AI Article Synopsis

  • Angiography has limitations in assessing the severity of left main coronary artery stenosis, while noninvasive Doppler echocardiographic evaluations of coronary flow velocity reserve (CFVR) show strong predictive value for patient outcomes.
  • A study involved 102 patients with intermediate LM stenosis, assessing CFVR through echocardiography; 81 patients were analyzed, with a mean CFVR of 2.4, after excluding those with impaired CFVR or poor acoustic windows.
  • Over a follow-up period of about 62 months, 92.6% of patients were event-free, showing that those with preserved CFVR (>2.0) can often safely avoid immediate revascularization interventions.

Article Abstract

Background: The potential of angiography to evaluate the hemodynamic severity of a left main coronary artery (LM) stenosis is limited. Noninvasive transthoracic Doppler echocardiographic coronary flow velocity reserve (CFVR) evaluation of intermediate coronary stenosis has demonstrated remarkably high negative prognostic value. The aim of this study was to assess clinical outcomes in patients with angiographically intermediate LM stenosis and preserved CFVR (>2.0) as evaluated by transthoracic Doppler echocardiographic CFVR.

Methods: The initial study population included 102 patients with intermediate coronary stenosis of the LM referred for transthoracic Doppler echocardiographic CFVR assessment. Peak diastolic CFVR measurements were performed in the distal segment of the left anterior descending coronary artery after intravenous adenosine (140 μg/kg/min), and CFVR was calculated as the ratio between maximal hyperemic and baseline coronary flow velocity. Nineteen patients had impaired CFVR (≤2.0) and were excluded from further analysis, as well as two patients with poor acoustic windows. The final group consisted of 81 patients (mean age, 60 ± 9 years; 76 men) evaluated for adverse cardiac events including death, myocardial infarction, and revascularization.

Results: Mean follow-up duration was 62 ± 26 months. Mean CFVR was 2.4 ± 0.4. Total event-free survival was 75 of 81 (92.6%), as six patients were referred for revascularization (five patients with coronary artery bypass grafting, one patient with percutaneous coronary intervention). There were no documented myocardial infarctions or cardiovascular deaths in the follow-up period.

Conclusions: In patients with angiographically intermediate and equivocal LM stenosis and preserved CFVR values of >2.0, revascularization can be safely deferred.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.echo.2018.09.020DOI Listing

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