Outcome Impact of Coronary Revascularization Strategy Reclassification With Fractional Flow Reserve at Time of Diagnostic Angiography

2013 Circulation 195 citations

Abstract

Background— There is no large report of the impact of fractional flow reserve (FFR) on the reclassification of the coronary revascularization strategy on individual patients referred for diagnostic angiography. Methods and Results— The Registre Français de la FFR (R3F) investigated 1075 consecutive patients undergoing diagnostic angiography including an FFR investigation at 20 French centers. Investigators were asked to define prospectively their revascularization strategy a priori based on angiography before performing the FFR. The final revascularization strategy, reclassification of the strategy by FFR, and 1-year clinical follow-up were prospectively recorded. The strategy a priori based on angiography was medical therapy in 55% and revascularization in 45% (percutaneous coronary intervention, 38%; coronary artery bypass surgery, 7%). Patients were treated according to FFR in 1028/1075 (95.7%). The applied strategy after FFR was medical therapy in 58% and revascularization in 42% (percutaneous coronary intervention, 32%; coronary artery bypass surgery, 10%). The final strategy applied differed from the strategy a priori in 43% of cases: in 33% of a priori medical patients, in 56% of patients undergoing a priori percutaneous coronary intervention, and in 51% of patients undergoing a priori coronary artery bypass surgery. In reclassified patients treated based on FFR and in disagreement with the angiography-based a priori decision (n=464), the 1-year outcome (major cardiac event, 11.2%) was as good as in patients in whom final applied strategy concurred with the angiography-based a priori decision (n=611; major cardiac event, 11.9%; log-rank, P =0.78). At 1 year, >93% patients were asymptomatic without difference between reclassified and nonreclassified patients (Generalized Linear Mixed Model, P =0.75). Reclassification safety was preserved in high-risk patients. Conclusion— This study shows that performing FFR during diagnostic angiography is associated with reclassification of the revascularization decision in about half of the patients. It further demonstrates that it is safe to pursue a revascularization strategy divergent from that suggested by angiography but guided by FFR.

Keywords

MedicineFractional flow reserveRevascularizationPercutaneous coronary interventionAngiographyCardiologyCoronary artery diseaseInternal medicinePercutaneousRadiologyCoronary artery bypass surgeryBypass surgeryCoronary angiographySurgeryArteryMyocardial infarction

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2013
Type
article
Volume
129
Issue
2
Pages
173-185
Citations
195
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

195
OpenAlex

Cite This

Éric Van Belle, Gilles Rioufol, Christophe Pouillot et al. (2013). Outcome Impact of Coronary Revascularization Strategy Reclassification With Fractional Flow Reserve at Time of Diagnostic Angiography. Circulation , 129 (2) , 173-185. https://doi.org/10.1161/circulationaha.113.006646

Identifiers

DOI
10.1161/circulationaha.113.006646