15 Mar 2021
Prognostic significance of thermodilution-derived coronary flow capacity in patients with deferred revascularisation
EuroIntervention Journal
The aim of this study was to investigate the prognostic value of thermodilution-derived coronary flow capacity (T-CFC) in patients with stable coronary artery disease and deferred revascularisation.
Methods and results: We evaluated 308 lesions in 308 patients with deferred revascularisation, stratifying the cohort according to T-CFC. Ischaemic T-CFC was defined as a composite of mildly, moderately, and severely reduced T-CFC. Clinical outcomes were assessed by vessel-oriented composite endpoints (VOCE) and major adverse cardiac events (MACE). VOCE and MACE occurred in 19 and 28 patients, respectively. Ischaemic T-CFC was found in 88 lesions (28.6%). Kaplan-Meier analysis revealed that lesions with ischaemic T-CFC had a significantly higher risk of both VOCE and MACE. The net reclassification index and integrated discrimination improvement index were both significantly improved when ischaemic T-CFC was added to the clinical risk model (age, sex, prior stent implantation, and lesion length) for predicting VOCE and MACE. Furthermore, ischaemic T-CFC showed significant incremental predictive ability for VOCE and MACE when compared with the clinical risk model + fractional flow reserve ≤0.8, or with the clinical model + coronary flow reserve ≤2.0.
Conclusions: T-CFC categorisation improved the risk stratification for both VOCE and MACE and showed incremental prognostic value in patients with deferred revascularisation.
Authors
Masahiro Hoshino, Yoshihisa Kanaji, Rikuta Hamaya, Yoshinori Kanno, Masahiro Hada, Masao Yamaguchi, Yohei Sumino, Eisuke Usui, Tadashi Murai, Tetsumin Lee, Taishi Yonetsu, Tsunekazu Kakuta