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Safety of optical coherence tomography in daily practice: a comparison with intravascular ultrasound

Authors :
Antonios Karanasos
Saskia Wemelsfelder
Evelyn Regar
Peter de Jaegere
Gijs van Soest
Robert-Jan van Geuns
Takayuki Okamura
Nienke S. van Ditzhuijzen
Jiang Ming Fam
Felix Zijlstra
Roberto Diletti
Bu-Chun Zhang
Karen Witberg
Nicolas M. Van Mieghem
Ron T. van Domburg
Marco Valgimigli
Johannes N. van der Sijde
Jurgen Ligthart
University of Zurich
Regar, Evelyn
Cardiology
Source :
European Heart Journal Cardiovascular Imaging, 18, 467-474, European Heart Journal-Cardiovascular Imaging, 18(4), 467-474. Oxford University Press, van der Sijde, Johannes N; Karanasos, Antonios; van Ditzhuijzen, Nienke S; Okamura, Takayuki; van Geuns, Robert-Jan; Valgimigli, Marco; Ligthart, Jurgen M R; Witberg, Karen T; Wemelsfelder, Saskia; Fam, Jiang Ming; Zhang, BuChun; Diletti, Roberto; de Jaegere, Peter P; van Mieghem, Nicolas M; van Soest, Gijs; Zijlstra, Felix; van Domburg, Ron T; Regar, Evelyn (2016). Safety of optical coherence tomography in daily practice: a comparison with intravascular ultrasound. European heart journal-cardiovascular imaging, 18(4), pp. 467-474. Oxford University Press 10.1093/ehjci/jew037 , European Heart Journal Cardiovascular Imaging, 18, 4, pp. 467-474
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Item does not contain fulltext Aims: Previous studies have reported the safety and feasibility of both time-domain optical coherence tomography (TD-OCT) and Fourier-domain OCT (FD-OCT) in highly selected patients and clinical settings. However, the generalizability of these data is limited, and data in unselected patient populations reflecting a routine cathlab practice are lacking. We compared safety of intracoronary FD-OCT imaging to intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) imaging in a large real-world series of consecutive patients who underwent invasive imaging during coronary catheterization in our centre. Methods and results: This is a prospective, single-centre registry of patients scheduled for coronary angiography or intervention undergoing intracoronary imaging with FD-OCT or IVUS between April 2008 and December 2013. Intra-procedural and major in-hospital adverse events that could be possibly related to invasive imaging were registered routinely by the operator as part of our clinical report and prospectively recorded in our database. These events were retrospectively individually adjudicated by an independent safety committee. Between April 2008 and December 2013, 13 418 diagnostic or interventional coronary catheterization procedures were performed. Of these, 1142 procedures used OCT and 2476 procedures used IVUS. Invasive imaging-related complications were rare, did not differ between the two imaging methods (OCT: n = 7, 0.6%; IVUS: n = 12, 0.5%; P = 0.6), and were self-limiting after retrieval of the imaging catheter or easily treatable in the catheterization laboratory. No major adverse events, prolongation of hospital stay, or permanent patient harm was observed. Conclusion: FD-OCT is safe in an unselected and heterogeneous group of patients with varying clinical settings.

Details

ISSN :
20472404
Volume :
18
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Heart Journal-Cardiovascular Imaging
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fb6cba3333ec1543f024b149979e479c