Abstract

Recanalisation of chronic total coronary occlusions - what is the evidence and which patients will benefit? Abstract. Continuous improvement of recanalisation techniques and newer device technologies significantly improved the success of revascularisation in percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) of chronic total occluded coronary arteries (CTO) in the past few years. The best documented clinical benefit of CTO-PCI is symptom control, based on a reduction of myocardial ischemia. In contrast, there is still an ongoing controversial debate regarding the prognostic benefit of successful CTO-PCI shown in several observational studies. Therefore, the indication for CTO-PCI is primarily based on patients' symptoms and the extent of myocardial ischemia. The risk / benefit ratio for the individual patient has to be estimated from technical complexity of the CTO lesion, the extent of the coronary artery disease and the ventricular function. Recanalisation strategy should be escalating, as most of the CTOs can be successfully recanalised with standard antegrade recanalisation techniques. With the implementation of retrograde CTO techniques, the likelihood for recanalisation success is very high (> 90 %) even in complex anatomies, combined with low complication rates in specialised centers. According to the operator's expertise a complete catheter-based revascularisation can be achieved nowadays even in patients with CTO and coronary multi-vessel disease.

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