• JACC Cardiovasc Imaging · Mar 2012

    Multicenter Study

    Relationship between palpography and virtual histology in patients with acute coronary syndromes.

    • Salvatore Brugaletta, Hector M Garcia-Garcia, Patrick W Serruys, Akiko Maehara, Vasim Farooq, Gary S Mintz, Bernard de Bruyne, Steven P Marso, Stefan Verheye, Dariusz Dudek, Christian W Hamm, Nahim Farhat, Francois Schiele, John McPherson, Amir Lerman, Pedro R Moreno, Bertil Wennerblom, Martin Fahy, Barry Templin, Marie-Angel Morel, Gerrit Anne van Es, and Gregg W Stone.
    • Erasmus University, Thoraxcentrum, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
    • JACC Cardiovasc Imaging. 2012 Mar 1; 5 (3 Suppl): S19-27.

    ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to correlate adverse events at long-term follow-up in patients after an acute coronary syndrome with coronary plaque characteristics derived from simultaneous evaluation of their mechanical and compositional properties using virtual histology (intravascular ultrasound virtual histology) and palpography.BackgroundFibroatheroma is the plaque morphology with the highest risk of causing adverse cardiac events. Palpography can potentially assess the local mechanical plaque properties with the possibility of identifying fibroatheroma with the highest risk of rupture.MethodsA total of 114 patients with acute coronary syndrome from the PROSPECT (Providing Regional Observations to Study Predictors of Events in the Coronary Tree) trial underwent a single ultrasound imaging investigation of their 3 coronary vessels with the co-registration of intravascular ultrasound virtual histology and palpography. Major adverse cardiac events (MACE) (cardiac death, cardiac arrest, myocardial infarction, or unstable or progressive angina) were collected up to a median follow-up of 3.4 years and adjudicated to originally treated culprit versus untreated nonculprit lesions.ResultsIn total, 488 necrotic core-rich plaques were identified and subclassified as thin-cap fibroatheroma (n = 111), calcified thick-cap fibroatheroma (n = 213), and noncalcified thick-cap fibroatheroma (n = 164) and matched to their co-registered palpography data. A total of 16 MACE, adjudicated to untreated nonculprit lesions, were recorded at follow-up. In patients in whom MACE developed, fibroatheroma were larger (plaque area 10.0 mm(2) [range: 8.4 to 11.6 mm(2)] vs. 8.2 mm(2) [range: 7.7 to 8.8 mm(2)] (p = 0.03) compared with patients who were MACE free. By palpography, the maximum and the density strain values did not differ between the varying subtypes of fibroatheroma of patients with or without MACE during follow-up.ConclusionsIn acute coronary syndromes, patients treated with stents and contemporary pharmacotherapy, palpography did not provide additional diagnostic information for the identification of fibroatheroma with a high risk of rupture and MACE during long-term follow-up. (Providing Regional Observations to Study Predictors of Events in the Coronary Tree [PROSPECT]: An Imaging Study in Patients With Unstable Atherosclerotic Lesions; NCT00180466).Copyright © 2012 American College of Cardiology Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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