Journal Information
Vol. 35. Issue 2.
Pages 105-112 (February 2016)
Share
Share
Download PDF
More article options
Visits
12375
Vol. 35. Issue 2.
Pages 105-112 (February 2016)
Review article
Open Access
Coronary optical coherence tomography: A practical overview of current clinical applications
Tomografia de coerência ótica coronária: uma revisão prática das aplicações clínicas atuais
Visits
12375
Rui Cruz Ferreiraa, Tiago Pereira-da-Silvaa,
Corresponding author
tiagopsilva@sapo.pt

Corresponding author.
, Lino Patrícioa, Hiram Bezerrab, Marco Costab
a Department of Cardiology, Hospital de Santa Marta, Centro Hospitalar de Lisboa Central, Lisbon, Portugal
b University Hospitals Case Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, USA
This item has received

Under a Creative Commons license
Article information
Abstract
Full Text
Bibliography
Download PDF
Statistics
Figures (4)
Show moreShow less
Abstract

Coronary optical coherence tomography has emerged as the most powerful in-vivo imaging modality to evaluate vessel structure in detail. It is a useful research tool that provides insights into the pathogenesis of coronary artery disease. This technology has an important clinical role that is still being developed. We review the evidence on the wide spectrum of potential clinical applications for coronary optical coherence tomography, which encompass the successive stages in coronary artery disease management: accurate lesion characterization and quantification of stenosis, guidance for the decision to perform percutaneous coronary intervention and subsequent planning, and evaluation of immediate and long-term results following intervention.

Keywords:
Clinical application
Coronary artery disease
Percutaneous coronary intervention
Optical coherence tomography
Resumo

A tomografia de coerência ótica coronária surgiu como a modalidade de imagem in-vivo que permite a avaliação estrutural vascular mais detalhada. Trata-se de uma ferramenta valiosa em investigação, tendo contribuído para melhor entendimento da patogénese da doença coronária. Apresenta igualmente um papel importante na prática clínica, e o leque de sua aplicabilidade tem aumentado. Enquadrando na evidência disponível, discutimos neste artigo as principais aplicações da tomografia de coerência ótica coronária na prática clínica, que englobam as diferentes etapas na abordagem da doença coronária, incluindo a caracterização da lesão e quantificação da estenose, o papel na decisão de realizar angioplastia, o contributo na planificação da mesma e a avaliação dos resultados a curto e a longo prazo após a intervenção.

Palavras-chave:
Aplicação clínica
Doença coronária
Intervenção coronária percutânea
Tomografia de coerência ótica
List of abbreviations
ACS

acute coronary syndrome

DES

drug-eluting stent

FFR

fractional flow reserve

ISA

incomplete stent apposition

ISR

in-stent restenosis

IVUS

intravascular ultrasound

MLA

minimal luminal area

MLD

minimal luminal diameter

OCT

optical coherence tomography

PCI

percutaneous coronary intervention

TCFA

thin-cap fibroatheroma

Full Text
Introduction

Coronary angiography is the standard invasive imaging method for diagnosis of coronary artery disease and for guiding coronary interventional procedures.1 In addition to intravascular ultrasound (IVUS), optical coherence tomography (OCT) has emerged as an imaging modality able to evaluate the vessel structure in detail, for which angiography may not suffice.2–4 The OCT image is formed by the backscattering of emitted near-infrared light, creating cross-sectional images of the coronary vessel.2 Compared to IVUS, the wavelength used in OCT is shorter, enabling higher spatial resolution (10–20 μm axial resolution and 20–30 μm lateral resolution).2,5,6 However, except for calcium, penetration depth of OCT is lower than with IVUS, particularly for thrombotic and lipid components.2 Coronary OCT systems have evolved from first-generation time-domain systems to second-generation frequency-domain OCT.4 The latter produces images at higher frame rates with slightly deeper penetration, using a short, non-occlusive flush and rapid spiral pullback.2,4 We had the opportunity to perform the first OCT studies in Portugal. In addition to research purposes, we recognize the invaluable potential of OCT as a diagnostic technique and as an adjunctive tool for percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI).2,3

Data relevant to this topic have recently been published and we review the evidence on current clinical applications of OCT from a practical perspective. The potential use of OCT in the successive stages in coronary artery disease management is discussed, including morphologic lesion characterization and quantification of stenosis, guidance for the decision to perform percutaneous coronary intervention and subsequent planning, and evaluation of immediate and long-term results following PCI.

Morphologic lesion characterization

Animal and human post-mortem studies have shown the ability of OCT to accurately characterize coronary atherosclerotic plaques.2,5 Due to its high spatial resolution, OCT has proved superior to other imaging modalities, including IVUS, for detecting different plaque components.2,5,6 A landmark post-mortem study showed a high sensitivity and specificity for detecting fibrous, fibrocalcific and lipid-rich plaques in histological specimens.5 OCT is currently the only method with sufficient resolution to accurately measure the fibrous cap.7 Historically, thin-cap fibroatheromas (TCFAs) are the substrate of approximately two-thirds of acute myocardial infarctions as presented in pathology series.8 Recently, this has been validated in vivo in the OCTAVIA study.9

Furthermore, macrophage infiltration, which is a marker of plaque instability, may be identified using OCT.10 In acute coronary syndrome (ACS) OCT is useful for identification of plaque dissection, ulceration, and erosion, calcified nodules and thrombus7 (Figures 1 and 2). In addition, OCT can differentiate between red and white thrombi.11 A complete description of the appearance of atherosclerotic and thrombotic components on OCT is beyond the scope of this review and is reported elsewhere.12

Figure 1.

(A) Left main artery lesion: appearance on optical coherence tomography, with ulceration (arrow); (B) thrombus (triangles) and a thin-cap fibroatheroma (asterisk); (C) these findings were undetected by invasive coronary angiography.

(0.41MB).
Figure 2.

(A–C) Optical coherence tomography showing a large spontaneous ulceration in the circumflex artery.

(0.54MB).

OCT is particularly valuable in providing insights into the pathophysiological mechanisms of ACS and may help with the development of individualized therapeutic strategies.13 TCFA, plaque rupture and red thrombus have been detected in most patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction and are more frequent in comparison to non-ST elevation ACS.14,15 However, not all ACS lesions showed plaque rupture and the presence of intact fibrous cap was associated with better prognosis.16,17 Moreover, plaque rupture, intracoronary thrombi, lipid-rich plaques and TCFAs were more frequent in culprit compared to nonculprit lesions.18

There are, however, some pitfalls in plaque characterization, mainly related to the low penetration depth. Penetration is lowest for thrombotic material, which may lead to signal-free shadowing, and non-protruding red thrombi may be misinterpreted as necrotic lipid pools due to a similar OCT signal pattern.12 Furthermore, in the majority of lesions an accurate measurement of lipid pool thickness cannot be performed.12

Stable coronary syndrome: predicting physiology and assessing stenosis severity

OCT may be used to assess lesions of intermediate stenosis severity in vessels without a large size.4 The proposed thresholds of minimal luminal area (MLA) and minimal luminal diameter (MLD) for detecting a hemodynamically significant lesion are based on recent validations against fractional flow reserve (FFR), which is considered the gold standard for assessing hemodynamic significance.19–22 In most studies, FFR ≤0.80 was taken as the threshold and the derived cut-offs of MLA and MLD ranged from 1.59 mm2 to 2.54 mm2 and from 1.23 mm to 1.77 mm, respectively.20–22 Taking FFR <0.75 as the threshold, an MLA <1.91 mm2 and an MLD <1.35 mm have been identified as the best cut-off values.23 A recent consensus report suggests a MLA threshold of 1.95 mm2, which has moderate sensitivity and negative predictive value for hemodynamic significance.4,24 In small vessels lower thresholds should probably be used.24 In most studies, however, the correlation between FFR- and OCT-derived measurements was only moderate.20,21,23 Despite potentially higher precision in determining MLA, this simple cross-section value cannot predict physiology accurately, as shown in a recent meta-analysis.25 The ability of OCT to automatically segment the lumen through the entire pullback enables volumetric analysis of the vessel for the first time. Applying the physical principles of fluid dynamics, a better correlation with FFR was obtained by deriving virtual flow reserve.26

Importantly, MLA values obtained with OCT are consistently lower than with IVUS. It has been speculated that the absence of non-uniform rotation distortion on OCT allows for a more precise contour of the lumen.27

Percutaneous coronary intervention guided by optical coherence tomographyAdjunctive tool in decision-making for percutaneous coronary intervention

Few data are available on the clinical impact of using OCT for guiding the decision to perform PCI, but the results are encouraging. In a single-center study, 90 patients with ambiguous or intermediate lesions underwent PCI if MLA was <3.5 mm2 or in the presence of thrombus.28 Post-dilatation or additional stent implantation was performed in cases of stent underexpansion, incomplete stent apposition (ISA), significant intraluminal tissue prolapse, or edge dissection extending beyond 200 μm.28 In addition to high procedural success, good clinical outcomes were reported at 4.6±3.2 months of follow-up, with 2.2% repeat revascularization and no stent thrombosis.28 An ongoing randomized trial (FORZA) is evaluating the feasibility of PCI guided by OCT in angiographically intermediate lesions with stenosis area ≥75% assessed by OCT, or 50–75% with MLA <2.5 mm2, or if a major plaque ulceration is detected.29

Recently, OCT has been used to guide treatment in ACS in a different way. The unique ability of the method to detect thrombus and plaque rupture adds an unprecedented level of confidence in determining the underlying mechanism of plaque instability.7 In a small study of 100 patients treated with thrombus aspiration followed by OCT, no stent was implanted if the occlusion was mostly thrombotic and no significant coronary narrowing was detected by OCT, provided that the patient was symptom-free and TIMI flow was ≥2 (20 patients).30 Follow-up OCT studies showed a “normal vessel” and there were no adverse events at 12-month follow-up. The safety and feasibility of medical management without stent placement in selected ACS patients with large thrombus burden detected by OCT has also been reported in other studies, in which OCT revealed lesion characteristics that were not disclosed by angiography and facilitated treatment decisions.31,32

Adjunctive tool for planning percutaneous coronary intervention

Similarly to IVUS, OCT may be used to help plan the intervention and, when used systematically, it has been reported to alter procedural strategy in over 80% of cases.33 OCT can provide highly reproducible measurements of lesion length and reference vessel lumen diameter, which may guide stent selection.4 Information on plaque components such as calcification may suggest the use of ancillary devices such as rotational atherectomy.3 OCT is the only method that can accurately image calcium thickness, and a combination of high thickness and circumferential distribution may identify non-dilatable lesions.3 Moreover, a lower calcium angle depicted by OCT correlates with asymmetric (eccentric) stent expansion and a higher calcium angle correlates with stent underexpansion.34 OCT may also be useful during complex procedures such as PCI of chronic total occlusions, where it may identify subintimal wire entrapment or double channels.4

Another potential use of OCT regarding PCI planning is risk stratification. Previous OCT studies have linked lesion morphology with periprocedural microvascular damage or myocardial infarction. In non-ST-elevation ACS, the presence of TCFA and the size of the lipid arc at the culprit plaque were predictors of no-reflow.35 The presence of TCFA was also associated with elevation of post-PCI myocardial necrosis markers, particularly if colocalized with spotty calcification.36 In addition, in-stent thrombus or dissection detected by OCT after PCI also predicted periprocedural myocardial infarction.37 Although these OCT findings could aid risk stratification before or during PCI, larger studies are needed to confirm the role of this clinical application.

Adjunctive tool for post-stenting assessment

One of the main contributions of OCT is in assessing stent expansion, sizing and apposition (defined elsewhere3,38) more accurately and with lower interobserver variability than angiography or IVUS. Stent underexpansion and undersizing have been linked to stent restenosis and stent thrombosis.39 The minimum stent area and lumen area of the reference vessel can be measured using OCT, enabling accurate estimation of stent expansion.3 ISA (Figure 3) delays neointimal coverage of the struts and is associated with stent thrombosis, although neointimal hyperplasia usually tends to reduce ISA over time.3,40 OCT can measure the distance between the struts and the vessel wall and quantify the number of struts with incomplete apposition.41,42 Stent apposition is thus assessed at the strut level.42

Figure 3.

Optical coherence tomography revealing stent malapposition with a large distance between struts and vessel wall.

(0.32MB).

Regarding vascular injury after PCI, intimal dissection at the stent edges, small thrombi and tissue prolapse commonly occur following stent deployment (Figure 4).43 OCT is much more sensitive than IVUS for detecting these vascular responses.43 Nevertheless, their prognostic impact is controversial, as discussed below.

Figure 4.

(A) Edge dissection, and (B) small thrombus following stent placement, detected by optical coherence tomography.

(0.52MB).

OCT may thus be useful after stent deployment, as it may prompt optimization with further stenting or high-pressure or larger-sized balloon inflation, with low procedural complication rates.44,45 Angiographic guidance for PCI in 335 patients was compared with angiographic plus OCT guidance in 335 patients in a propensity-score adjusted analysis (the CLI-OPCI study).45 OCT disclosed adverse features, including stent malapposition, stent underexpansion, lumen narrowing, thrombus, or edge dissection, requiring further stenting or additional balloon dilatation in 34.7% of patients. The OCT-guided approach resulted in lower adjusted risk of cardiac death or nonfatal myocardial infarction at 12 months of follow-up (OR 0.49, 95% confidence interval 0.25–0.96).45 In another study, even after achieving an optimal angiographic result following stenting, removal of in-stent thrombus detected by OCT using balloon dilatation was shown to be a safe approach.46 Of note, left main intervention can be performed with OCT guidance, and in a head-to-head comparison against IVUS, OCT identified more findings that prompted additional interventions.47 The DOCTORS trial is currently evaluating the utility of OCT for optimizing the results of coronary angioplasty in non-ST-segment elevation ACS, beyond angiography alone.48

Nevertheless, following stent deployment, minor stent malapposition with a short distance between the struts and the vessel wall, small thrombus, mild tissue prolapse, or minor stent edge dissection do not seem to be associated with worse prognosis.49 Improvement is expected during follow-up when these small non-flow limiting abnormalities are left untreated, without adverse impact on clinical outcome.49 Conversely, a dissection flap thickness >0.31 mm carries an adverse clinical impact in the long term.50 Regarding malapposition, some operators recommend no additional post-dilatation unless there is >200 μm distance between the stent and wall vessel at multiple strut locations.4

Follow-up evaluationStent coverage

OCT has been used extensively to assess neointimal hyperplasia and strut coverage with different types of stents, placed using different stenting techniques, with or without adjunctive techniques. Different quantitative measurements may be obtained.3,51–55 Accuracy is greater than with IVUS; not only the completeness of individual strut coverage but also the thickness of coverage can be assessed.3,51 OCT studies have shown that a greater percentage of uncovered struts is associated with increased risk of major adverse events after drug-eluting stent (DES) implantation, a cut-off of ≥5.9% of uncovered struts on follow-up OCT having been reported.56

Stent restenosis

Quantitative measurements such as percentage lumen obstruction can be obtained by OCT.3 In addition, different tissue patterns of in-stent restenosis (ISR) have been described, including layered, homogeneous and heterogeneous patterns.57 A heterogeneous pattern is more frequent in focal than in diffuse ISR and has been associated with the presence of fibrinoid or proteoglycans.57 In bare-metal stents, early ISR is usually homogeneous due to neointimal proliferation, which is rich in smooth muscle cells, while late ISR may have a heterogeneous appearance due to lipid pools, calcification and neovascularization, suggesting that neoatherosclerosis is the underlying mechanism.58 ISR of DES is typically characterized by a layered or heterogeneous intrastent tissue band and may be part of the spectrum of in-stent neoatherosclerotic changes, such as TCFA-containing neointima, particularly if the stent had been placed for at least 20 months.58

In a recent study on ISR, morphological assessment using OCT was useful for identifying lesions favorable for paclitaxel-coated balloon dilatation or DES placement.59 Of the 428 treated ISR lesions, a homogenous structure was associated with higher rates of repeated ISR and target lesion revascularization using plain balloon angioplasty alone compared with paclitaxel-coated balloon dilatation or DES placement (target lesion revascularization rates of 38.7%, 10.6% and 10.7%, respectively, in a follow-up of 211±40 days); conversely, no differences were found between the three treatment approaches in ISR lesions of heterogeneous appearance.59

Stent thrombosis

The mechanisms for stent thrombosis may be readily elucidated by OCT, as mentioned above. Strut malapposition or underexpansion, incomplete strut coverage, stent fracture, incomplete lesion coverage by the stent, edge dissection, in-stent neoatherosclerosis and ruptured neointima, particularly in areas of lipid-laden neointima, may be detected by OCT.4,60,61

Future directions

As a clinical tool, OCT is currently potentially able to replace IVUS in every situation with the exception of diagnosis of lesions in the ostial left main or right coronary arteries, in which the flow in the aorta prevents adequate blood clearance.2–4 However, most of these patients should be assessed with FFR.2–4 Another exception is chronic total occlusions in which antegrade injections are of potential concern.2–4

The method continues to evolve, with pullback speeds now reaching 40 mm/s62 and the potential for a paradigm shift, with opportunities to save contrast compared to conventional angiography. The introduction of angiographic frame co-registration enables precise spatial location for stent implantation.63

OCT can replicate IVUS metrics that are essentially cross-sectionally derived, but most importantly allows for full volumetric analysis of the vessel.27 Virtual fractional flow reserve derived from OCT is a potentially disruptive technology in predicting physiology and assessing results after stenting.27

Finally, OCT is the most accurate method for follow-up assessment after placement of bioresorbable stents, considering their low opacity at fluoroscopy and the lower accuracy of IVUS.64

Conclusion

The current clinical applications of OCT encompass the successive stages in coronary artery disease management, from initial lesion evaluation to assessment of the final results of PCI, including accurate lesion characterization and quantification of stenosis, guidance for the decision to perform PCI and subsequent planning, and evaluation of immediate and long-term results following PCI.

Conflicts of interest

The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.

References
[1]
P. Garrone, G. Biondi-Zoccai, I. Salvetti, et al.
Quantitative coronary angiography in the current era: principles and applications.
J Interv Cardiol, 22 (2009), pp. 527-536
[2]
G. Ferrante, P. Presbitero, R. Whitbourn, et al.
Current applications of optical coherence tomography for coronary intervention.
Int J Cardiol, 165 (2013), pp. 7-16
[3]
J.L. Gutiérrez-Chico, E. Alegría-Barrero, R. Teijeiro-Mestre, et al.
Optical coherence tomography: from research to practice.
Eur Heart J Cardiovasc Imaging, 13 (2012), pp. 370-384
[4]
J.J. Lopez, S.A. Arain, R. Madder, et al.
Techniques and best practices for optical coherence tomography: a practical manual for interventional cardiologists.
Catheter Cardiovasc Interv, 84 (2014), pp. 687-699
[5]
H. Yabushita, B.E. Bouma, S.L. Houser, et al.
Characterization of human atherosclerosis by optical coherence tomography.
Circulation, 106 (2002), pp. 1640-1645
[6]
K. Jang, B.E. Bouma, D.H. Kang, et al.
Visualization of coronary atherosclerotic plaques in patients using optical coherence tomography: comparison with intravascular ultrasound.
J Am Coll Cardiol, 39 (2002), pp. 604-609
[7]
T. Kubo, T. Imanishi, S. Takarada, et al.
Assessment of culprit lesion morphology in acute myocardial infarction: ability of optical coherence tomography compared with intravascular ultrasound and coronary angioscopy.
J Am Coll Cardiol, 50 (2007), pp. 933-939
[8]
R. Virmani, F. Otsuka, F. Prati, et al.
Matching human pathology is essential for validating OCT imaging to detect high-risk plaques.
Nat Rev Cardiol, 11 (2014), pp. 638
[9]
G. Guagliumi, D. Capodanno, F. Saia, et al.
Mechanisms of atherothrombosis and vascular response to primary percutaneous coronary intervention in women versus men with acute myocardial infarction: results of the OCTAVIA study.
JACC Cardiovasc Interv, 7 (2014), pp. 958-968
[10]
G.J. Tearney, H. Yabushita, S.L. Houser, et al.
Quantification of macrophage content in atherosclerotic plaques by optical coherence tomography.
Circulation, 107 (2003), pp. 113-119
[11]
T. Kume, T. Akasaka, T. Kawamoto, et al.
Assessment of coronary arterial thrombus by optical coherence tomography.
Am J Cardiol, 97 (2006), pp. 1713-1717
[12]
F. Prati, E. Regar, G.S. Mintz, et al.
Expert review document on methodology, terminology, and clinical applications of optical coherence tomography: physical principles, methodology of image acquisition, and clinical application for assessment of coronary arteries and atherosclerosis.
Eur Heart J, 31 (2010), pp. 401-415
[13]
T. Akasaka, T. Kubo, M. Mizukoshi, et al.
Pathophysiology of acute coronary syndrome assessed by optical coherence tomography.
J Cardiol, 56 (2010), pp. 8-14
[14]
Y. Ino, T. Kubo, A. Tanaka, et al.
Difference of culprit lesion morphologies between ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction and non-ST-segment elevation acute coronary syndrome: an optical coherence tomography study.
JACC Cardiovasc Interv, 4 (2011), pp. 76-82
[15]
F. Ferreira, R.C. Ferreira.
Optical coherence tomography findings in ST-elevation acute myocardial infarction in a young woman.
Rev Port Cardiol, 30 (2011), pp. 249-251
[16]
L. Wang, G. Parodi, A. Maehara, et al.
Variable underlying morphology of culprit plaques associated with ST-elevation myocardial infarction: an optical coherence tomography analysis from the SMART trial.
Eur Heart J Cardiovasc Imaging, (2015),
Apr 24 [Epub ahead of print]
[17]
G. Niccoli, R.A. Montone, L. Di Vito, et al.
Plaque rupture and intact fibrous cap assessed by optical coherence tomography portend different outcomes in patients with acute coronary syndrome.
Eur Heart J, 36 (2015), pp. 1377-1384
[18]
H. Refaat, G. Niccoli, M. Gramegna, et al.
Optical coherence tomography features of angiographic complex and smooth lesions in acute coronary syndromes.
Int J Cardiovasc Imaging, 31 (2015), pp. 927-934
[19]
N.H. Pijls, W.F. Fearon, P.A. Tonino, et al.
Fractional flow reserve versus angiography for guiding percutaneous coronary intervention in patients with multivessel coronary artery disease: 2-year follow up of the FAME (Fractional Flow Reserve Versus Angiography for Multivessel Evaluation) study.
J Am Coll Cardiol, 56 (2010), pp. 177-184
[20]
H. Zafar, I. Ullah, K. Dinneen, et al.
Evaluation of hemodynamically severe coronary stenosis as determined by fractional flow reserve with frequency domain optical coherence tomography measured anatomical parameters.
J Cardiol, 64 (2014), pp. 19-24
[21]
S. Reith, S. Battermann, A. Jaskolka, et al.
Relationship between optical coherence tomography derived intraluminal and intramural criteria and haemodynamic relevance as determined by fractional flow reserve in intermediate coronary stenoses of patients with type 2 diabetes.
[22]
A. Belkacemi, P.R. Stella, D.S. Ali, et al.
Diagnostic accuracy of optical coherence tomography parameters in predicting in-stent hemodynamic severe coronary lesions: validation against fractional flow reserve.
Int J Cardiol, 168 (2013), pp. 4209-4213
[23]
Y. Shiono, H. Kitabata, T. Kubo, et al.
Optical coherence tomography-derived anatomical criteria for functionally significant coronary stenosis assessed by fractional flow reserve.
Circ J, 76 (2012), pp. 2218-2225
[24]
N. Gonzalo, J. Escaned, F. Alfonso, et al.
Morphometric assessment of coronary stenosis relevance with optical coherence tomography: a comparison with fractional flow reserve and intravascular ultrasound.
J Am Coll Cardiol, 59 (2012), pp. 1080-1089
[25]
F. D’Ascenzo, U. Barbero, E. Cerrato, et al.
Accuracy of intravascular ultrasound and optical coherence tomography in identifying functionally significant coronary stenosis according to vessel diameter: a meta-analysis of 2,581 patients and 2,807 lesions.
Am Heart J, 169 (2015), pp. 663-673
[26]
G. Guagliumi, V. Sirbu, C. Petroff, et al.
Volumetric assessment of lesion severity with optical coherence tomography: relationship with fractional flow.
EuroIntervention, 8 (2013), pp. 1172-1181
[27]
H.G. Bezerra, G.F. Attizzani, V. Sirbu, et al.
Optical coherence tomography versus intravascular ultrasound to evaluate coronary artery disease and percutaneous coronary intervention.
JACC Cardiovasc Interv, 6 (2013), pp. 228-236
[28]
F. Imola, M.T. Mallus, V. Ramazzotti, et al.
Safety and feasibility of frequency domain optical coherence tomography to guide decision making in percutaneous coronary intervention.
EuroIntervention, 6 (2010), pp. 575-581
[29]
F. Burzotta, A.M. Leone, G.L. De Maria, et al.
Fractional flow reserve or optical coherence tomography guidance to revascularize intermediate coronary stenosis using angioplasty (FORZA) trial: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial.
[30]
P. Cervinka, R. Spaček, M. Bystroň, et al.
Optical coherence tomography-guided primary percutaneous coronary intervention in ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction patients: a pilot study.
Can J Cardiol, 30 (2014), pp. 420-427
[31]
F. Prati, S. Uemura, G. Souteyrand, et al.
OCT-based diagnosis and management of STEMI associated with intact fibrous cap.
JACC Cardiovasc Imaging, 6 (2013), pp. 283-287
[32]
G. Souteyrand, N. Amabile, N. Combaret, et al.
Invasive management without stents in selected acute coronary syndrome patients with a large thrombus burden: a prospective study of optical coherence tomography guided treatment decisions.
EuroIntervention, (2014),
Jul 19 [Epub ahead of print]
[33]
G.T. Stefano, H.G. Bezerra, E. Mehanna, et al.
Unrestricted utilization of frequency domain optical coherence tomography in coronary interventions.
Int J Cardiovasc Imaging, 29 (2013), pp. 741-752
[34]
L. Patrício.
Assessment of complex coronary angioplasty with rotational atherectomy by optical coherence tomography. PhD thesis.
Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Coimbra, (2013), pp. 109
[35]
A. Tanaka, T. Imanishi, H. Kitabata, et al.
Lipid-rich plaque and myocardial perfusion after successful stenting in patients with non-ST-segment elevation acute coronary syndrome: an optical coherence tomography study.
Eur Heart J, 30 (2009), pp. 1348-1355
[36]
T. Ueda, S. Uemura, M. Watanabe, et al.
Colocalization of thin-cap fibroatheroma and spotty calcification is a powerful predictor of procedure-related myocardial injury after elective coronary stent implantation.
Coron Artery Dis, 25 (2014), pp. 384-391
[37]
I. Porto, L. Di Vito, F. Burzotta, et al.
Predictors of periprocedural (type IVa) myocardial infarction, as assessed by frequency-domain optical coherence tomography.
Circ Cardiovasc Interv, 5 (2012), pp. 89-96
S1–6
[38]
P.C. Magnus, J.E. Jayne, H.M. Garcia-Garcia, et al.
Optical coherence tomography versus intravascular ultrasound in the evaluation of observer variability and reliability in the assessment of stent deployment: the OCTIVUS study.
Catheter Cardiovasc Interv, (2015),
Jan 23 [Epub ahead of print]
[39]
F. Alfonso, J. Sandoval, A. Cárdenas, et al.
Optical coherence tomography: from research to clinical application.
Minerva Med, 103 (2012), pp. 441-464
[40]
A.V. Finn, M. Joner, G. Nakazawa, et al.
Pathological correlates of late drug-eluting stent thrombosis: strut coverage as a marker of endothelialization.
Circulation, 115 (2007), pp. 2435-2441
[41]
J. Tanigawa, P. Barlis, C. di Mario.
Intravascular optical coherence tomography: optimisation of image acquisition and quantitative assessment of stent strut apposition.
EuroIntervention, 3 (2007), pp. 128-136
[42]
H.G. Bezerra, M.A. Costa, G. Guagliumi, et al.
Intracoronary optical coherence tomography: a comprehensive review clinical and research applications.
JACC Cardiovasc Interv, 2 (2009), pp. 1035-1046
[43]
L.J. Diaz-Sandoval, B.E. Bouma, G.J. Tearney, et al.
Optical coherence tomography as a tool for percutaneous coronary interventions.
Catheter Cardiovasc Interv, 65 (2005), pp. 492-496
[44]
N. Viceconte, P.H. Chan, E.A. Barrero, et al.
Frequency domain optical coherence tomography for guidance of coronary stenting.
Int J Cardiol, 166 (2013), pp. 722-728
[45]
F. Prati, L. Di Vito, G. Biondi-Zoccai, et al.
Angiography alone versus angiography plus optical coherence tomography to guide decision-making during percutaneous coronary intervention: the Centro per la Lotta contro l’Infarto-Optimisation of Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (CLI-OPCI) study.
EuroIntervention, 8 (2012), pp. 823-829
[46]
A. Di Giorgio, D. Capodanno, V. Ramazzotti, et al.
Optical coherence tomography guided in-stent thrombus removal in patients with acute coronary syndromes.
Int J Cardiovasc Imaging, 29 (2013), pp. 989-996
[47]
Y. Fujino, H.G. Bezerra, G.F. Attizzani, et al.
Frequency-domain optical coherence tomography assessment of unprotected left main coronary artery disease – a comparison with intravascular ultrasound.
Catheter Cardiovasc Interv, 82 (2013), pp. E173-E183
[48]
N. Meneveau, F. Ecarnot, G. Souteyrand, et al.
Does optical coherence tomography optimize results of stenting?. Rationale and study design.
Am Heart J, 168 (2014),
175–81.e1–2
[49]
H. Kawamori, J. Shite, T. Shinke, et al.
Natural consequence of post-intervention stent malapposition, thrombus, tissue prolapse, and dissection assessed by optical coherence tomography at mid-term follow-up.
Eur Heart J Cardiovasc Imaging, 14 (2013), pp. 865-875
[50]
K.P. Bouki, E. Sakkali, K. Toutouzas, et al.
Impact of coronary artery stent edge dissections on long-term clinical outcome in patients with acute coronary syndrome: an optical coherence tomography study.
Catheter Cardiovasc Interv, (2015),
Jan 23 [Epub ahead of print]
[51]
P. Toušek, V. Kočka, M. Malý, et al.
Neointimal coverage and late apposition of everolimus-eluting bioresorbable scaffolds implanted in the acute phase of myocardial infarction: OCT data from the PRAGUE-19 study.
Heart Vessels, (2015),
Apr 21 [Epub ahead of print]
[52]
A. Picchi, G. Musumeci, P. Calabria, et al.
Comparison of strut coverage at 6 months by optical coherence tomography with everolimus-eluting stenting of bare-metal stent restenosis versus stenosis of nonstented atherosclerotic narrowing (from the DESERT Study).
Am J Cardiol, 115 (2015), pp. 1351-1356
[53]
T. Kume, T. Akasaka, T. Kawamoto, et al.
Assessment of coronary intima-media thickness by optical coherence tomography: comparison with intravascular ultrasound.
Circ J, 69 (2005), pp. 903-907
[54]
G. Guagliumi, G. Musumeci, V. Sirbu, et al.
Optical coherence tomography assessment of in vivo vascular response after implantation of overlapping bare-metal and drug-eluting stents.
JACC Cardiovasc Interv, 3 (2010), pp. 531-539
[55]
A. Girassolli, S. Carrizo, S. Jiménez-Valero, et al.
Utility of optical coherence tomography and intravascular ultrasound for the evaluation of coronary lesions.
Rev Port Cardiol, 32 (2013), pp. 925-929
[56]
H. Won, D.H. Shin, B.K. Kim, et al.
Optical coherence tomography derived cut-off value of uncovered stent struts to predict adverse clinical outcomes after drug-eluting stent implantation.
Int J Cardiovasc Imaging, 29 (2013), pp. 1255-1263
[57]
N. Gonzalo, P.W. Serruys, T. Okamura, et al.
Optical coherence tomography patterns of stent restenosis.
Am Heart J, 158 (2009), pp. 284-293
[58]
F. Alfonso, R.A. Byrne, F. Rivero, et al.
Current treatment of in-stent restenosis.
J Am Coll Cardiol, 63 (2014), pp. 2659-2673
[59]
T. Tada, K. Kadota, S. Hosogi, et al.
Association between tissue characteristics assessed with optical coherence tomography and mid-term results after percutaneous coronary intervention for in-stent restenosis lesions: a comparison between balloon angioplasty, paclitaxel-coated balloon dilatation, and drug-eluting stent implantation.
Eur Heart J Cardiovasc Imaging, 16 (2015), pp. 1101-1111
[60]
A. Karanasos, N. Van Mieghem, N. van Ditzhuijzen, et al.
Angiographic and optical coherence tomography insights into bioresorbable scaffold thrombosis: single-center experience.
Circ Cardiovasc Interv, 8 (2015),
[61]
F. Prati, T. Kodama, E. Romagnoli, From the CLI Foundation investigators: the CLI-THRO study, et al.
Suboptimal stent deployment is associated with subacute stent thrombosis: optical coherence tomography insights from a multicenter matched study.
Am Heart J, 169 (2015), pp. 249-256
[62]
Z. Jamil, G. Tearney, N. Bruining, et al.
Interstudy reproducibility of the second generation, Fourier domain optical coherence tomography in patients with coronary artery disease and comparison with intravascular ultrasound: a study applying automated contour detection.
Int J Cardiovasc Imaging, 29 (2013), pp. 39-51
[63]
L. Hebsgaard, T.M. Nielsen, S. Tu, et al.
Co-registration of optical coherence tomography and X-ray angiography in percutaneous coronary intervention. The Does Optical Coherence Tomography Optimize Revascularization (DOCTOR) fusion study.
Int J Cardiol, 182 (2015), pp. 272-278
[64]
P.W. Serruys, J.A. Ormiston, Y. Onuma, et al.
A bioabsorbable everolimus-eluting coronary stent system (ABSORB): 2-year outcomes and results from multiple imaging methods.
Copyright © 2016. Sociedade Portuguesa de Cardiologia
Download PDF
Idiomas
Revista Portuguesa de Cardiologia (English edition)
Article options
Tools
en pt

Are you a health professional able to prescribe or dispense drugs?

Você é um profissional de saúde habilitado a prescrever ou dispensar medicamentos

By checking that you are a health professional, you are stating that you are aware and accept that the Portuguese Journal of Cardiology (RPC) is the Data Controller that processes the personal information of users of its website, with its registered office at Campo Grande, n.º 28, 13.º, 1700-093 Lisbon, telephone 217 970 685 and 217 817 630, fax 217 931 095, and email revista@spc.pt. I declare for all purposes that the information provided herein is accurate and correct.