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Utility of myocardial fractional flow reserve for prediction of restenosis following sirolimus-eluting stent implantation

Authors :
Hiroaki Takeshita
Shoichi Ehara
Takashi Muro
Shinji Nakata
Minoru Yoshiyama
Takao Hasegawa
Yoshiki Kobayashi
Hideshi Ishii
Nobuyuki Shirai
Takara Tsumori
Hiroki Nishioka
Yoshihisa Shimada
Toru Kataoka
Ryo Matsumoto
Source :
Heart and Vessels. 26:572-581
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2011.

Abstract

Drug-eluting stents reduce restenosis due to neointimal growth suppression. Considering long-term outcomes, it is both difficult and important to predict drug-eluting stent restenosis. Thus, this study was designed to examine the utility of myocardial fractional flow reserve (FFR) as a predictor of sirolimus-eluting stent (SES) restenosis. Thirty-three patients (35 lesions) were enrolled. Upon completion of SES implantation, FFR was obtained under hyperemia. At 8 months of follow-up, coronary angiography revealed that five lesions had restenosis. Percent diameter stenosis (restenosis 68.7 ± 12.8% vs. non-restenosis 68.7 ± 12.4%, p = 0.78) and lesion length (restenosis 15.8 ± 9.4 mm vs. non-restenosis 14.4 ± 9.2 mm, p = 0.60) were similar. At post-intervention, percent diameter stenosis (restenosis 16.4 ± 6.1% vs. non-restenosis 14.0 ± 7.4%, p = 0.48) and minimum stent area (restenosis 6.01 ± 1.08 mm2 vs. non-restenosis 6.27 ± 1.85 mm2, p = 0.92) were also equivalent. However, proximal edge lumen area was smaller (restenosis 4.24 ± 1.40 mm2 vs. non-restenosis 7.73 ± 2.64 mm2, p = 0.004) and FFR was lower in the restenosis group (restenosis 0.81 ± 0.12 vs. non-restenosis 0.92 ± 0.06, p = 0.029). SES patients with restenosis had a lower FFR post stent deployment, suggesting the decreased FFR may be a useful predictor for SES restenosis.

Details

ISSN :
16152573 and 09108327
Volume :
26
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Heart and Vessels
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e376c8820e719e92eed8f44214644be7