Physiological basis and long-term clinical outcome of discordance between fractional flow reserve and coronary flow velocity reserve in coronary stenoses of intermediate severity

Discordance between fractional flow reserve (FFR) and coronary flow velocity reserve (CFVR) may reflect important coronary pathophysiology but usually remains unnoticed in clinical practice. We evaluated the physiological basis and clinical outcome associated with FFR/CFVR discordance. We studied 15...

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Veröffentlicht in:Circulation. Cardiovascular interventions 2014-06, Vol.7 (3), p.301-311
Hauptverfasser: van de Hoef, Tim P, van Lavieren, Martijn A, Damman, Peter, Delewi, Ronak, Piek, Martijn A, Chamuleau, Steven A J, Voskuil, Michiel, Henriques, José P S, Koch, Karel T, de Winter, Robbert J, Spaan, Jos A E, Siebes, Maria, Tijssen, Jan G P, Meuwissen, Martijn, Piek, Jan J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Discordance between fractional flow reserve (FFR) and coronary flow velocity reserve (CFVR) may reflect important coronary pathophysiology but usually remains unnoticed in clinical practice. We evaluated the physiological basis and clinical outcome associated with FFR/CFVR discordance. We studied 157 intermediate coronary stenoses in 157 patients, evaluated by FFR and CFVR between April 1997 and September 2006 in which revascularization was deferred. Long-term follow-up was performed to document the occurrence of major adverse cardiac events: cardiac death, myocardial infarction, or target vessel revascularization. Discordance between FFR and CFVR occurred in 31% and 37% of stenoses at the 0.75, and 0.80 FFR cut-off value, respectively, and was characterized by microvascular resistances during basal and hyperemic conditions. Follow-up duration amounted to 11.7 years (Q1-Q3, 9.9-13.3 years). Compared with concordant normal results of FFR and CFVR, a normal FFR with an abnormal CFVR was associated with significantly increased major adverse cardiac events rate throughout 10 years of follow-up, regardless of the FFR cut-off applied. In contrast, an abnormal FFR with a normal CFVR was associated with equivalent clinical outcome compared with concordant normal results: ≤ 3 years when FFR
ISSN:1941-7640
1941-7632
DOI:10.1161/CIRCINTERVENTIONS.113.001049