Abstract

BackgroundDetecting coronary vulnerable plaques in vivo and assessing their vulnerability have been great challenges for clinicians and the research community. Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) is commonly used in clinical practice for diagnosis and treatment decisions. However, due to IVUS limited resolution (about 150–200 µm), it is not sufficient to detect vulnerable plaques with a threshold cap thickness of 65 µm. Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) has a resolution of 15–20 µm and can measure fibrous cap thickness more accurately. The aim of this study was to use OCT as the benchmark to obtain patient-specific coronary plaque cap thickness and evaluate the differences between OCT and IVUS fibrous cap quantifications. A cap index with integer values 0–4 was also introduced as a quantitative measure of plaque vulnerability to study plaque vulnerability.MethodsData from 10 patients (mean age: 70.4; m: 6; f: 4) with coronary heart disease who underwent IVUS, OCT, and angiography were collected at Cardiovascular Research Foundation (CRF) using approved protocol with informed consent obtained. 348 slices with lipid core and fibrous caps were selected for study. Convolutional Neural Network (CNN)-based and expert-based data segmentation were performed using established methods previously published. Cap thickness data were extracted to quantify differences between IVUS and OCT measurements.ResultsFor the 348 slices analyzed, the mean value difference between OCT and IVUS cap thickness measurements was 1.83% (p = 0.031). However, mean value of point-to-point differences was 35.76%. Comparing minimum cap thickness for each plaque, the mean value of the 20 plaque IVUS-OCT differences was 44.46%, ranging from 2.36% to 91.15%. For cap index values assigned to the 348 slices, the disagreement between OCT and IVUS assignments was 25%. However, for the OCT cap index = 2 and 3 groups, the disagreement rates were 91% and 80%, respectively. Furthermore, the observation of cap index changes from baseline to follow-up indicated that IVUS results differed from OCT by 80%.ConclusionsThese preliminary results demonstrated that there were significant differences between IVUS and OCT plaque cap thickness measurements. Large-scale patient studies are needed to confirm our findings.

Highlights

  • Detecting coronary vulnerable plaques in vivo and assessing their vulnerability have been great challenges for clinicians and the research community

  • Stary et al published a series of papers and introduced the well-recognized American Heart Association (AHA) plaque classifications which served as the foundation for vulnerable plaque research [3]

  • Cap thickness by Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) has large difference from cap thickness by Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) Patient morphological data and formulas for mean and minimum cap thickness (Min CapT) calculation and comparisons are provided in the Methods section

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Summary

Introduction

Detecting coronary vulnerable plaques in vivo and assessing their vulnerability have been great challenges for clinicians and the research community. Due to IVUS limited resolution (about 150–200 μm), it is not sufficient to detect vulnerable plaques with a threshold cap thickness of 65 μm. The aim of this study was to use OCT as the benchmark to obtain patient-specific coronary plaque cap thickness and evaluate the differences between OCT and IVUS fibrous cap quantifications. Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death worldwide Most cardiovascular events such as heart attack and stroke are linked to development and rupture of vulnerable plaques. Plaque morphological features such as thin fibrous cap and large lipidrich necrotic pools have been recognized as the two most important and identifiable characteristics of vulnerable plaques [1,2,3]. It is fair to say that plaque cap thickness is the single most important factor people use to assess plaque vulnerability

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