 vs. −0.38 vs. −0.002 mm<superscript>2</superscript>; P  < 0.001) and lumen area (−0.82 vs. −0.09 vs. 0.40 mm<superscript>2</superscript>; P  < 0.001). Overall, we found significant regression in percent atheroma volume (PAV) [−0.80% (−1.41 to −0.19)]. Segments with constrictive remodelling at baseline had greater subsequent PAV regression vs. modest regression in the compensatory, and PAV progression in the expansive remodelling group (−6.14% vs. −0.71% vs. 2.26%; P  < 0.001). Lesion-level analyses (n  = 118) showed no differences when remodelling was defined by the local reference approach at baseline or follow-up. Conclusion Remodelling assessment using a global arterial reference approach, but not the commonly used, local reference site approach, correlated reasonably well with serial changes in arterial dimensions and identified arterial segments with subsequent PAV progression despite intensive statin treatment and overall atheroma regression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20472404
Volume :
22
Issue :
9
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
151978026
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/ehjci/jeaa221