OCT or Angiography Guidance for PCI in Complex Bifurcation Lesions.

Niels R Holm,Lene N Andreasen,Omeed Neghabat,Peep Laanmets,Indulis Kumsars,Johan Bennett,Niels T Olsen, Jacob Odenstedt,Pavel Hoffmann,Jo Dens,Saqib Chowdhary, Peter O'Kane, Søren-Haldur Bülow Rasmussen, Matthias Heigert,Ole Havndrup, Jan P Van Kuijk,Simone Biscaglia, Lone J H Mogensen, Loghman Henareh, Francesco Burzotta, Christian H Eek, Darren Mylotte,Miquel S Llinas,Lukasz Koltowski,Paul Knaapen,Slobodan Calic,Nils Witt, Irene Santos-Pardo, Stuart Watkins,Jacob Lønborg, Andreas T Kristensen, Lisette O Jensen,Fredrik Calais,James Cockburn, Andrew McNeice,Olli A Kajander, Ton Heestermans, Stephan Kische,Ashkan Eftekhari,James C Spratt,Evald H Christiansen, OCTOBER Trial Group

The New England journal of medicine(2023)

Cited 11|Views45
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Abstract
BACKGROUND:Imaging-guided percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is associated with better clinical outcomes than angiography-guided PCI. Whether routine optical coherence tomography (OCT) guidance in PCI of lesions involving coronary-artery branch points (bifurcations) improves clinical outcomes as compared with angiographic guidance is uncertain. METHODS:We conducted a multicenter, randomized, open-label trial at 38 centers in Europe. Patients with a clinical indication for PCI and a complex bifurcation lesion identified by means of coronary angiography were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to OCT-guided PCI or angiography-guided PCI. The primary end point was a composite of major adverse cardiac events (MACE), defined as death from a cardiac cause, target-lesion myocardial infarction, or ischemia-driven target-lesion revascularization at a median follow-up of 2 years. RESULTS:We assigned 1201 patients to OCT-guided PCI (600 patients) or angiography-guided PCI (601 patients). A total of 111 patients (18.5%) in the OCT-guided PCI group and 116 (19.3%) in the angiography-guided PCI group had a bifurcation lesion involving the left main coronary artery. At 2 years, a primary end-point event had occurred in 59 patients (10.1%) in the OCT-guided PCI group and in 83 patients (14.1%) in the angiography-guided PCI group (hazard ratio, 0.70; 95% confidence interval, 0.50 to 0.98; P = 0.035). Procedure-related complications occurred in 41 patients (6.8%) in the OCT-guided PCI group and 34 patients (5.7%) in the angiography-guided PCI group. CONCLUSIONS:Among patients with complex coronary-artery bifurcation lesions, OCT-guided PCI was associated with a lower incidence of MACE at 2 years than angiography-guided PCI. (Funded by Abbott Vascular and others; OCTOBER ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT03171311.).
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