Clinical outcomes of suboptimal stent deployment as assessed by optical coherence tomography: long-term results of the CLI-OPCI registry.

2021 
Background Intraprocedural optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a valuable tool for guidance of percutaneous coronary intervention, but long-term follow-up data are lacking. Aims The aim of this study was to address the long-term (7.5 years) clinical impact of quantitative OCT metrics of suboptimal stent implantation. Methods This retrospective study includes 391 patients with long-term follow-up (mean 2,737 days; interquartile range 1,301-3,143 days) from the multicentre Centro per la Lotta contro lrInfarto n Optimisation of Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (CLI-OPCI) registry. OCT-assessed suboptimal stent deployment required the presence of at least one of the following pre-definednOCT findings: in-stent MLA l4.5 mm2, proximal or distal reference lumen narrowing with lumen area l4.5 mm2, significant proximal or distal edge dissection width g200 mm. Results One-hundred-two patients (26.1%) with 138 stented lesions (27.7%) experienced a device-oriented cardiovascular event (DOCE). In-stent MLA l4.5 mm2 (38.1% vs 19.8%, pl0.001), in-stent lumen expansion l70% (29.5% vs 20.3%, p=0.032), proximal reference lumen narrowing l4.5 mm2 (6.5% vs 1.4%, p=0.004), and distal reference lumen narrowing l4.5 mm2 (12.9% vs 3.6%, p=0.001) were significantly more common in the DOCE vs non-DOCE group. OCT assessed suboptimalnstent deployment was an independent predictor of long-term DOCE (HR 2.17, pl0.001), together with bare metal stent implantation (HR 1.73, p=0.003) and prior revascularisation (HR 1.53, p=0.017). Conclusions The presence of OCT assessed suboptimal criteria for stent implantation was related to a worse clinical outcome at very long-term follow-up. This information further supports an OCT-guided strategy of stent deployment.
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