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Proximal optimisation technique versus final kissing balloon inflation in coronary bifurcation lesions: the randomised, multicentre PROPOT trial. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study aimed to compare the effectiveness of the proximal optimisation technique (POT) versus the conventional kissing balloon technique (KBT) for treating bifurcation lesions in patients using advanced imaging (OCT).
  • A total of 120 patients were randomly assigned to either POT or KBT, with the analysis focusing on the rate of malapposed stent struts after treatment.
  • Results showed no significant differences in stent apposition rates between the two techniques, though POT required more additional treatments; both methods yielded good long-term clinical outcomes.

Article Abstract

Background: Clinical implications of the proximal optimisation technique (POT) for bifurcation lesions have not been investigated in a randomised controlled trial.

Aims: This study aimed to investigate whether POT is superior in terms of stent apposition compared with the conventional kissing balloon technique (KBT) in real-life bifurcation lesions using optical coherence tomography (OCT).

Methods: A total of 120 patients from 15 centres were randomised into two groups - POT followed by side branch dilation or KBT. Finally, 57 and 58 patients in the POT and KBT groups, respectively, were analysed. OCT was performed at baseline, immediately after wire recrossing to the side branch, and at the final procedure.

Results: The primary endpoint was the rate of malapposed struts assessed by the final OCT. The rate of malapposed struts did not differ between the POT and KBT groups (in-stent proximal site: 10.4% vs 7.7%, p=0.33; bifurcation core: 1.4% vs 1.1%, p=0.67; core's distal edge: 6.2% vs 5.3%, p=0.59). More additional treatments were required among the POT group (40.4% vs 6.9%, p<0.01). At one-year follow-up, only one patient in each group underwent target lesion revascularisation (2.0% vs 1.9%).

Conclusions: POT followed by side branch dilation did not show any advantages over conventional KBT in terms of stent apposition; however, excellent midterm clinical outcomes were observed in both strategies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9724954PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4244/EIJ-D-20-01386DOI Listing

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