Article, 2024

Unintended Deformation of Stents During Bifurcation PCI An OCTOBER Trial Substudy

JACC Cardiovascular Interventions, ISSN 1876-7605, 1936-8798, Volume 17, 9, Pages 1106-1115, 10.1016/j.jcin.2024.03.013

Contributors

Andreasen, Lene Nyhus 0000-0002-9891-7890 (Corresponding author) [1] Neghabat, Omeed 0000-0002-5889-0953 [1] Laanmets, Peep [2] Kumsars, Indulis 0000-0002-7734-8174 [3] Bennett, Johan [4] Olsen, Niels Thue 0000-0003-1466-5225 [5] Odenstedt, Jacob [6] Burzotta, Francesco 0000-0002-6569-9401 [7] Johnson, Thomas William 0000-0003-4638-601X [8] O'Kane, Peter D 0000-0001-5245-4547 [9] Hartikainen, Juha E K 0000-0003-0847-107X [10] Spratt, James C S 0000-0001-8719-4538 [11] Christiansen, Evald H [1] Holm, Niels Ramsing 0000-0002-2316-3107 [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Aarhus University Hospital
  2. [NORA names: Central Denmark Region; Hospital; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] North Estonia Medical Centre
  4. [NORA names: Estonia; Europe, EU; OECD];
  5. [3] University of Latvia
  6. [NORA names: Latvia; Europe, EU; OECD];
  7. [4] Universitair Ziekenhuis Leuven
  8. [NORA names: Belgium; Europe, EU; OECD];
  9. [5] Gentofte Hospital
  10. [NORA names: Capital Region of Denmark; Hospital; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Unintended deformation of implanted coronary stents can lead to loss of coronary access, stent thrombosis and coronary events during follow-up. The incidence, mechanisms and clinical outcomes of unintended stent deformations (USD) during complex bifurcation stenting are not well characterized. OBJECTIVES: In a prespecified analysis of the OCTOBER (European Trial on Optical Coherence Tomography Optimized Bifurcation Event Reduction) trial, we aimed to: 1) determine the incidence and characterize mechanisms of USD identified by optical coherence tomography (OCT); and 2) evaluate physician's detection and correction of accidental abluminal rewiring and USD. METHODS: OCT scans were analyzed for accidental abluminal rewiring and USD. When USD was identified, the plausible mechanism was determined by analysis of all procedural OCT scans and the corresponding angiograms. RESULTS: USD was identified by the core lab in 9.3% (55/589) of OCT-guided cases. Accidental abluminal rewiring was the cause in 44% (24/55), and guide catheter collision was the cause in 40% (22/55) of cases. USD was found in 18.5% of all cases with left main bifurcation percutaneous coronary intervention. The total incidence of abluminal rewiring was 33 in 32 OCT-guided cases (5.4%) and was corrected by physicians in 18 of 33 appearances (54.5%). The 2-year major adverse cardiac event rate for patients with untreated USD (n = 30) was 23.3%, whereas patients with confirmed or possibly corrected USD (n = 25) had no events during follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: USD was associated with adverse procedural complications and cardiac events during follow-up when not identified and corrected. The predominant mechanisms were undetected abluminal rewiring and guide catheter collision. Left main bifurcation percutaneous coronary intervention was a particular risk with USD detected in 18.5% of cases.

Keywords

OCT scans, PCI, USD, adverse cardiac event rates, analysis, angiogram, appearance, bifurcation percutaneous coronary intervention, bifurcation stenting, cardiac event rate, cardiac events, cases, catheter, characterized mechanisms, clinical outcomes, coherence tomography, collision, complex bifurcation stenting, complications, core, core lab, coronary events, coronary intervention, coronary stenting, correction, deformation, deformation of stents, detection, event rates, events, follow-up, incidence, intervention, lab, loss, mechanism, optical coherence tomography, outcomes, patients, percutaneous coronary intervention, physician detection, physicians, predominant mechanism, procedural complications, rate, rewiring, risk, scanning, stent, stent deformation, stent thrombosis, substudy, thrombosis, tomography, unintended deformation

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