Acute Coronary Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Comparative Effectiveness Study of Routine Versus Selective Use of Fractional Flow Reserve (FFR) to Guide Non-Emergent Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI)
Fractional flow reserve (FFR) is a test that can be performed at the time of heart catheterization. It measures the change in pressure across a narrowing in the heart artery during high flow situation, and provides reliable information about the functional severity of the narrowing. FFR measurements accurately predict whether a stent is needed, and is considered an excellent test before placement of stents to treat narrowed heart arteries. However, FFR is not used in every case because of the extra time needed and the associated device costs. Cardiac Services BC (an agency of Provincial Health Services Authority) is sponsoring this study to find out if FFR should be used in most cases (routine), rather than the current selective approach.
Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is an effective, less invasive mode of
revascularization compared with coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). In 2011, a total of
7,614 PCI procedures were performed in British Columbia (BC). While some procedures were done
emergently for life-threatening indications (e.g. ST elevation myocardial infarction - STEMI
or cardiogenic shock), most (6,169 cases in year 2011) were done at the discretion of the
treating physicians, taking patient preference into account. A number of factors are usually
considered before proceeding with PCI. These may include clinical presentation (stable angina
versus acute coronary syndrome); severity of symptoms (asymptomatic or highly symptomatic);
response to medical therapy; severity of ischemia based on non-invasive functional testing
(mild, moderate, or severe); predicted risk (low, intermediate, or high); and findings on
coronary angiography (lesion number, location, severity, and morphology, etc). However,
interpretation of symptoms is subjective. Non-invasive tests for ischemia may not be
reliable. In addition, coronary angiography uses 2 dimensional images to depict 3-dimensional
structures, and there is well known limitations.
The concept of using fractional flow reserve (FFR) to predict the functional significance of
coronary lesions was described > 20 years ago. In 1996, Pijls et al showed that measurements
of FFR in the cardiac catheterization laboratory can accurately predict provoked ischemia
upon non-invasive functional testing. The DEFER study (2007) showed that coronary lesions
with non-ischemic FFR values can be treated with medical therapy with good clinical outcome
at 5-year follow up. The FAME-1 study (2009) evaluated the strategy of PCI guided by
angiography versus PCI guided by FFR measurements in multi-vessel disease. The primary
end-point was the 1-year composite of death, myocardial infarction (MI), and any repeat
revascularization. Fewer stents were used per patient for the FFR-guided group (2.7 versus
1.9 stents per patient), less contrast agent used (302 versus 272 ml), and lower in-lab
equipment cost ($6,007 US versus $5,332 US), all significant with P<0.001. A total of 1,005
patients were randomized. At 1-year follow up, the composite end-point of death, MI and
target vessel revascularization was 18.2% for the angiography-guided group versus 13.3% for
the FFR-guided group (p < 0.02). At 2-year follow up, the incidence of death and MI was lower
for the FFR-guided group (12.7% versus 8.4%, p<0.03), and the incidence of MI in the
FFR-guided and PCI deferred population was very low at 0.2%.
Since the publication of the FAME-1 study, the use of pressure wires to measure FFR increased
from ~400 cases per year to ~1,000 cases per year in BC. However, in comparison with an
annual non-emergent PCI volume of >6,000 cases per year, the use of FFR appears highly
selective (1,058 out of 6,169, 17%, based on year 2011 statistics). In a series of 442
consecutive FFR cases done at the Vancouver General and St. Paul's Hospitals (year 2011 to
2012), the use of FFR identified non-ischemic lesions in 52%, and this resulted in a change
in management decision in 68%. In addition, provincial data showed significant variation in
the use of FFR among the 5 PCI capable hospitals in BC (from <5% to ~30%). Based on the
recent European Society of Cardiology guidelines, the use of FFR to guide revascularization
has a class 1a indication in multi-vessel disease, while the US guidelines (American College
of Cardiology, ACC) has a class 2a recommendation for the use of FFR in evaluating coronary
lesions of intermediate severity. It is possible that a highly selective approach to the use
of FFR may lead to underuse, which in turn may lead to overuse of PCI, with increased cost,
and adverse clinical outcome.
We hypothesize that the routine use of FFR may improve clinical outcome, decrease the number
of PCI, and decrease direct cost in the cardiac catheterization laboratory. We propose a
randomized study to compare 2 approaches of using FFR to guide PCI: (1) routine use - the
experimental arm; and (2) selective use - the current standard.
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