Effective anti-thrombotic therapy without stenting: intravascular optical coherence tomography-based management in plaque erosion (the EROSION study)

Haibo Jia(Heilongjiang University of Chinese Medicine), Jiannan Dai(Harvard University), Jingbo Hou(Heilongjiang University of Chinese Medicine), Lei Xing(Massachusetts General Hospital), Lijia Ma(Heilongjiang University of Chinese Medicine), Huimin Liu(Heilongjiang University of Chinese Medicine), Maoen Xu(Heilongjiang University of Chinese Medicine), Yuan Yao(Harbin Medical University), Sining Hu(Harbin Medical University), Erika Yamamoto(Harvard University), Hang Lee(Harvard University), Shaosong Zhang(Harbin Medical University), Bo Yu(Heilongjiang University of Chinese Medicine), Ik‐Kyung Jang(Harvard University)
European Heart Journal
August 30, 2016
Cited by 345Open Access
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Abstract

AIMS: Plaque erosion, compared with plaque rupture, has distinctly different underlying pathology and therefore may merit tailored therapy. In this study, we aimed to assess whether patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) caused by plaque erosion might be stabilized by anti-thrombotic therapy without stent implantation. METHODS AND RESULTS: This was a single-centre, uncontrolled, prospective, proof-of concept study. Patients with ACS including ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction were prospectively enrolled. If needed, aspiration thrombectomy was performed. Patients diagnosed with plaque erosion by optical coherence tomography (OCT) and residual diameter stenosis <70% on coronary angiogram were treated with anti-thrombotic therapy without stenting. OCT was repeated at 1 month and thrombus volume was measured. The primary endpoint was >50% reduction of thrombus volume at 1 month compared with baseline. The secondary endpoint was a composite of cardiac death, recurrent ischaemia requiring revascularization, stroke, and major bleeding. Among 405 ACS patients with analysable OCT images, plaque erosion was identified in 103 (25.4%) patients. Sixty patients enrolled and 55 patients completed the 1-month follow-up. Forty-seven patients (47/60, 78.3%; 95% confidence interval: 65.8-87.9%) met the primary endpoint, and 22 patients had no visible thrombus at 1 month. Thrombus volume decreased from 3.7 (1.3, 10.9) mm3 to 0.2 (0.0, 2.0) mm3. Minimal flow area increased from 1.7 (1.4, 2.4) mm2 to 2.1 (1.5, 3.8) mm2. One patient died of gastrointestinal bleeding, and another patient required repeat percutaneous coronary intervention. The rest of the patients remained asymptomatic. CONCLUSION: For patients with ACS caused by plaque erosion, conservative treatment with anti-thrombotic therapy without stenting may be an option.


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