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Update on chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension Anatomical and Functional Computed Tomography for Diagnosing Hemodynamically Significant Coronary Artery Disease: A Meta-Analysis Lesion-Specific and Vessel-Related Determinants of Fractional Flow Reserve Beyond Coronary Artery Stenosis Physiological Stratification of Patients With Angina Due to Coronary Microvascular Dysfunction Coronary Physiology in the Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory Cardiotoxicity and Cardiac Monitoring Among Chemotherapy-Treated Breast Cancer Patients Randomized Comparison of FFR-Guided and Angiography-Guided Provisional Stenting of True Coronary Bifurcation Lesions: The DKCRUSH-VI Trial (Double Kissing Crush Versus Provisional Stenting Technique for Treatment of Coronary Bifurcation Lesions VI) The Impact of Coronary Physiology on Contemporary Clinical Decision Making Genetic analyses in a cohort of 191 pulmonary arterial hypertension patients Circulating Plasma microRNAs In Systemic Sclerosis-Associated Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension

Clinical Trial2018 Jan 25;82(2):369-375.

JOURNAL:Circ J. Article Link

Clinical Characteristics and Long-Term Outcomes of Rotational Atherectomy-J2T Multicenter Registry

Okai I, Dohi T, Okazaki S et al. Keywords: Calcified coronary lesion; Coronary artery disease; Percutaneous coronary intervention; Rotational atherectomy

ABSTRACT


BACKGROUND - Rotational atherectomy (RA) is an adjunct tool for the management of heavily calcified coronary lesions during percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), but the long-term clinical outcomes of RA use remain unclear in this drug-eluting stent era. Methods and Results:This multi-center registry assessed the characteristics and outcomes of patients treated by RA for calcified coronary lesions between 2004 and 2015. Among 1,090 registered patients, mean age was 70±10 years and 815 (75%) were male. Sixty percent of patients had diabetes mellitus and 27.7% were receiving hemodialysis. The procedure was successful in 96.2%. In-hospital death occurred in 33 patients (3.0%), and 14 patients (1.3%) developed definite/probable stent thrombosis. During the median follow-up period of 3.8 years, the incidence of major adverse cardiac events (MACE), defined as all-cause death, acute coronary syndrome, stent thrombosis, target vessel revascularization and stroke, was 46.7%. On multivariable Cox hazard analysis, hemodialysis (HR, 2.08; 95% CI: 1.53-2.86; P<0.0001) and age (HR, 1.03; 95% CI: 1.01-1.04; P<0.0001) were strong independent predictors of MACE. Conversely, statin treatment was associated with lower incidence of MACE (P=0.035).


CONCLUSIONS - This study has provided the largest Japanese dataset for long-term follow-up of RA. Although RA in calcified lesions appears feasible with a high rate of procedural success, a high incidence of MACE was observed.