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RECRUITING
NCT07151976

Thrombus Aspiration and Pathology and OCT Study

Sponsor: Fujita Health University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Most acute coronary syndromes (ACS) are caused by plaque complications triggering thrombotic events in the culprit plaques. Plaque complications include plaque rupture (Ruptured Fibrous Cap-RFC) with exposure of highly thrombogenic substrate to the flow and plaque erosion (Intact Fibrous Cap-IFC) a condition characterized by endothelial/intimal damage occurring over non-ruptured plaques. Far less commonly (\<5%), calcified nodules (CN) may trigger acute coronary thrombosis. Plaque rupture accounts for 75% of fatal AMI in autopsy series, while erosion is found in about 25% of cases. These proportions have been supported by in vivo invasive studies (OCT) and OCT-pathology correlation studies. However, it remains unclear whether OCT findings consistently align with in vivo pathology-based evidence of RFC in ACS. Guidelines addressing treatments of ACS unanimously indicate percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) to restore the coronary flow. Pre-PCI thrombus aspiration is not currently indicated by most guidelines, with the exception of cases with very high thrombus burden. The samples retrieved from thrombus aspiration can be suitable for pathology investigation and aim to evaluate the presence of plaque components in the context of the thrombotic material, a finding that demonstrates plaque rupture as the substrate for the acute coronary event. These studies are uniquely qualified to provide information on the correct OCT-based interpretation of plaque complications in ACS and require OCT imaging quality suitable to classify RFC, IFC, and CN. Therefore, a prospective OCT-pathology study was designed using the pre-PCI aspirated material from patients with high thrombus burden, to explore the contribution of pathology study in OCT-based classification of plaque complications.

Official title: Pathologic Features of Aspirated Athero-Thrombotic Material From OCT-Verified Culprit Lesion in Acute Coronary Syndrome (TAPOS)

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

20 Years - Any

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

200

Start Date

2016-07-01

Completion Date

2027-12-31

Last Updated

2026-02-05

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DEVICE

PCI

PCI with athero-thrombotic aspiration and subsequent pathological analysis: Pathologic Characteristics of Athero-Thrombotic AsPirated Material of OCT-Verified Culprit Lesion in Acute Coronary Syndrome

Locations (1)

Fujita Health University

Toyoake, Aichi-ken, Japan