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Coronary Physiology clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Coronary Physiology.

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NCT ID: NCT04664140 Completed - Clinical trials for Percutaneous Coronary Intervention

QFR-based Virtual PCI Versus Angio-guided PCI

AQVA
Start date: February 20, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A significant portion of patients continue to experience both adverse events and symptoms after angiographically successful PCI. Beyond different underlying mechanisms non-related to epicardial disease (vasospasm, microcirculatory dysfunction), several recent studies have shown that in at least 15-20% of PCIs, a prognostically meaningful ischemia, detected with different coronary physiology tools, is present at the end of a successful angiography-guided PCI. In addition, physiology is able to discriminate the underlying reason causing the suboptimal functional result, namely: i) in-stent drop; ii) focal drop outside stent; iii) diffuse disease. However, the use of post-PCI physiology is still very low, even when it is utilized pre-PCI to set the indication for stenting. Lack of dedicated randomized clinical trials and procedural lengthening and increase in side effects are at the basis of this underutilization. In addition, the ideal tool should allow to plan the intervention in advance rather than to assess the results afterwards. To this hand, QFR is particularly appealing, among available physiology tools, because it does not need wire or adenosine and allows: i) identification of disease mechanism; ii) co-registration with angiography; iii) pre-PCI planning with residual vessel QFR value according to a pre-specified treatment. Taken all this characteristics together, QFR is the ideal technology for virtual PCI. The hypothesis of the present investigation is that a procedural planning based on QFR (virtual PCI) is able to reduce the rate of patients with post-PCI suboptimal functional result, that has been found to correlate with prognosis in our earlier study, if compared to the traditional angio-guided PCI.

NCT ID: NCT02425969 Completed - Stable Angina Clinical Trials

A Trial in Stable Intermediate Coronary Lesions and Grey-zone FFR Values

GzFFR
Start date: April 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In this randomised controlled trial of patients with stable angina and documented intermediate coronary disease with indeterminate or "grey-zone" Fractional Flow Reserve (FFR) we will randomise patients to either optimal medical therapy alone versus optimal medical therapy with PCI and they will be followed up for the primary endpoint of anginal control as measured by the Seattle Angina Questionnaire at 3 months.