Consensus Standards for Acquisition, Measurement, and Reporting of Intravascular Optical Coherence Tomography Studies

Guillermo J. Tearney(Massachusetts General Hospital), Evelyn Regar(Erasmus MC), Takashi Akasaka(Wakayama Medical University), Tom Adriaenssens(Codarts Rotterdam), Peter Barlis(Codarts Rotterdam), Hiram G. Bezerra(Codarts Rotterdam), Brett E. Bouma(Codarts Rotterdam), Nico Bruining(Codarts Rotterdam), Jin‐Man Cho(Codarts Rotterdam), Saqib Chowdhary(Codarts Rotterdam), Marco A. Costa(Codarts Rotterdam), Ranil de Silva(Codarts Rotterdam), Jouke Dijkstra(Codarts Rotterdam), Carlo Di Mario(Codarts Rotterdam), Darius Dudeck(Codarts Rotterdam), Erlin Falk(Codarts Rotterdam), Marc D. Feldman(Codarts Rotterdam), Peter J. Fitzgerald(Codarts Rotterdam), Héctor García García(Codarts Rotterdam), Nieves Gonzalo(Codarts Rotterdam), Juan F. Granada(Codarts Rotterdam), Giulio Guagliumi(Codarts Rotterdam), Niels Ramsing Holm(Codarts Rotterdam), Yasuhiro Honda(Codarts Rotterdam), Fumiaki Ikeno(Codarts Rotterdam), Masanori Kawasaki(Codarts Rotterdam), Janusz Kochman(Codarts Rotterdam), Łukasz Kołtowski(Codarts Rotterdam), Takashi Kubo(Wakayama Medical University), Teruyoshi Kume(Codarts Rotterdam), Hiroyuki Kyono(Codarts Rotterdam), Cheung Chi Simon Lam(Codarts Rotterdam), Guy Lamouche(Codarts Rotterdam), David P. Lee(Codarts Rotterdam), Martin B. Leon(Codarts Rotterdam), Akiko Maehara(Codarts Rotterdam), Olivia Manfrini(Codarts Rotterdam), Gary S. Mintz(Codarts Rotterdam), Kyiouchi Mizuno(Codarts Rotterdam), Marie‐Angèle Morel(Codarts Rotterdam), Seemantini K. Nadkarni(Codarts Rotterdam), Hiroyuki Okura(Codarts Rotterdam), Hiromasa Otake(Codarts Rotterdam), Arkadiusz Pietrasik(Codarts Rotterdam), Francesco Prati(Codarts Rotterdam), Lorenz Räber(Codarts Rotterdam), Maria Radu(Codarts Rotterdam), Johannes Rieber(Codarts Rotterdam), Maria Riga(Codarts Rotterdam), Andrew Rollins(Codarts Rotterdam), Mireille Rosenberg(Codarts Rotterdam), Vasile Sirbu(Codarts Rotterdam), Patrick W. Serruys(Codarts Rotterdam), Kenei Shimada(Codarts Rotterdam), Toshiro Shinke(Codarts Rotterdam), Junya Shite(Codarts Rotterdam), Eliot L. Siegel(Codarts Rotterdam), Shinjo Sonada(Codarts Rotterdam), Melissa J. Suter(Codarts Rotterdam), Shigeho Takarada(Codarts Rotterdam), Atsushi Tanaka(Codarts Rotterdam), Mitsuyasu Terashima(Codarts Rotterdam), Troels Thim(Codarts Rotterdam), Shiro Uemura(Codarts Rotterdam), Giovanni J. Ughi(Codarts Rotterdam), Heleen M.M. van Beusekom(Codarts Rotterdam), Antonius F.W. van der Steen(Codarts Rotterdam), Gerrit-Ann van Es(Codarts Rotterdam), Gijs van Soest(Codarts Rotterdam), Renu Virmani(Codarts Rotterdam), Sergio Waxman(Codarts Rotterdam), Neil J. Weissman(Codarts Rotterdam), Giora Weisz(Codarts Rotterdam)
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
March 1, 2012
Cited by 1,831Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this document is to make the output of the International Working Group for Intravascular Optical Coherence Tomography (IWG-IVOCT) Standardization and Validation available to medical and scientific communities, through a peer-reviewed publication, in the interest of improving the diagnosis and treatment of patients with atherosclerosis, including coronary artery disease. BACKGROUND: Intravascular optical coherence tomography (IVOCT) is a catheter-based modality that acquires images at a resolution of ~10 μm, enabling visualization of blood vessel wall microstructure in vivo at an unprecedented level of detail. IVOCT devices are now commercially available worldwide, there is an active user base, and the interest in using this technology is growing. Incorporation of IVOCT in research and daily clinical practice can be facilitated by the development of uniform terminology and consensus-based standards on use of the technology, interpretation of the images, and reporting of IVOCT results. METHODS: The IWG-IVOCT, comprising more than 260 academic and industry members from Asia, Europe, and the United States, formed in 2008 and convened on the topic of IVOCT standardization through a series of 9 national and international meetings. RESULTS: Knowledge and recommendations from this group on key areas within the IVOCT field were assembled to generate this consensus document, authored by the Writing Committee, composed of academicians who have participated in meetings and/or writing of the text. CONCLUSIONS: This document may be broadly used as a standard reference regarding the current state of the IVOCT imaging modality, intended for researchers and clinicians who use IVOCT and analyze IVOCT data.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis