Abstract
Abstract Background The concept of coronary flow capacity (CFC) originated from positron emission tomography has been reported to provide prognostic information. Phase contrast cine-magnetic resonance imaging (PC-CMR) of the coronary sinus (CS) is a promising approach for quantifying global coronary sinus flow (CSF) and global coronary flow reserve (g-CFR) without the need for ionizing radiation, radioactive tracers, or intravascular catheterization. Purpose We evaluated the prognostic value of postprocedural CFC by quantifying CSF using PC-CMR in patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) treated with primary or urgent percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Methods This study prospectively but nonconsecutively enrolled 569 ACS patients who underwent uncomplicated primary (for ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI)) or urgent PCI within 48 hours of symptom onset (for non-ST elevation acute coronary syndrome (NSTE-ACS)). Breath-hold PC-CMR images of CS were acquired to assess absolute CSF at rest and during maximum hyperemia within 30 days after culprit lesion PCI and revascularization of functionally significant non-culprit lesions. The entire cohort was stratified by the CFC according to the thresholds of hyperemic CSF and g-CFR. Impaired CFC was defined as a severely-reduced CFC in the present study. The association of CFC and baseline clinical characteristics with major adverse cardiac events (all-cause death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, hospitalization for congestive heart failure or stroke) was investigated. Results In the final analysis of 502 patients (Male 417 (83.1%), mean age was 67 [58, 73]) and 310 patients (82.3%) with STEMI and 192 patients (38.2%) with NSTE-ACS were studied. In a total cohort, rest and maximal hyperemic CSF and corrected G-CFR were 0.93 [0.68, 1.24] ml/min/g, 2.08 [1.44, 2.77] ml/min/g, and 2.21 [1.58, 3.05], respectively. During a median follow-up of 28 months, MACE occurred in 53 patients (all-cause death: 19, nonfatal myocardial infarction: 16, late revascularization: 59, hospitalization for congestive heart failure: 9, stroke: 9). Cox proportional hazards analysis showed that corrected G-CFR and impaired CFC were both independent predictors of MACE. (hazard ratio (HR), 0.61, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.45–0.82, p=0.001; HR, 3.51, 95% CI: 1.79–6.86, p≤0.001, respectively). Cardiac event-free survival was significantly worse in patients with impaired CFC (log-rank χ2=22.9, P<0.001). Net reclassification index (NRI) and integrated discrimination improvement (IDI) were both significantly improved when impaired CFC was added to the clinical risk model for predicting MACE. Conclusions In ACS patients successfully revascularized with primary or urgent PCI, CFC categorization stratified by noninvasive PC-CMR provided significant prognostic information independent of infarction size, conventional risk factors and g-CFR. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding source: None
Published Version
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