Comparable neointimal healing in patients with stable coronary lesions and acute coronary syndrome: 3-month optical coherence tomography analysis

AbstractWe aimed to assess a possible difference of the neointimal coverage status and its quality after implantation of the current-generation metallic stents in patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) vs. stable coronary lesions (non-ACS). We comprehensively analyzed three prospective single-center observational studies RESTORE (UMIN000033009), HEAL-BioFreedom (UMIN000029692), and HEAL-BioFreedom ACS (UMIN000034769). All patients who received successful optical coherence tomography (OCT) examination at planned 3-month follow-up after stent implantation were analyzed. Study population was divided into two groups, ACS vs. non-ACS groups. We evaluated standard OCT variables, coverage percent, and the quantitative light property values including light intensity, attenuation, and backscatter of neointima. A total of 177 lesions from 154 patients (ACS 44 lesions vs. non-ACS 133 lesions) were analyzed. At 3-month follow-up, coverage percent (ACS 91.5   ±  9.5% vs. non-ACS 91.8  ±  9.0%, P = 0.722) and neointimal thickness (ACS 59.5  ±  32.3 µm vs. non-ACS 58.2  ±  32.3 µm, P = 0.760) did not significantly differ. Light property values were similar between both groups (light intensity 159.29  ±  72.2 0 vs. 159.45   ± 63.78, P = 0.654; light attenuation 0.88  ±  0.26 vs. 0.87   ±  0.24 m−1, P  = 0.988; backscatter 4.86   ±  0.58 vs. 4.83   ±  0.57, P = 0.812). The similarity of...
Source: The International Journal of Cardiovascular Imaging - Category: Radiology Source Type: research