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Does Co-registration of OCT and Angiography Reduce Geographic Miss of Stent Implantation?

S

St. Francis Hospital, New York

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Coronary Artery Disease

Treatments

Procedure: Coronary PCI with OCT without Co Registration
Procedure: Coronary PCI with OCT with Co Registration

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to determine whether co-registration of OCT and angiography reduce geographic miss defined as stent edge dissection or significant residual stenosis at stent edge after stent implantation during percutaneous coronary intervention.

Full description

Background: When a stent fails to fully cover the lesion, it is termed "geographic miss" (GM). Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is an intracoronary imaging modality that has higher resolution than conventional intracoronary ultrasound. Although OCT allows identification of the location of the culprit lesion and side branch using automated measures, it is sometimes difficult to identify the exact segment corresponding to angiography. Recently, co-registration of OCT and angiography has become available; however, whether this reduces the incidence of GM during stenting is unknown.

Hypothesis: OCT reduces GM during percutaneous coronary intervention.

Objectives:

  1. Determine the incidence of GM defined as residual disease* and significant edge dissection† at proximal and distal reference

  2. Determine the incidence of stent dislocation (distance between planned and actual stented place)

  3. Determine procedural findings (additional stent, total fluoro time, total contrast volume)

    • Minimum lumen area <4.0 mm2 in the presence of significant residual plaque within 5 mm distal and proximal to the stent edge.

      • A flap of vessel wall of >60° is seen in ≥2 consecutive cross-section image within 5 mm distal and proximal from stent edge Study Design and Methods: Single-center, prospective, randomized study. Consented subjects who are to undergo percutaneous coronary intervention are divided into 2 groups randomly (OCT with co-registration vs OCT without co-registration). After stent deployment guided by OCT, dissection, residual disease at the stent edge, and distance between planned and actual stent location are assessed using OCT or angiography. Additional stent deployment, procedure time, total fluoroscopy time, and total contrast volume are also evaluated.

Sample size considerations: OCT with co-registration: 100, OCT without co-registration: 100 (α=0.05, β =0.2). In a retrospective evaluation, the incidence of residual disease (lumen area <4.0 mm2 in the presence of significant residual plaque) or significant stent edge dissection was 36% (18/50, 34% [17/50] with residual stenosis, 4% [2/50] with significant edge dissection). Under the assumption that GM occurs in 36% of patients without co-registration and 18% of patients with co-registration, a group of 190 patients yields a power 80% (with a 2-sided α=0.05) to detect a difference in GM between patients with and without co-registration. In order to account for patient drop out and non-evaluable OCT recordings (5%), a total of 200 patients will be enrolled.

Enrollment

200 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

• Patients ≥18 years old who undergo percutaneous coronary intervention per clinical indications.

Exclusion criteria

  • Left main disease
  • Ostial lesion at Right Coronary Artery
  • Tortuous artery in which OCT is unable to pass
  • Lesion at bypass graft
  • In-stent restenosis
  • Chronic total occlusion
  • Cardiogenic shock (sustained [>10 min] systolic blood pressure <90 mm Hg in absence of inotropic support or the presence of an intra-aortic balloon pump)
  • Acute phase heart failure
  • Sustained ventricular arrhythmias
  • Known ejection fraction <35%
  • Known severe valvular heart disease Known severe renal insufficiency (estimated glomerular filtration rate <30 mL/min/1.72 m2)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

200 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

Coronary PCI with OCT with Co-Registration
Active Comparator group
Description:
Coronary stenting will be performed with OCT guidance as per local practice. Pre and post stenting procedure will be performed with OCT guidance with the use of the Co-Registration software tool after stent implanted.
Treatment:
Procedure: Coronary PCI with OCT with Co Registration
Coronary PCI with OCT without Co-Registration
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
Coronary stenting will be performed with OCT guidance as per local practice. Pre and post stenting procedure will be performed with OCT guidance without the use of the Co-Registration software tool after stent implanted. I
Treatment:
Procedure: Coronary PCI with OCT without Co Registration

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Richard A Shlofmitz, MD; Elizabeth S Haag, RN MPA

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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