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Head-to-head comparison of two angiography-derived fractional flow reserve techniques in patients with high-risk acute coronary syndrome: A multicenter prospective study

Ioannis Skalidis, Nathalie Noirclerc, David Meier, Wongsakorn Luangphiphat, Aurelien Cagnina, Sarah Mauler‐Wittwer, Thabo Mahendiran, Bernard De Bruyne, Alessandro Candreva, Carlos Collet, Jeroen Sonck, Olivier Müller, Stéphane Fournier

2023International Journal of Cardiology13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

•Novel non-invasive FFR modalities, FFRangio and QFR, although they have shown great diagnostic performance, they have never been compared to each other.•Among 84 angiographically intermediate coronary lesions in patients with NSTEMI, both modalities demonstrated great diagnostic performance, but FFRangio exhibited a statistically significant better correlation to invasive FFR than QFR as well as higher inter-observer agreement.•For the first time in the literature, two different non-invasive angiography-based FFR techiniques are compared to each other. Further studies will add to the growing body of evidence regarding the reliability of non-invasive FFR modalities and their correlation to invasive FFR BackgroundFFRangio and QFR are angiography-based technologies that have been validated in patients with stable coronary artery disease. No head-to-head comparison to invasive fractional flow reserve (FFR) has been reported to date in patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACS).MethodsThis study is a subset of a larger prospective multicenter, single-arm study that involved patients diagnosed with high-risk ACS in whom 30–70% stenosis was evaluated by FFR. FFRangio and QFR – both calculated offline by 2 different and blinded operators – were calculated and compared to FFR. The two co-primary endpoints were the comparison of the Pearson correlation coefficient between FFRangio and QFR with FFR and the comparison of their inter-observer variability.ResultsAmong 134 high-risk ACS screened patients, 59 patients with 84 vessels underwent FFR measurements and were included in this study. The mean FFR value was 0.82 ± 0.40 with 32 (38%) being ≤0.80. The mean FFRangio was 0.82 ± 0.20 and the mean QFR was 0.82 ± 0.30, with 27 (32%) and 25 (29%) being ≤0.80, respectively. The Pearson correlation coefficient was significantly better for FFRangio compared to QFR, with R values of 0.76 and 0.61, respectively (p = 0.01). The inter-observer agreement was also significantly better for FFRangio compared to QFR (0.86 vs 0.79, p < 0.05). FFRangio had 91% sensitivity, 100% specificity, and 96.8% accuracy, while QFR exhibited 86.4% sensitivity, 98.4% specificity, and 93.7% accuracy.ConclusionIn patients with high-risk ACS, FFRangio and QFR demonstrated excellent diagnostic performance. FFRangio seems to have better correlation to invasive FFR compared to QFR but further larger validation studies are required. FFRangio and QFR are angiography-based technologies that have been validated in patients with stable coronary artery disease. No head-to-head comparison to invasive fractional flow reserve (FFR) has been reported to date in patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACS). This study is a subset of a larger prospective multicenter, single-arm study that involved patients diagnosed with high-risk ACS in whom 30–70% stenosis was evaluated by FFR. FFRangio and QFR – both calculated offline by 2 different and blinded operators – were calculated and compared to FFR. The two co-primary endpoints were the comparison of the Pearson correlation coefficient between FFRangio and QFR with FFR and the comparison of their inter-observer variability. Among 134 high-risk ACS screened patients, 59 patients with 84 vessels underwent FFR measurements and were included in this study. The mean FFR value was 0.82 ± 0.40 with 32 (38%) being ≤0.80. The mean FFRangio was 0.82 ± 0.20 and the mean QFR was 0.82 ± 0.30, with 27 (32%) and 25 (29%) being ≤0.80, respectively. The Pearson correlation coefficient was significantly better for FFRangio compared to QFR, with R values of 0.76 and 0.61, respectively (p = 0.01). The inter-observer agreement was also significantly better for FFRangio compared to QFR (0.86 vs 0.79, p < 0.05). FFRangio had 91% sensitivity, 100% specificity, and 96.8% accuracy, while QFR exhibited 86.4% sensitivity, 98.4% specificity, and 93.7% accuracy. In patients with high-risk ACS, FFRangio and QFR demonstrated excellent diagnostic performance. FFRangio seems to have better correlation to invasive FFR compared to QFR but further larger validation studies are required.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineFractional flow reserveCardiologyInternal medicineCoronary artery diseaseStenosisAngiographyCoronary angiographyRadiologyProspective cohort studyAcute coronary syndromeMyocardial infarctionCoronary Interventions and DiagnosticsAcute Myocardial Infarction ResearchCardiac Imaging and Diagnostics
Head-to-head comparison of two angiography-derived fractional flow reserve techniques in patients with high-risk acute coronary syndrome: A multicenter prospective study | Litcius