AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aims to examine the current practices of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for in-stent chronic total occlusions (IS-CTO) in a large Latin American registry.
  • IS-CTO patients have notable differences in demographics, such as higher rates of diabetes and hypertension, and characteristics compared to non-IS-CTO patients, but technical success rates are similar for both groups.
  • The findings suggest that IS-CTO PCI is common in Latin America and exhibits comparable technical success and safety to non-IS-CTO PCI.

Article Abstract

Objectives: To inform about contemporary PCI practice of in-stent (IS) chronic total occlusions (CTO) from a large international registry in Latin America.

Background: IS-CTO represent a distinctive challenge for PCI, but literature is limited and restricted to high-resource regions of the world.

Methods: Patients undergoing CTO PCI enrolled in the LATAM CTO registry from 42 centers in eight countries were included. We analyzed demographics, angiographic, procedure technique, success and postprocedural outcomes between IS-CTO and non-IS-CTO PCI.

Results: From 1,565 patients IS-CTO was present in 181 patients (11.5%). IS-CTO patients had higher prevalence of diabetes and hypertension than patients without IS-CTO. IS-CTOs had less calcification (32.5 vs. 46.7%, p < .001), lower prevalence of a proximal branch (36.3 vs. 50.1%, p < .001), more likely to be ostial (24.4 vs. 18.1%, p = .042), were longer (28.5 vs. 25.2 mm, p = .062), and had less interventional collaterals (49.1 vs. 57.3%, p = .038) compared with non-IS-CTO. CTO complexity scores were similar between both groups. There was no statistically significant difference in the initial or successful strategy between IS-CTO and non-IS-CTO PCI. Technical success rates remained high in IS-CTO (86.7%) and non-IS-CTO (83.1%, p = .230). There was no independent association between IS-CTO and technical success in multivariable analysis. There were no differences between IS-CTO and non-IS-CTO groups for in-hospital clinical outcomes.

Conclusion: In a contemporary, multicenter, and international registry from Latin America, IS-CTO PCI is frequent and has comparable technical success and safety profile compared to non-IS-CTO PCI.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ccd.28937DOI Listing

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