Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease (Mar 2017)

Management and Outcome of Patients With Acute Coronary Syndrome Caused by Plaque Rupture Versus Plaque Erosion: An Intravascular Optical Coherence Tomography Study

  • Sining Hu,
  • Yinchun Zhu,
  • Yingying Zhang,
  • Jiannan Dai,
  • Lulu Li,
  • Harold Dauerman,
  • Tsunenari Soeda,
  • Zhao Wang,
  • Hang Lee,
  • Chao Wang,
  • Chunyang Zhe,
  • Yan Wang,
  • Gonghui Zheng,
  • Shaosong Zhang,
  • Haibo Jia,
  • Bo Yu,
  • Ik‐Kyung Jang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.116.004730
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 3

Abstract

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Background Plaque rupture and erosion are the 2 most common mechanisms for acute coronary syndromes. However, the outcome of these 2 distinct pathologies in patients with acute coronary syndromes has never been studied. Methods and Results We retrospectively studied 141 patients with acute coronary syndromes who underwent optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging of the culprit lesion prior to stenting from the Massachusetts General Hospital OCT Registry. Management (stent versus no stent), poststent OCT findings, and outcomes were compared. Among the 141 culprit lesions, rupture was found in 79 (56%) patients and erosion in 62 (44%). Stent implantation was performed in 77 (97.5%) patients with rupture versus 49 (79.0%) in those with erosion (P<0.001). Immediately after percutaneous coronary intervention, OCT showed a higher incidence of malapposition (37.5% versus 7.3%, P<0.001), thrombus (59.4% versus 14.6%, P<0.001), and protrusion (93.8% versus 73.2%, P=0.008) in the rupture group compared with the erosion group. Plaque rupture was associated with a higher incidence of no reflow or slow flow and distal embolization. Although cardiac event rates were comparable between the two groups at the 1‐year follow‐up, none of the erosion patients who were treated conservatively without stenting had adverse cardiac events. Conclusions Unfavorable poststent OCT findings were more frequent in rupture patients compared with erosion patients. A subset of erosion patients who were treated conservatively without stenting remained free of adverse cardiac events for up to 1 year.

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