Abstract

Two hundred and eighty-four consecutive patients with 438 native coronary artery stenoses were enrolled prospectively in a study of intravascular ultrasound (IVUS)-guided percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) with provisional stenting: (1) aggressive lesion-site media-to-media balloon-sizing; (2) IVUS-assessment of residual lumen dimensions to identify optimal PTCA results (minimum lumen area = 65% of the average of the proximal and distal reference lumen areas or = 6.0 mm(2) and no major dissection); and (3) liberal stent crossover. Overall, 206 stenoses in 134 patients (47%) were treated with PTCA alone. Reasons for crossover were flow-limiting or lumen-compromising dissections in 28% of patients and suboptimal IVUS minimum lumen area in 72% of patients. At one year, 8% of stenoses in the PTCA group and 16% in the stent crossover group required revascularization. In approximately half of the patients treated using an IVUS-guided aggressive PTCA strategy, stent implantation could be avoided without sacrificing an increase in acute complications or worse clinical outcome.

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