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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:
Determine the incidence of GM defined as residual disease* and significant edge dissection† at proximal and distal reference
Determine the incidence of stent dislocation (distance between planned and actual stented place)
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.
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.
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Inclusion criteria
• Patients ≥18 years old who undergo percutaneous coronary intervention per clinical indications.
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200 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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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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