Skip to main content

Advertisement

ADVERTISEMENT

Original Contribution

COMMENTARY: Optimal Stent Expansion: Is the Eye of the Beholder as Good as Intravascular Ultrasound?

March 2007

The introduction of coronary stenting marked a major milestone in percutaneous coronary interventions. Acute or threatened closure of the artery was once the most serious complication of conventional coronary balloon angioplasty. It was mostly due to the unpredictable nature of arterial wall disruption (dissection) due to barotrauma, arterial recoil and inadequate antiplatelet therapy, making it the “Sword of Damocles”. Stents, with their scaffolding design, together with improved antiplatelet therapy, have resulted in a marked reduction in acute and subacute abrupt occlusion of the artery which is now mostly due to stent thrombosis.1,2 Numerous variables have been implicated for this continued potential threat, including the length of the stented segment, final minimal luminal diameter, inadequate antiplatelet therapy, low ejection fraction, more stents per lesion, smaller balloon size, persistent slow flow and dissection and, most importantly, stent underexpansion.3 Restenosis of the treated segment was reduced by stenting compared to balloon angioplasty but continued to plague coronary interventions until drug-eluting coronary stents were introduced. Late loss is a major predictor of restenosis and is defined as the minimal luminal diameter (MLD) of a treated segment at the completion of intervention minus the MLD at 6 to 9 months after the procedure. Larger vessel sizes are associated with lower re-stenosis rates. These factors prompted emphasis on achieving greater MLDs at the time of intervention. In an analysis of 22 clinical trials examining late loss after deployment of bare-metal (BMS) or drug-eluting stents (DES), Mauri et al found that late loss with BMS ranged from 0.65 to 1.21 mm, while late loss for DES was -0.01 to 0.81 mm, and that late loss correlated strongly with binary restenosis.4 Hong et al demonstrated in an intravascular ultrasound (IVUS)-guided study on patients undergoing DES deployment that the angiographic restenosis rate was highest in lesions with stent area <5.5 mm2 and stent length >40 mm.5 Similarly, Mintz et al pointed out the correlation between stent underexpansion and both thrombosis and restenosis.6
Optimal stent implantation has been very difficult to evaluate angiographically. Angiographic projections do not reveal the three-dimensional geometry assumed after stent expansion. What may seem like an angiographically perfect result may in fact, on an intracoronary ultrasound study, show areas of stent malapposition, irregularity of the stented segment and incomplete stent expansion.7–11 Contrast angiography may completely miss narrowed segments within the stented vessel if they are <1 mm, unless the beam of X-ray is absolutely perpendicular to the artery.11 Colombo and associates have shown that 70% of the stents that were reported as apparent success angiographically were suboptimally placed in the artery.3 Intravascular ultrasound imaging (IVUS) has the distinct advantage of providing a detailed cross-sectional view of the stent and the vessels from within the lumen. IVUS has now become the gold standard and has been widely used to ascertain complete expansion of intracoronary stents.12 IVUS guidance of stent implantation is also clinically relevant, as its use has resulted in significantly lowering not only the thrombotic complications, but also long-term target vessel revascularization as demonstrated in the CRUISE and RESIST trials.12,13 Although IVUS has played an integral role in understanding and guiding coronary stent placement, its routine use is not supported in contemporary clinical practice. The interpretation skills, time constraints and the cost of IVUS studies have been prohibitive.14
The foremost variable in preventing acute and subacute stent thrombosis is placement of the stent with adequate inflow and outflow. Several techniques have been developed as surrogate markers for optimal stent expansion and to guide stent implantation without having to use IVUS. The most commonly used techniques in day-to-day clinical practice are the use of a balloon-to-artery ratio of 1.1, high-pressure stent deployment, postdilatation with a 0.25 mm oversized balloon, visualization of angiographic step-up and step-down and luminal regularity.7,15 Other techniques to guide optimal stent deployment include the use of fractional flow reserve (FFR) and StentBoost (Philips Medical Systems, Amsterdam, The Netherlands). Studies analyzing the impact of high- versus low-pressure stent implantation techniques have concluded that high-pressure stent implantation results in greater stent expansion and larger lumen dimensions without any increase in complications.16 Numerous studies have now shown that high-pressure deployment of stents without IVUS guidance and dual antiplatelet therapy not only increases the minimal lumen diameter, but also decreases the rates of stent thrombosis to an acceptable level (3.1%).9,17 Although high-pressure expansion improves stent apposition to the luminal wall, it does not guarantee homogeneous stent geometry and optimal stent expansion in all patients.11,18,19 The era of high-pressure stent expansion had coincided with dual antiplatelet therapy, and thus the reduction in stent thrombosis is due in major part to a combination of dual antiplatelet therapy and high-pressure balloon inflation, and not just the latter.17,20
The inability to achieve optimal stent deployment despite high-pressure inflation is not due to undersizing but rather to an inability of the stent balloon to fully expand the stent to nominal size and acute recoil of the stented vessel.10,18,21,22,23 Thus postdilatation of stents with a 0.25 mm oversized balloon has become a common practice. In patients who undergo postdilatation, the frequency of achieving optimal stent expansion doubles, minimal stent area increases by approximately 1 mm and minimal stent diameter increases by 0.2 mm.21 Postdilatation studies have also shown a decrease in target vessel revascularization rates without increasing the risk of dissection or perforation.24
The use of FFR after stent deployment can indeed give information regarding adequacy of stent deployment by providing functional information but by no means can provide any information about stent expansion or apposition to the vessel wall.25 This inadequacy poses the continued threat of stent thrombosis and has been largely abandoned.26
A novel and new fluoroscopic image processing technique has recently emerged with a fairly good correlation with IVUS in demonstrating stent expansion.21 It is known as StentBoost and uses motion-corrected fluoroscopic images with balloon markers as reference points to enhance coronary stent visualization. Although the technique is inferior to IVUS, it is superior to conventional contrast angiography.27 It does have some limitations in lesions with heavy intimal calcification, but may be very advantageous in bifurcation stenting or overlapping stents. It is a relatively new technique and awaits critical appraisal.
The step-up and step-down technique described by Haldis et al in this issue of the journal, although not unique and has been previously well described, reiterates the simplicity of surrogate markers of good stent expansion.28 It was a small study with 25 patients where 12 patients were randomized to standard sizing and high-pressure stent deployment and 13 patients to angiographic step-up and step-down, both followed by IVUS to evaluate stent expansion and strut apposition. The stent expansion index was calculated using the MUSIC (Multicenter Ultrasound Stenting in Coronaries) criteria. The results were impressive with 33% in the standard arm and 92% in the step-up arm, achieving the primary endpoint of optimal stent expansion. A similar study was performed by Colombo and his team with 62 patients, all of whom underwent stent deployment with angiographic step-up and step-down followed by IVUS.7 In contrast to the present study, Colombo’s study showed a high frequency of suboptimal stent expansion by IVUS criteria (80% of the lesions requiring further balloon dilatation). It is difficult to speculate on the reason(s) for the significant differences in the findings of the two studies. It would be important to bear in mind that the Colombo study was performed using Palmaz Schatz coronary and biliary stents with older balloon technology.
The step-up and step-down technique, although very attractive, can lead to edge dissection and edge restenosis.15,23,29–33 There were no edge dissections noted in this study and there was no angiographic follow up to look for edge restenosis. It was a relatively small study and as mentioned by the authors, was not powered to analyze adverse outcomes. Overall, this study helps provide the interventionalist with the reassurance that the step-up and step-down effect is a useful surrogate marker for optimal stent expansion.

 

 

References

  1. Cutlip DE. Stent thrombosis: Historical perspectives and current trends. J Thromb Thrombolysis 2000;10:89–101.
  2. Herrmann HC, Buchbinder M, Clemen MW, et al. Emergent use of balloon-expandable coronary artery stenting for failed percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty. Circulation 1992;86:812–819.
  3. Moussa I, Di Mario C, Reimers B, et al. Subacute stent thrombosis in the era of intravascular ultrasound-guided coronary stenting without anticoagulation: Frequency, predictors and clinical outcome. J Am Coll Cardiol 1997;29:6–12.
  4. Mauri L, Orav EJ, Kuntz RE. Late loss in lumen diameter and binary restenosis for drug eluting stent comparison. Circulation 2005;111:3435–3442.
  5. Hong M, Mintz GS, Lee CW, et al. Intravascular ultrasound predictors of angiographic restenosis after sirolimus-eluting stent implantation. Eur Heart J 2006;27:1305–1310.
  6. Mintz GS, Weissman NJ. State-of-the-art paper. Intravascular ultrasound in the drug-eluting stent era: Stent underexpansion continues to predict restenosis and thrombosis. J Am Coll Cardiol 2006;48:421–429.
  7. Nakamura S, Colombo A, Gaglione A, et al. Intracoronary ultrasound observations during stent implantation. Circulation 1994;89:2026–2034.
  8. Goldberg SL, Colombo A, Nakamura S, et al. Benefit of intracoronary ultrasound in the deployment of Palmaz-Schatz stents. J Am Coll Cardiol 1994;24:996–1003.
  9. Gorge G, Haude M, Ge J, et al. Intravascular ultrasound after low and high inflation pressure coronary artery stent implantation. J Am Coll Cardiol 1995;26:725–730.
  10. Colombo A, Hall P, Nakamura S, et al. Intracoronary stenting without anticoagulation accomplished with intravascular ultrasound guidance. Circulation 1995;91:1676–1688.
  11. Johansson B, Olsson H, Wennerblom B. Angiography-guided routine coronary stent implantation results in suboptimal dilatation. Angiology 2002;53:69–75.
  12. Schiele F, Meneveau N, Vuillemenot A, et al. Impact of intravascular ultrasound guidance in stent deployment on 6-month restenosis rate: A multicenter, randomized study comparing two strategies—With and without intravascular ultrasound guidance. RESIST Study Group. REStenosis after Ivus guided STenting. J Am Coll Cardiol 1998;32:320–328.
  13. Fitzgerald PJ, Oshima A, Hayase M, et al. Final results of the Can Routine Ultrasound Influence Stent Expansion (CRUISE) study. Circulation 2000;102:523–530.
  14. Choi JW, Goodreau LM, Davidson CJ. Resource utilization and clinical outcomes of coronary stenting: A comparison of intravascular ultrasound and angiographicallly guided stent implantation. Am Heart J 2001;142:112–118.
  15. Roubin GS, Douglas JS Jr, King SB 3rd, et al. Influence of balloon size on initial success, acute complications, and restenosis after percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty. A prospective randomized study. Circulation 1988; 78:557–565.
  16. Hoffmann R, Haager P, Mintz GS, et al. The impact of high pressure vs. low pressure stent implantation on intimal hyperplasia and follow-up lumen dimensions; Results of a randomized trial. Eur Heart J 2001;22:2015–2024.
  17. Nakamura S, Hall P, Gaglione A, et al. High pressure assisted coronary stent implantation accomplished without intravascular ultrasound guidance and subsequent anticoagulation. J Am Coll Cardiol 1997;29:21–27.
  18. Bermejo J, Botas J, Garcia E, et al. Mechanisms of residual lumen stenosis after high-pressure stent implantation: A quantitative coronary angiography and intravascular ultrasound study. Circulation 1998;98:112–118.
  19. Choi JW, Vardi GM, Meyers SN, et al. Role of intracoronary ultrasound after high-pressure stent implantation. Am Heart J 2000;139:643–648.
  20. Karrillon GJ, Morice MC, Benveniste E, et al. Intracoronary stent implantation without ultrasound guidance and with replacement of conventional anticoagulation by antiplatelet therapy. 30-day clinical outcome of the French Multicenter Registry. Circulation 1996;94:1519–1527.
  21. Brodie BR, Cooper C, Jones M, et al. Is adjunctive balloon postdilatation necessary after coronary stent deployment? Final results from the POSTIT trial. Catheter Cardiovasc Interv 2003; 59:184–192.
  22. Takano Y, Yeatman LA, Higgins JR, et al. Optimizing stent expansion with new stent delivery systems. J Am Coll Cardiol 2001;38:1622–1627.
  23. Hermans WR, Rensing BJ, Strauss BH, Serruys PW. Methodological problems related to the quantitative assessment of stretch, elastic recoil, and balloon-artery ratio. Cathet Cardiovasc Diagn 1992;25:174–185.
  24. Johansson B, Allared M, Borgencrantz B, et al. Standardized angiographically guided over-dilatation of stents using high pressure technique optimize results without increasing risks. J Invasive Cardiol 2002;14:221–226.
  25. Hanekamp CE, Koolen JJ, Pijls NH, et al. Comparison of quantitative coronary angiography, intravascular ultrasound, and coronary pressure measurement to assess optimum stent deployment. Circulation 1999;99:1015–1021.
  26. Matthys K, Carlier S, Segers P, et al. In vitro study of FFR, QCA, and IVUS for the assessment of optimal stent deployment. Catheter Cardiovasc Interv 2001;54:363–375.
  27. Mishell JM, Vakharia KT, Ports TA, et al. Determination of adequate coronary stent expansion using StentBoost, a novel fluoroscopic image processing technique. Catheter Cardiovasc Interv 2007;69:84–93.
  28. Haldis TA, Fenster B, Gavlick K, et al. The Angiographic step-up and step-down: A surrogate for optimal stent expansion by intravascular ultrasound. J Invasive Cardiol 2007;19:101–105.
  29. Carter AJ, Lee DP, Suzuki T, et al. Experimental evaluation of a short transitional edge protection balloon for intracoronary stent deployment. Catheter Cardiovasc Interv 2000;51:112–119.
  30. Schwarzacher SP, Metz JA, Yock PG, Fitzgerald PJ. Vessel tearing at the edge of intracoronary stents detected with intravascular ultrasound imaging. Cathet Cardiovasc Diagn 1997;40:152–155.
  31. Nishida T, Colombo A, Briguori C, et al. Outcome of nonobstructive residual dissections detected by intravascular ultrasound following percutaneous coronary intervention. Am J Cardiol 2002;89:1257–1262.
  32. Sheris SJ, Canos MR, Weissman NJ. Natural history of intravascular ultrasound-detected edge dissections from coronary stent deployment. Am Heart J 2000;139:59–63.
  33. Hong MK, Park SW, Lee NH, et al. Long-term outcomes of minor dissection at the edge of stents detected with intravascular ultrasound. Am J Cardiol 2000;86:791–795.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement