BackgroundCoronary chronic total occlusions (CTO) are frequent, and coronary angioplasty has been increasingly used in recent years for lesion revascularisation. However, to date, no dedicated multicentric prospective study is available in France. AimTo describe the characteristics of CTO patients and to assess current treatment strategies in French catheterisation laboratory practice. MethodsPatients presenting with CTOs were included from 16/09/2021 to 13/12/2021 over two consecutive prospective phases. In phase I (one month), data were collected to include all patients presenting CTO at diagnostic angiography. In phase II (two months), data were collected focusing on patients who underwent CTO-PCI. ResultsA total of 1303 patients (1460 CTOs) were included in 68 French centres. The mean age was 67.7±10.7 years and 84.3% of the patients were men. The prevalence of prior PCI (44.6%), and diabetes mellitus (35.6%) was high. In phase I, multivessel coronary artery disease was detected in two-thirds of cases, and most of them (88.5%) had a single CTO. The mean J-CTO score was 1.9±1.2, with a proportion of difficult and very difficult CTO (J CTO score ≥2) of 61.1%. The selected treatment was medical therapy in 57% of cases, coronary angioplasty in 30% and bypass surgery in 13%. In phase II, 528 patients were included with a mean J-CTO score of 1.8±1.2. Successful guidewire crossing through CTO lesion was obtained with an antegrade access in 89% of patients. Procedural success rate of CTO-PCI was 80%, with a rate of major in-hospital complications of 1% (death: 0.4%, MI: 0.2%, stroke: 0.2%, emergency CABG: 0.2%). ConclusionThis prospective study provides a snapshot of CTOs prevalence and CTO treatment strategies in France in 2021.
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