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Optimization of Complex Percutaneous Coronary Intervention With Liberal Use of Intracoronary Imaging Versus Contemporary Practice
Sponsor: Cathreine BV
Summary
Coronary artery disease remains a leading cause of mortality worldwide and is commonly treated with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Typically, PCI is guided by invasive coronary angiography (ICA). However, ICA has inherent limitations in accurately assessing vessel dimensions, calcium burden, circumferential tissue and whether a stent has achieved full expansion. Therefore ICA alone is insufficient for guiding stent optimization, especially in complex lesions which are most vulnerable to long-term stent failure. To overcome the limitations of ICA, intracoronary imaging can be used to guide and optimize PCI. The advantages of intracoronary imaging include obtaining larger lumen areas, better stent expansion and strut apposition, full lesion stent coverage and identifying stent complications. Multiple randomized studies have shown that these advantages translate into a reduction in major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) in complex PCI. Consequently, the recommendation for intracoronary imaging has been upgraded in the most recent guidelines. Despite robust evidence supporting its benefits, intracoronary imaging remains relatively underused in real-world practice and in the Netherlands it is only used in 7% of complex PCI procedures. This underutilization may be attributed to several factors, including operator and hospital-dependent issues such as lack of experience, reluctance to spend additional time on intracoronary imaging and concerns about its cost-effectiveness. Therefore, initiating an implementation project to incorporate intracoronary imaging into routine use in the catheterization lab during complex PCI would be highly valuable. Such a project could make imaging-guided PCI the standard of care in complex PCI. Additionally, it could evaluate the cost-effectiveness of routine intracoronary imaging during complex PCI. For this reason we designed the OPTIMIZE-PCI II, a national registry-based quality improvement project. This project is aimed at implementing a liberal intracoronary imaging-guided strategy for complex PCI across multiple centres in the Netherlands, with data extraction from the Netherlands Heart Registration (NHR) database. The objective of the OPTIMIZE-PCI II is to establish a routine use of intracoronary imaging in complex PCI, to determine if this approach reduces adverse cardiac events in real-world practice, and evaluate its cost-effectiveness.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
11092
Start Date
2025-04-01
Completion Date
2027-05-01
Last Updated
2026-03-27
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Liberal use of intracoronary imaging during complex PCI
A new protocol regarding use of intracoronary imaging will be implemented in multiple PCI centers in the Netherlands. Main goal of this protocol will be to increase the use of imaging in complex PCI in the Netherlands. Moreover operators will be trained according to the new protocol and on site training will be organized to improve the skills in using imaging during complex PCI.Operators are requested to use of intracoronary imaging preferentially in all complex coronary lesions, but at least increase their use with at least 50% and minimum of 25% of the cases. Throughout the second phase, individual participating operators will receive personalized feedback on their use of intracoronary imaging at multiple intervals. Based on this result, the implementation process will be refined as necessary. These intermediate measurements will also be shared with all participating centres anonymous.
Locations (1)
Catharina hospital Eindhoven
Eindhoven, North Brabant, Netherlands