Optical coherence tomography assessment of morphological characteristics in suspected coronary artery disease, but angiographically nonobstructive lesions

2018 
Abstract Background/purpose We sought to evaluate the morphological characteristics of nonobstructive coronary lesions in patients with ischemic symptoms and/or signs. Materials/methods We used optical coherence tomography (OCT) to assess the presumed culprit lesion in 142 patients with suspected coronary artery disease in whom coronary angiography showed no lesion with a diameter stenosis ≥50%. Patients with a clinical diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome (ACS, n  = 31, including 2 ST-elevation myocardial infarction, 9 non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction, and 20 unstable angina pectoris) were compared to those with stable coronary artery disease (CAD) ( n  = 111) including 79 patients with stable angina and 32 patients with silent ischemia (positive non-invasive stress test only). Results The overall prevalence of thrombus, plaque rupture, intimal laceration, or calcified nodule in the combined groups was 23.2% (33/142) including 15 thrombus, 12 plaque rupture, 9 calcified nodule, and 8 intimal laceration (not mutually exclusive) without differences between ACS and stable CAD patients. Also the prevalence of thin-cap fibroatheroma was not significantly different between ACS and stable patients (12.9% vs 6.3%, p  = 0.22). Minimum lumen area (3.1 mm 2 [2.3, 4.1] versus 3.2 mm 2 [2.4, 4.7], p  = 0.7) and area stenosis (49.9% [37.1, 56.4] versus 48.1% [37.8, 55.8], p  = 0.9) were similar between ACS and stable CAD patients. Conclusion In patients presenting with ischemic symptoms and/or signs, but angiographically nonobstructive culprit lesions, approximately 25% had abnormal findings by OCT—whether patients presented with acute/unstable or stable CAD.
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