Abstract

Abstract Background and introduction The percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for acute coronary syndrome (ACS) shows worse clinical outcomes than that for stable angina. As the one of the reasons, a recent optical coherence tomography (OCT) registry showed that the presence of irregular protrusion (IP)after coronary stenting was the worse predictor of 1-year device-oriented clinical end points. However, the impact of the quantitative findings on IP has not been well investigated in ACS patients. Aim To investigate the clinical impact of the post stent OCT findings, especially IP, detected by OCT after coronary stenting in ACS patients. Methods Consecutive 256 ACS lesions treated with OCT-guided PCI in our Medical University Hospital from January 2013 to November 2016 was retrospectively analyzed. In 256 lesions, 173 lesions were enrolled which had ST-elevation acute myocardial infarction (STEMI) with the onset to recanalization time within 720 minutes. In 170 lesions, the OCT images were available. In OCT image, IP was detected in 140 lesions (82.3%). Quantitative analysis of IP in post-procedure OCT imaging was observed to identify the OCT predictors for clinical endpoint including cardiac death, target vessel revascularization ant stent thrombosis in 1 year after index PCI. Result In post-procedure OCT findings, stent edge dissection was detected in 32.4% of lesions. Incomplete stent apposition was detected in 74.1%. Maximum angle of irregular protrusion was 194±86 degree and the incidence of maximum IP angle >180 degree was 52.9%. Maximum height of IP was 0.26±0.11mm. Small minimal stent area, defined as a lesion with minimal stent area <5.0 mm2 in a drug-eluting stent or <5.6 mm2 in a bare metal stent, was observed in 32.4% of lesions. Maximum IP angle and that of >180degree was significantly associated with the clinical endpoint (p=0.0259 and 0.0429, respectively). Conclusion In STEMI patients, IP was frequently observed in post-procedure OCT imaging during primary PCI. The maximum angle of IP was significantly associated with the clinical end points. The prognostic impact of maximum IP angle in STEMI patient needs further investigations.

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