6114Indications, procedural parameters, complications and consequences of fractional flow reserve measurements in a multicenter cohort

2019 ◽  
Vol 40 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
M Troebs ◽  
M Marwan ◽  
L Gaede ◽  
J Feyrer ◽  
B Nazli ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Determination of the Fractional Flow Reserve (FFR) has become part of routine clinical practice. Contemporary clinical use, consequences as well as complications in consecutive, large cohorts have not been thoroughly investigated. We report the results of the prospective Fractional Flow Reserve Fax Registry F (FR2) conducted in Germany. Purpose To systematically analyze indications, procedural parameters, complications and consequences of intracoronary pressure measurements in a large contemporary cohort. Methods Data of 2000 consecutive patients undergoing clinically indicated FFR, iFR or pd/pa measurements in 8 interventional centres in Germany were prospectively collected in a systematic fashion. Data included basic patient characteristics, procedural aspects of intracoronary pressure measurements, associated complications, visual stenosis degree, measurement results and treatment decisions. Results Mean patient age was 68±11 years, 73% of patients were male. Of all patients, 300 patients (15%) had an acute coronary syndrome (STEMI: 9; NSTEMI: 94; unstable angina: 197) and 1002 patients (50%) had undergone previous revascularization. A mean of 1.7±0.9 measurements were performed per patient, for which an average of 1.02 pressure wires were required (more than 1 wire in 64 patients). For all 3373 interrogated lesions, median stenosis degree was 60%. Vasodilator-free measurements were performed in 415/3373 cases (12%, iFR: 346; pd/pa: 69). For vasodilation, i.v. adenosine was used in 396 cases (13%), i.c. adenosine in 2628 cases (87%), and other drugs in 10 cases (0.3%). Measurement was performed before potential revascularization in 3232 cases (96%) and during or following PCI in 141 cases. In 2958 lesions analyzed by FFR, mean FFR was 0.87, with 588 FFR measurements ≤0.80 (19.8%). Median FFR values were higher for i.c than i.v. adenosine administration (0.88 vs. 0.84), but not significantly different after adjustment for stenosis degree. In 735 cases (20.2%), intracoronary pressure measurement was followed by revascularization measures, while in 2637 cases (79.8%), no revascularization or no further revascularization was performed. In 36 out of 117 stenoses visually estimated to be ≥90%, revascularization was deferred following pressure measurement (31%). In 75 out of 2958 lesions analyzed by FFR, revascularization was performed even though FFR was >0.80 (3%). Severe complications (vessel dissection or occlusion) occurred in 5 out of 2000 patients as a consequence of intracoronary pressure measurement, resulting in death of 1 patient. Conclusion In clinical practice, the majority of intracoronary pressure measurements are performed in stenoses of intermediate angiographic severity and revascularization is deferred in approximately 80% of lesions. Vasodilator-free measurements are infrequent and route of adenosine administration has no effect on results. Complication rate is low but not negligible. Acknowledgement/Funding Abbott Vascular

Authorea ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafael Agujetas Ortiz ◽  
Conrado Ferrera Llera ◽  
Reyes Gonz lez Fern ndez ◽  
Juan Manuel Nogales Asensio ◽  
Ana Fern ndez Tena

2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (Supplement_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
K Ishibuchi ◽  
K Fujii ◽  
S Otsuji ◽  
S Takiuchi ◽  
K Hasegawa ◽  
...  

Abstract Background This study evaluated whether caffeine abstention is required before fractional flow reserve (FFR) measurement by intravenous adenosine triphosphate (ATP) administration in Japanese patients. Methods and results This study was a subanalysis of a previously published study and a total of 208 intermediate lesions that underwent FFR measurements were enrolled for this analysis. Hyperemia was induced by continuous intravenous ATP infusion at 150μg/kg/min (IVATP150) and 210μg/kg/min (IVATP210), and by intracoronary administration of nicorandil 2mg (ICNIC2mg) as a reference standard. The degree of change in the FFR value both after IVATP150 and after IVATP210, as compared with the FFR value after ICNIC2mg was similar between the caffeine and non-caffeine groups (−0.04±0.05 vs. −0.04±0.07, and 0.00±0.02 vs. 0.01±0.02, respectively). In patients who consumed caffeine before the FFR measurement, the degree of FFR change was independent of the time interval (<12 hours, 12–24 hours, and 24–48 hours) between caffeine intake and catheterization both after IVATP150 and ICNIC2mg and after IVATP210 and ICNIC2mg. Conclusion When compared with the FFR value after ICNIC2mg, the degree of change in the FFR value both after IVATP150 and after IVATP210 remained similar regardless of caffeine intake. Strict caffeine abstention before intravenous ATP-induced FFR measurement may not be required in clinical practice. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding source: None


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Xinyang Ge ◽  
Youjun Liu ◽  
Zhaofang Yin ◽  
Shengxian Tu ◽  
Yuqi Fan ◽  
...  

While coronary revascularization strategies guided by instantaneous wave-free ratio (iFR) are, in general, noninferior to those guided by fractional flow reserve (FFR) with respect to the rate of major adverse cardiac events at one-year follow-up in patients with stable angina or an acute coronary syndrome, the overall accuracy of diagnosis with iFR in large patient cohorts is about 80% compared with the diagnosis with FFR. So far, it remains incompletely understood what factors contribute to the discordant diagnosis between iFR and FFR. In this study, a computational method was used to systemically investigate the respective effects of various cardiovascular factors on FFR and iFR. The results showed that deterioration in aortic valve disease (e.g., regurgitation or stenosis) led to a marked decrease in iFR and a mild increase in FFR given fixed severity of coronary artery stenosis and that increasing coronary microvascular resistance caused a considerable increase in both iFR and FFR, but the degree of increase in iFR was lower than that in FFR. These findings suggest that there is a high probability of discordant diagnosis between iFR and FFR in patients with severe aortic valve disease or coronary microcirculation dysfunction.


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