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Clinical Editor's Corner

Is Your Lab Using Intravascular Imaging Enough?

Morton J. Kern, MD, MSCAI, FACC, FAHA

Clinical Editor; Chief of Cardiology, Long Beach VA Medical Center, Long Beach, California; Professor of Medicine, University of California, Irvine Medical Center, Orange, California

July 2023
© 2023 HMP Global. All Rights Reserved.
Any views and opinions expressed are those of the author(s) and/or participants and do not necessarily reflect the views, policy, or position of Cath Lab Digest or HMP Global, their employees, and affiliates. 

 

Every percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) operator should have the skills to treat a wide variety of coronary stenosis using an impressive array of devices and techniques. Good practice says that every implanted stent should be optimized, ie, well-expanded and well-apposed to the vessel wall to ensure the best clinical results with the lowest rates of restenosis and acute or late thrombosis.1 The scientific literature is packed with data on why intravascular imaging should be routine for PCI, both before and after stent placement (Figure). However, the discordance between the evidence and guidelines with the actual use of imaging across the country and around the world demonstrates that not all operators practice PCI with imaging. Over the years I am still confounded by the disparity between Japan and the United States.2 Japan has a rate of >90% routine intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) use during PCI. In comparison, Bergmark et al3 reported that in a real-world U.S. Medicare population of 502,821 PCI procedures, 463,201 (92%) were guided by angiography alone, with IVUS or optical coherence tomography (OCT) used in only 37,908 (7.5%) and 1712 (0.3%), respectively. Notably, compared with angiography alone, the risk of myocardial infarction (MI) or repeat revascularization was lower with OCT and the risk of MI alone was lower with IVUS. In a real-world U.S. cohort, IVUS and OCT were used infrequently during PCI. It’s an old question but still relevant today: “Why does IVUS use during PCI remain so low in the U.S.?”

As a strong proponent of both imaging and physiology to guide PCI, I was stimulated to ask this question again after reading the recent RENOVATE-COMPLEX-PCI study by Lee, Choi, and Song, et al4 published in the NEJM. The RENOVATE-COMPLEX-PCI study looked at the outcomes of intravascular image (IVUS/OCT)-guided PCI compared to angiography for complex PCI in one center in South Korea. Patients (n=1639) were randomized to intravascular imaging-guided or standard angiography-guided PCI. At 2 years, 76 (8%) patients in the intravascular imaging group (n=1092) and 60 (12%) patients in the angiographic group (n=547) experienced major adverse events. Death was 1.7% in the IVUS group and 3.8% in the angiographic group, with target vessel revascularization and myocardial infarction higher in the angiographic group. This well-done study of PCI using intravascular imaging compared to angiography alone, much like the FAME 1 trial with fractional flow reserve (FFR) versus angiography alone, found that with image-guided PCI, patients with complex coronary artery disease had a lower risk of major adverse cardiac events, including death.

The RENOVATE-COMPLEX-PCI study takes its place among many others indicating the use of intravascular imaging provides superior PCI outcomes. Why, then, do some U.S. operators avoid using imaging for routine practice? I thought I’d look again at this question, as it has been asked for decades since the introduction of imaging (the same can be said about physiology). To be clear, the data on imaging for PCI are currently overwhelmingly favorable. The 2022 Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions/American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (SCAI/ACC/AHA) consensus on best PCI practices recommends that intravascular imaging be incorporated into every PCI performed.1

Variations in the Use of IVUS

The use of IVUS during PCI can vary between regions in countries3 and between countries2 for several reasons:

1. Reimbursement: While it is approved for the use of IVUS systems for specific indications, reimbursement may be limited for certain cases. Higher reimbursement favors higher use.

2. Cost: The cost of IVUS systems with their disposable catheters influences use in some parts of the world. High costs, lower use. Countries with smaller healthcare budgets prioritize cost-effective alternatives or reserve IVUS for specific cases.

3. Clinical guidelines: Issued by professional societies, guidelines and consensus statements often influence the practice of PCI, providing evidence for or against certain procedures/techniques. Strong recommendations should produce high use rates.

4. Physician training and the practice environment: By now, every interventional cardiologist is familiar with IVUS/OCT and the data around the benefits of imaging. Operators from programs that routinely employ IVUS/OCT produce new interventionalists who often adopt this practice. However, an opposing force impacting the new graduates’ use of IVUS is the milieu or habits of the trainee’s new physician group. A negative attitude toward IVUS from either colleagues or lab staff can reduce utilization as well.    

5. Technical complexity and procedure time: IVUS/OCT requires specialized knowledge and skill to perform and interpret the imaging accurately. Both the staff and the operator must become trained and comfortable with the imaging workflow. The labs with dedicated personnel interested and active in imaging data acquisition are among the highest users.

Any adjunctive technique to PCI adds time. The operators often weigh the value of the information against the additional time (ie, delay to the next case), a particular concern in busy catheterization laboratories. While admirable for economics, the goal of minimizing procedural time and maximizing patient throughput should never override good clinical practice. No one thinks about extra time when managing a difficult lesion or a complication. Nonetheless, some operators eschew IVUS because of extra time in a routine use of IVUS.

Guideline Recommendations for Intravascular Imaging

Despite attempts to overcome the barriers with a combination of educational efforts, supportive reimbursement policies, improved IVUS technology and imaging analysis, and the development of clear clinical guidelines that promote its appropriate use, IVUS/OCT is still widely underutilized. In several clinical scenarios identified in both the ACC/AHA guidelines4 and European Society of Cardiology (ESC) guidelines,5 intravascular imaging is strongly recommended for the routine use of IVUS, specifically:

a. Complex lesions: IVUS is considered reasonable for assessing lesion characteristics, optimizing stent size and length, and evaluating stent expansion in complex coronary lesions.

b. Left main coronary artery disease: IVUS is reasonable for guiding stent size, length, and optimization in left main coronary artery stenting.

c. Chronic total occlusions (CTOs): IVUS can be useful for assessing CTOs, guiding wire crossing, and optimizing stent placement.

d. Stent failure: IVUS can be considered for evaluating stent failure or restenosis and determining the need for repeat intervention.

e. Unclear angiographic assessment: IVUS can be considered to assess the severity of intermediate lesions, evaluate ambiguous or discordant angiographic findings, and guide decision-making in equivocal cases.

The Bottom Line

Although many operators and labs know what IVUS/OCT can do and how to use it, many still do not practice or accept the recommendations for use. My suggestions for using imaging and physiology to achieve best practices in the cath lab include the following:

• To give your patient the best chance sustained clinical benefit from PCI, operators should use IVUS and not be dissuaded by low reimbursement.  We should do the right thing regardless of pay.

• There should be no excuse that the lab/operator is unfamiliar (ie, not trained) with imaging/physiology. Training is readily available from the companies and at every interventional cardiology meeting (especially at the annual SCAI Scientific Sessions).

• Time should not be an excuse to shirk on best practices. The few minutes of extra time is well worth the clinical long-term gains.

• Operators and labs should recognize and accept the guidelines and consensus statements from our colleagues and professional societies. A lot of brainpower went into these documents to help us help our patients.

While I understand the reticence to routinely using IVUS or FFR (believe it or not, I too feel this now and again), let’s all work to practice the best modern PCI we can. 

Kern Intravascular Imaging Figure
Reprinted with permission from Truesdell AG, Alasnag MA, Kaul P, et al; ACC Interventional Council. Intravascular imaging during percutaneous coronary intervention: JACC State-of-the-Art Review. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2023 Feb 14; 81(6): 590-605. doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2022.11.045

Disclosures: Dr. Morton Kern reports he is a consultant for Abiomed, Abbott Vascular, Philips Volcano, ACIST Medical, and Opsens Inc.

Dr. Kern can be contacted at mortonkern2007@gmail.com

On Twitter @MortonKern

References

1. Hannan EL, Zhong Y, Reddy P, et al. Percutaneous coronary intervention with and without intravascular ultrasound for patients with complex lesions: utilization, mortality, and target vessel revascularization. Circ Cardiovasc Interv. 2022 Jun; 15(6): e011687. doi:10.1161/CIRCINTERVENTIONS.121.011687

2. Kuno T, Numasawa Y, Sawano M, et al. Real-world use of intravascular ultrasound in Japan: a report from contemporary multicenter PCI registry. Heart Vessels. 2019 Nov; 34(11): 1728-1739. doi:10.1007/s00380-019-01427-9

3. Bergmark BA, Osborn EA, Ali ZA, et al.  Association between intracoronary imaging during PCI and clinical outcomes in a real-world US Medicare population. JSCAI 2023 Mar; 2(2): 100556. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jscai.2022.100556

4. Lee JM, Choi KH, Song YB, et al; RENOVATE-COMPLEX-PCI Investigators. Intravascular imaging-guided or angiography-guided complex PCI. N Engl J Med. 2023 May 4; 388(18): 1668-1679. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2216607

5. Neumann FJ, Sousa-Uva M, Ahlsson A, et al; ESC Scientific Document Group. 2018 ESC/EACTS Guidelines on myocardial revascularization. Eur Heart J. 2019 Jan 7; 40(2): 87-165. doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehy394

6. Patel MR, Calhoon JH, Dehmer GJ, et al. ACC/AATS/AHA/ASE/ASNC/SCAI/SCCT/STS 2017 Appropriate use criteria for coronary revascularization in patients with stable ischemic heart disease: a report of the American College of Cardiology Appropriate Use Criteria Task Force, American Association for Thoracic Surgery, American Heart Association, American Society of Echocardiography, American Society of Nuclear Cardiology, Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions, Society of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography, and Society of Thoracic Surgeons. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2017; 69(17): 2212-2241. doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2017.02.001

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