AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to evaluate how effective intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) is when added to coronary angiography (CA) for diagnosing and treating left main coronary artery (LMCA) compression caused by pulmonary hypertension (PH).
  • LMCA compression is a serious issue that can arise from pulmonary artery aneurysms in PH patients, but IVUS is rarely used, even though guidelines suggest it.
  • The results showed that while CA could misidentify compressions, IVUS accurately confirmed compression in patients suspected of having LMCA issues, leading to a low rate of significant clinical problems over an extended follow-up period.

Article Abstract

Objectives: We sought to assess the clinical value of adding intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) evaluation to coronary angiography (CA) to guide extrinsic left main coronary artery (LMCA) compression diagnosis and treatment in pulmonary hypertension (PH).

Background: LMCA compression due to a pulmonary artery aneurysm (PAA) is a severe complication of PH. Although guidelines encourage the use of IVUS for LMCA disease evaluation, it has hardly been used in this scenario.

Methods: We analyzed morbimortality of type 1 and 4 PH patients with clinically suspected LMCA compression by a PAA between 2010 and 2018 in a reference unit. LMCA compression was prospectively assessed with CA ± IVUS. Angiographic-LMCA compression was considered conclusive when LMCA stenosis>50% was present in four predetermined projections; inconclusive, when LMCA stenosis>50% was present in <4 projections and negative if no stenosis>50% was present. Patients with conclusive and inconclusive CA underwent IVUS. IVUS-LMCA compression was defined as systolic minimum lumen area < 6 mm .

Results: LMCA compression was suspected in 23/796 patients (3%). CA was conclusive for compression in 7(30.5%), inconclusive in 9(39%), and negative in 7(30.5%). IVUS confirmed LMCA compression in 6/7(86%) patients with conclusive CA and in 2/9(22%) with inconclusive CA. Patients fulfilling IVUS criteria for LMCA compression underwent stent implantation. At 20 months follow-up a composite end-point of death, stent restenosis/thrombosis, or lung transplant was reported in three patients (13%).

Conclusions: CA can misdiagnose LMCA extrinsic compression. IVUS discriminates better whether significant compression by a PAA exists or not, avoiding unnecessary LMCA stenting. Patients treated following this strategy show a low rate of major clinical events at 20 months follow-up.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ccd.29194DOI Listing

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