Litcius/Paper detail

Comparison of Optical Flow Ratio and Fractional Flow Ratio in Stent-Treated Arteries Immediately After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention

Hiroki Emori, Takashi Kubo, Yasutsugu Shiono, Yasushi Ino, Kunihiro Shimamura, Kosei Terada, Takahiro Nishi, Daisuke Higashioka, Masahiro Takahata, Teruaki Wada, Manabu Kashiwagi, Amir Kh. M. Khalifa, Atsushi Tanaka, Takeshi Hozumi, Shengxian Tu, Takashi Akasaka

2020Circulation Journal20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Optical flow ratio (OFR) is a recently developed method for functional assessment of coronary artery disease based on computational fluid dynamics of vascular anatomical data from intravascular optical coherence tomography (OCT). The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between OFR and fractional flow reserve (FFR) in stent-treated arteries immediately after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). METHODS AND RESULTS: The OFR and FFR were measured in 103 coronary arteries immediately after successful PCI with a stent. An increase in the OFR and FFR values within the stent was defined as in-stent ∆OFR and ∆FFR, respectively. The values of FFR and OFR were 0.89±0.06 and 0.90±0.06, respectively. OFR was highly correlated with FFR (r=0.84, P<0.001). OFR showed a good agreement with FFR, presenting small values of mean difference and root-mean-squared deviation (FFR-OFR: -0.01±0.04). In-stent ∆OFR showed a moderate correlation (r=0.69, P<0.001) and good agreement (in-stent ∆FFR - in-stent ∆OFR: 0.00±0.02) with in-stent ∆FFR. CONCLUSIONS: OFR showed a high correlation and good agreement with FFR in stent-treated arteries immediately after PCI.

Topics & Concepts

Fractional flow reserveStentPercutaneous coronary interventionConventional PCICardiologyMedicineInternal medicineCoronary artery diseaseCoronary arteriesArteryCoronary angiographyMyocardial infarctionCoronary Interventions and DiagnosticsOptical Coherence Tomography ApplicationsCardiovascular Health and Disease Prevention
Comparison of Optical Flow Ratio and Fractional Flow Ratio in Stent-Treated Arteries Immediately After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention | Litcius