Long-Term Clinical Outcomes of Fractional Flow Reserve-Guided Versus Routine Drug-Eluting Stent Implantation in Patients with Intermediate Coronary Stenosis: Five-Year Clinical Outcomes of DEFER-DES Trial

Sang Hyun Park, Ki Hyun Jeon, Joo Myung Lee, Chang Wook Nam, Joon Hyung Doh, Bong Ki Lee, Seung Woon Rha, Ki Dong Yoo, Kyung Tae Jung, Young Seok Cho, Hae Young Lee, Tae Jin Youn, Woo Young Chung, Bon Kwon Koo

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24 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background-We aimed to compare the long-Term clinical outcomes between fractional flow reserve (FFR)-guided and routine drug-eluting stent (DES) implantation in patients with an intermediate coronary stenosis. Methods and Results-A total of 229 patients with an angiographically intermediate coronary stenosis were randomly assigned to FFR-guided or Routine-DES implantation group. For FFR-guided group (n=114), treatment strategy was determined according to the target vessel FFR (FFR<0.75: DES implantation [FFR-DES group]; FFR≥0.75: deferral of stenting [FFR-Defer group]). Routine-DES group underwent DES implantation without FFR measurement (n=115). The primary end point was the incidence of major adverse cardiac events, a composite of cardiac death, myocardial infarction, and target lesion revascularization. Of lesions assigned to FFR-guided strategy, only one quarter had functional significance (FFR<0.75). At 2-year follow-up, the cumulative incidence of major adverse cardiac events was 7.9±2.5% in the FFR-guided group and 8.8±2.7% in Routine-DES group (P=0.80). At 5-year follow-up, the cumulative incidence of major adverse cardiac events was 11.6±3.0% and 14.2±3.3% for the FFR-guided group and the Routine-DES group (P=0.55). There was no difference in major adverse cardiac events rates between the 2 groups ≤5-year follow-up (hazard ratio, 1.25; 95% confidence interval, 0.60-2.60). Conclusions-In lesions with angiographically intermediate stenosis, FFR guidance provides a tailored approach, which is at least as good as an angiography-guided routine-DES implantation strategy and avoids unnecessary DES-stenting in a considerable part of the patients. Clinical Trial Registration-URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00592228.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere002442
JournalCirculation: Cardiovascular Interventions
Volume8
Issue number12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2015 Dec 1
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • coronary artery disease
  • coronary stenosis
  • drug-eluting stents
  • myocardial fractional flow reserve
  • percutaneous coronary intervention

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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