Angiography-Derived Fractional Flow Reserve to Guide PCI.
Summary
Angiography-Derived Fractional Flow Reserve to Guide PCI. Original Article Abstract Background Assessing intermediate coronary lesions with an intracoronary pressure wire improves clinical outcomes in patients undergoing cardiac catheterization and percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). However, clinical use of pressure-wire-based physiological assessment remains low. Measurement of fractional flow reserve (FFR) derived from coronary angiographic images alone correlates well with press
Content
# Angiography-Derived Fractional Flow Reserve to Guide PCI.
*Original Article*
# Abstract
## Background
Assessing intermediate coronary lesions with an intracoronary
pressure wire improves clinical outcomes in patients undergoing cardiac
catheterization and percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). However, clinical
use of pressure-wire-based physiological assessment remains low. Measurement of
fractional flow reserve (FFR) derived from coronary angiographic images alone
correlates well with pressure-wire-based FFR measurements and may simplify
procedures, but its effect on clinical outcomes is unknown.
## Methods
In this international noninferiority trial, we randomly assigned
patients undergoing coronary angiography who were found to have at least one
intermediate coronary stenosis to physiological assessment with measurements
derived from angiographic images (FFRangio) or with pressure-wire-based
measurements. The primary end point was a composite of death, myocardial
infarction, or unplanned, clinically indicated coronary revascularization at 1
year. The noninferiority margin was 3.5 percentage points.
## Results
A total of 1930 patients were randomly assigned to physiological
assessment with FFRangio (FFRangio group; 965 patients) or a pressure-wire-based
approach (pressure-wire group; 965 patients). The mean age of the patients was
68.4 years, and 25.0% of the patients were women. At 1 year, a primary end-point
event had occurred in 64 patients (Kaplan-Meier estimate, 6.9%) in the FFRangio
group and 65 patients (Kaplan-Meier estimate, 7.1%) in the pressure-wire group
(hazard ratio, 0.98; 95% confidence interval, 0.70 to 1.39; difference, -0.2
percentage points; upper boundary of the one-sided 97.5% confidence interval,
2.1 percentage points; P<0.001 for noninferiority). There were no apparent
differences between the groups with respect to the incidence of bleeding, acute
kidney injury, or procedure-related adverse events.
## Conclusions
Among patients with intermediate coronary-artery lesions undergoing
physiological assessment in the cardiac catheterization laboratory, an
angiography-guided strategy involving FFRangio was noninferior to a
pressure-wire-guided strategy with respect to a composite end point of death,
myocardial infarction, or unplanned clinically indicated coronary
revascularization at 1 year. (Funded by CathWorks; ALL-RISE ClinicalTrials.gov
number, NCT05893498.).
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DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa2600949