Intravascular Ultrasound-guided versus Angiography-guided Drug-eluting Stent Implantation in Complex Coronary Lesions: Meta-analysis of randomized trials Chirag Bavishi MD, MPH, Partha Sardar MD, Saurav Chatterjee MD, Abdur Rahman Khan MD, Arpit Shah MD, Sameer Ather MD, PhD, Pedro A. Lemos MD, Pedro Moreno MD, Gregg W Stone MD PII: DOI: Reference:
S0002-8703(16)30230-7 doi: 10.1016/j.ahj.2016.10.008 YMHJ 5303
To appear in:
American Heart Journal
Received date: Accepted date:
30 July 2016 15 October 2016
Please cite this article as: Bavishi Chirag, Sardar Partha, Chatterjee Saurav, Khan Abdur Rahman, Shah Arpit, Ather Sameer, Lemos Pedro A., Moreno Pedro, Stone Gregg W, Intravascular Ultrasound-guided versus Angiography-guided Drug-eluting Stent Implantation in Complex Coronary Lesions: Meta-analysis of randomized trials, American Heart Journal (2016), doi: 10.1016/j.ahj.2016.10.008
This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain.
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Intravascular Ultrasound-guided versus Angiography-guided Drug-eluting Stent Implantation in Complex Coronary Lesions: Meta-analysis of
RI P
T
randomized trials
Chirag Bavishi*, MD, MPH, Partha Sardar, MD†, Saurav Chatterjee*, MD, Abdur Rahman
SC
Khan+, MD, Arpit Shah*, MD, Sameer Ather¶, MD, PhD, Pedro A. Lemosκ, MD, Pedro
NU
Moreno*, MD, Gregg W Stone, MD║
Mount Sinai St. Luke's & Mount Sinai West Hospitals, New York, NY; †University of Utah,
MA
*
Salt Lake City, Utah; +University of Louisville, Louisville, KY; ¶University of Alabama at
ED
Birmingham, Birmingham, AL;κHeart Institute (InCor), University of Sao Paulo Medical School,
PT
Sao Paulo, Brazil; ║Columbia University Medical Center, New York-Presbyterian Hospital and
CE
the Cardiovascular Research Foundation, New York, NY
AC
Short Title: IVUS versus angiography-guided stenting
Word count (abstract, manuscript text, references, legend): 4,035 Conflicts of Interests/Disclosures: None Funding: None
Corresponding author: Gregg W. Stone, MD 1700 Broadway, 8th Floor New York, NY 10019, USA Tel: +1 646-434-4131 Fax: +1 646-434-4715 Email:
[email protected]
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT ABSTRACT Background: The relative outcomes of IVUS-guided PCI compared to angiography-guided PCI
T
with DES in complex lesions has not been established. We sought to compare the efficacy and
RI P
safety of intravascular ultrasound (IVUS)-guided percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with angiography-guided PCI in patients with complex coronary lesions treated with drug-eluting
SC
stents (DES).
NU
Methods: Electronic databases were searched to identify all randomized trials comparing IVUSguided vs. angiography-guided DES implantation. We evaluated major adverse cardiac events
MA
(MACE), all-cause and cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction (MI), target lesion revascularization (TLR), target vessel revascularization (TVR) and stent thrombosis outcomes at
ED
the longest reported follow-up. Random effects modeling was used to calculate pooled relative
PT
risk (RR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI). Results: Eight trials comprising 3,276 patients (1,635 IVUS-guided and 1,641 angiography-
CE
guided) enrolling only patients with complex lesions were included. Mean follow-up was 1.4 ±
AC
0.5 years. Compared to angiography-guided PCI, patients undergoing IVUS-guided PCI had significantly lower MACE (RR: 0.64, 95% CI: 0.51-0.80, p=0.0001), TLR (RR: 0.62, 95% CI: 0.45–0.86, p=0.004) and TVR (RR: 0.60, 95% CI: 0.42–0.87, p=0.007). There were no significant differences for stent thrombosis, cardiovascular death or all-cause death. In metaregression analysis, IVUS-guided PCI was of greatest benefit in reducing MACE in patients with acute coronary syndromes, diabetes and long lesions. Conclusions: The present meta-analysis demonstrates a significant reduction in MACE, TVR and TLR with IVUS-guided DES implantation in complex coronary lesions.
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Key words: intravascular ultrasound, angiography, percutaneous coronary intervention, drug-
AC
CE
PT
ED
MA
NU
SC
RI P
T
eluting stent, outcomes
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Introduction Drug-eluting stents (DES) are widely used in patients undergoing percutaneous coronary
T
intervention (PCI) (1), and significantly reduce restenosis and subsequent revascularization
RI P
compared to bare metal stents (2-4). Nonetheless, stent thrombosis and restenosis still occur (especially in complex lesions), and are associated with increased mortality (5,6). In addition to
SC
clinical and patient-related factors, suboptimal stent deployment with underexpansion and
NU
residual edge disease and dissections contributes to the occurrence of subsequent events (7,8). Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) provides information about reference vessel dimensions
MA
and lesion characteristics such as severity, length and morphology that are poorly appreciated by coronary angiography. As such, IVUS may be used to optimize stent deployment and identify
ED
stent-related complications (9). In the bare metal stent era, randomized clinical trials (RCTs) and
PT
observational studies demonstrated improved clinical outcomes with IVUS-guided compared to angiography-guided PCI (10-12). Nonetheless, IVUS is presently used infrequently in the US
CE
and Europe to guide PCI procedures (13,14), in part because of a paucity of RCT data in the
AC
contemporary DES era. During the past year, three randomized trials evaluating IVUS-guided versus angiography-guided coronary DES implantation were published (15-17), although none were adequately powered for clinical endpoints. We therefore performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of all available randomized trials to investigate the efficacy of routine IVUSguided PCI compared to angiography-guided PCI for DES implantation.
Methods Search strategy. We performed a systematic search, without language restriction, using PUBMED, EMBASE, SCOPUS, google scholar and ClinicalTrials.gov from inception to June,
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 2016 for RCTs comparing IVUS-guided PCI with angiography-guided PCI with DES implantation. We also searched conference proceedings of Transcatheter Cardiovascular
T
Therapeutics, EuroPCR, Society of Cardiovascular Angiography and Intervention, American
RI P
College of Cardiology, American Heart Association, and European Society of Cardiology from the last 10 years. Furthermore, we performed manual searches through the reference lists of
intravascular ultrasound,
IVUS, IVUS-guided, angiography,
NU
following MeSH terms:
SC
studies, reviews and pertinent meta-analyses on this topic. The search keywords included the
angiography-guided, percutaneous coronary intervention, PCI, stenting (Supplement Table 1).
MA
Study selection and eligibility criteria. Studies were included if they met the following criteria: (1) RCTs comparing IVUS-guided versus angiography-guided PCI; (2) DES
ED
implantation only, (3) data on cardiac outcomes provided; and (4) at least 1 year of follow-up.
PT
For the purpose of this systematic review, we focused on complex coronary lesions, defined as long coronary lesions or those requiring ≥4 stents, small vessels, bifurcation lesions, chronic total
CE
occlusions, and other complex lesions as defined by the individual trials. Two physician-
AC
reviewers (CB and PS) independently and in duplicate performed the literature search, reviewed the originally identified titles and abstracts and selected studies for meta-analysis based on the inclusion criteria. Any divergence was resolved by consensus. Quality of the included studies and assessment of trial bias risk was assessed for the domains suggested by the Cochrane collaboration (18), emphasizing sequence generation, allocation concealment, blinding, outcomes assessment, and selective reporting. Data extraction and outcomes. Two independent reviewers (CB and ARK) extracted the following data from individual studies: first author, year of publication, study characteristics, sample size, patient baseline characteristics, follow-up duration, and clinical outcomes in the
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT angiography-guided and IVUS-guided groups. We evalauted the following outcomes: (1) allcause and cardiovascular death; (2) major adverse cardiac events (MACE); (3) myocardial
T
infarction (MI); (4) target lesion revascularisation (TLR); (5) target vessel revascularisation
RI P
(TVR); and (6) stent thrombosis. The definition of MACE and MI differed slightly across studies, and the trial-specific definitions for each were used. Stent thrombosis was defined as
SC
definite or probable stent thrombosis according to the Academic Research Consortium criteria
NU
(19).
Statistical analysis. Statistical analysis was performed per recommendations from the
MA
Cochrane Collaboration and the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Metaanalyses (PRISMA) guidelines (20,21). Analysis was performed on an intention-to-treat basis.
ED
Considering that the heterogeneity of the included trials might influence the treatment effects, we
PT
used a random-effects model as the primary analysis to examine relative risks (RR) and confidence intervals (CI) (22). The results were confirmed by a fixed effects model to avoid
CE
small studies being overly weighted. Heterogeneity was assessed using Higgins and Thompson’s
AC
I2 statistic. I2 is the proportion of total variation observed between the trials attributable to differences between trials rather than sampling error, with I2 values of <25%, 25%-75%, and >75% corresponding to low, moderate and high levels of heterogeneity, respectively (23). Treatment effects were further explored using meta-regression and sensitivity analysis. Publication bias was visually estimated by funnel plots and Begg and Mazumdar’s rank correlation test (24). A 2-tailed p <0.05 was considered statistically significant for all analyses. Statistical analysis was performed using Stata 11 (Stata Corp., College Station, Texas) and RevMan v5.02 (Nordic Cochrane Center).
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Funding. No extramural funding was used to support this work. The authors are solely responsible for the design and conduct of this study, all study analyses, the drafting and editing
RI P
T
of the paper and its final contents. None of the authors have any conflict of interest.
Results
SC
Trials and patients. Based on our eligibity criteria, 8 RCTs (15-17,25-29) of IVUS-
NU
guided vs. angiography-guided DES implantation were identified and included in the final analysis (Figure 1). Of 3,276 enrolled patients, 1,635 were randomized to IVUS-guided PCI and
MA
1,641 patients were randomized to angiography-guided PCI. Each trial only enrolled patients with complex lesions. The Study comparing Angiography vs. IVUS-guided stent implantation
ED
for chronic total occlusion in coronary artery (AIR-CTO) (16) and Chronic Total Occlusion
PT
InterVention with drUg-eluting Stents guided by IVUS (CTO-IVUS) (17) included patients with chronic total occlusions (CTO); the Impact of Intravascular Ultrasound Guidance on Outcomes
CE
of Xience Prime Stents in Long Lesions (IVUS-XPL) (15) and Real Safety and Efficacy of a 3-
AC
Month Dual Antiplatelet Therapy Following Zotarolimus-Eluting Stents Implantation (RESET) (27) trials included patients with long coronary lesions, while the study by Zhang et al (29) included patients with small vessel lesions; the Angiography Versus IVUS Optimization (AVIO) (25) trial included patients with long lesions, CTOs, bifurcation lesions, small vessels and patients requiring ≥4 stents; the Long-Term Health Outcome andMortality Evaluation After Invasive Coronary Treatment Using Drug Eluting Stents with or without the IVUS Guidance (HOME DES IVUS) (26) trials included patients with either complex coronary lesions or characteristics; and Tan et al (28) studied patients with unprotected left main coronary artery intervention. The exclusion criteria in trials is presented in Supplement Table 2. Characteristics
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT of the included studies are shown in Table 1. On quality assessment all the trials, except Tan et al (28) and Zhang et al(29), had low-risk of bias (Supplement Table 3). Three trials (13,20,22) used
T
first-generation DES (sirolimus-eluting and paclitaxel-eluting) either predominately or
RI P
exclusively, three trials (15,17,27) used newer generation DES (everolimus-eluting, zotarolimuseluting, and biolimus-eluting), and two trials (25,29) did not provide information on the type of
SC
DES. The mean follow-up duration was 1.4 ± 0.5 years. Baseline clinical and quantitative
NU
coronary angiographic (QCA) data are presented in Tables 2 and 3. Clinical results. The results of the random effects meta-analysis appear in Figures 2 and
MA
3. All 8 trials reported MACE data. IVUS-guided PCI significantly decreased MACE by 36% when compared to angiography-guided PCI (6.5% vs. 10.5%; RR: 0.64, 95% CI: 0.51 - 0.80,
ED
p=0.0001). No statistical heterogeneity was noted among the included studies (I2=0%, p=0.46).
PT
Four trials (16,17,26,27) reported rates of all-cause death. There was no significant difference in rates of all-cause death between IVUS-guided and angiography-guided PCI (2.0% vs. 2.0%, RR:
CE
1.00, 95% CI: 0.48 -2.09, p=0.99). No statistical heterogeneity was present (I2 =0%, p=0.87).
AC
Seven trials (15-17,25,27-29) reported cardiovascular death data. IVUS-guided PCI showed a trend towards decreased cardiovascular death compared to angiography-guided group (0.5% vs. 1.2%; RR: 0.51, 95% CI: 0.23 – 1.12, p=0.09). No statistical heterogeneity was present (I2=0%, p=0.96). All trials reported MI data. No significant difference in the rates of MI was found between the two groups (2.0% vs. 2.4%; RR: 0.90, 95% CI: 0.58 – 1.41, p=0.65). There was no evidence of statistical heterogeneity (I2=0%, p=0.65). Five trials (16,17,25,27,29) reported TVR data, 6 trials (15-17,25,26,28) reported TLR data and 7 trials reported stent thrombosis data. IVUS-guided PCI significantly reduced TVR (5.5% vs. 9.2%; RR: 0.60, 95% CI: 0.42 – 0.87,
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT p=0.007) and TLR (4.1% vs. 6.6%; RR: 0.62, 95% CI: 0.45 – 0.86, p=0.004). The reduction in stent thrombosis with IVUS-guidance was not statistically significant (0.6% vs. 1.3%; RR: 0.57,
T
95% CI: 0.26 – 1.23, p=0.15). No evidence of statistical heterogeneity was noted among studies
RI P
with resepct to TVR (I2=0%, p=0.87), TLR (I2=0%, p=0.84), or stent thrombosis (I2=0%, p=0.65).
SC
Sensitivity analysis, publication bias assessment, and meta-regression. Sensitivity
NU
analysis using fixed effect models yielded largely similar results (Supplement Table 4). Moreover, after exclusion of the Tan et al and Zhang et al trials (potentially high-bias risk
MA
studies) the results remained unchanged (Supplement Table 5). No publication bias was found either on inspection of funnel plots (Supplement Figure 2) or on Begg’s rank correlation test (p
ED
for MACE=0.17; p for all-cause death = 0.73; p for cardiovascular death=0.30; p for MI=0.46; p
PT
for TVR=0.09; p for TLR=0.99 and p for stent thrombosis=0.99). Meta-regression analysis showed a greater magnitude of benefit of IVUS-guided PCI compared to angiography-guided
CE
PCI for MACE in trials with higher proportion of patients with acute coronary syndrome
Discussion
AC
(p=0.02), diabetes (p=0.01) and with longer lesion length (p=0.01) (Supplement Figure 1).
The main findings of the present meta-analysis are that in patients with complex lesions undergoing PCI with DES, IVUS-guidance compared to angiography-guidance resulted in: (1) significantly reduced rates of MACE, TLR and TVR at mean 1.4 year follow-up; (2) nonsignificantly different rates of stent thrombosis, MI and death; and (3) maximal benefit in patients with acute coronary syndromes, diabetes and long lesions.
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT The present report extends the results from prior meta-analyses of IVUS-guided vs. angiography-guided PCI for DES implantation, finding some similarities but other notable
T
differences. Zhang et al performed a meta-analysis of 1 RCT and 10 observational studies,
RI P
reporting significantly lower rates of MACE, death and stent thrombosis with IVUS-guided PCI (11). The rates of MI, TVR and TLR were comparable in both groups. In another meta-analysis
SC
by Jang et al which included 3 RCTs and 11 observational studies, IVUS-guided PCI was
NU
associated with significant reductions in MACE, all-cause mortality, MI, TVR and stent thrombosis (10). Of note, repeat revascularization rates (TVR and TLR) were comparable in the
MA
two groups in studies when analyzed using propensity-matching methodology, and significant heterogeneity was present between studies. In our analysis, which is the largest meta-analysis to
ED
date and was restricted to RCTs of DES in complex lesions, IVUS-guided PCI was associated
PT
with reduced rates of MACE by 35%, principally mediated by 38% and 37% reductions in TLR and TVR respectively. In contrast, while the rates of stent thrombosis and cardiovascular death
CE
were numerically lower in the IVUS-guided compared to the angiography-guided groups, these
AC
differences were not statistically significant, and rates of MI were comparable with the two approaches. While these data strongly support the role of IVUS-guidance to improve the efficacy of DES implantation, further studies are warranted to determine whether IVUS enhances the safety (MI, stent thrombosis and death) of PCI in the contemporary DES era. The benefits of IVUS in reducing the need for subsequent revascularization likely accrue from its ability to facilitate improved stent expansion and to minimize geographic miss and undetected edge dissections, collectively the greatest correlates of restenosis after bare metal stent and DES implantation (8). IVUS provides precise plaque, vessel and lumen measurements aiding in appropriate stent sizing. A smaller stent area has consistently been shown to be the
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT strongest predictor of both restenosis and early and late stent thrombosis (30,31). In this regard the minimum lumen diameter was numerically larger with IVUS-guided compared to
T
angiography-guided PCI in 7 of 8 trials (15-17,25,26,28,29), and the % diameter stenosis was
RI P
numerically lower in all 6 trials in which this data was reported (15-17,25,26,29), consistent with enhanced stent optimization. In addition, IVUS-guided PCI helps in detection of stent-related
SC
complications such as incomplete stent apposition, incomplete lesion coverage, edge dissections,
NU
stent fracture, tissue protrusion, and residual thrombus, findings that are often inapparent by angiography.
MA
It should be emphasized that all the trials in the present meta-analysis were performed in patients with complex lesion or patient characteristics. PCI of complex lesions has been
ED
associated with worse short-term and long-term outcomes (32). In such interventions, IVUS-
PT
guided PCI may guide not only the stent deployment but also the selection of treatment approaches according to lesion morphology, such as direct stenting, plaque modification with
CE
rotational atherectomy, etc. which may improve early and late outcomes. However, it is
AC
uncertain if similar benefit with IVUS-guidance will be observed in low-risk patients or lesions in whom the long-term prognosis is excellent with contemporary DES. Currently, the American College of Cardiology Foundation/ American Heart Associate PCI guidelines (33) recommend IVUS as a potential diagnostic tool for the assessment of angiographically indeterminate left main stenosis (class IIa, level of evidence B), cardiac allograft vasculopathy (IIa, B), evaluation of the mechanism of in-stent restenosis (IIa, C), assessment of intermediate non–left main coronary stenoses (IIb, B), and for guidance of coronary stent implantation, particularly in cases of left main stenting (IIb, B). The lack of any class I guideline recommendations for IVUS-
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT guidance emphasizes the need for additional adequately powered RCTs to evaluate the role of routine IVUS-guided PCI in patients with different risk profiles and lesion morphologies.
T
Limitations. The present study has several limitations. First, all the trials enrolled
RI P
patients undergoing complex coronary interventions, limiting the generalizability of the results. Second, in absence of patient-level data, we were unable to adjust our analysis for severity of
SC
presentation, lesion characteristics, use of various anticoagulants and anti-platelet therapy, or
NU
different stent types. However, the meta-regression analysis suggested that IVUS-guidance is of greatest benefit in particularly high-risk patients and lesions (acute coronary syndromes, diabetes
MA
and long lesions). Additional studies are required to determine the utlilty of IVUS-guidance for DES implantation in non-complex lesions. Third, two trials included in our analysis (26,28) were
ED
single-center studies which may introduce some degree of institutional or operator bias (although
PT
no statistical heterogeneity was observed between studies for any of the endpoints). Fourth, the IVUS criteria for stent optimization after PCI varied among trials, (Supplement Table 6) as did
CE
the specific definitions for MACE and MI. As such the results of the present study should be
AC
considered hypothesis-generating. Fifth, all of the trials examining outcomes of IVUS guidance in the DES era have exclusively enrolled high-risk patients and/or lesions. No such trials were broadly inclusive. As a result, whether IVUS guidance of DES implantation in simpler lesions would yield similar results as those found in the present meta-analysis is unknown. Finally, although the present study is the most comprehensive meta-analysis of IVUS-guided vs. angiography-guided PCI with DES to date, we still lack adequate power to determine whether the trends toward reduced stent thrombosis and cardiovascular death are real, again emphasizing the need for future large-scale trials. Such studies should also include a cost-effectiveness component to determine the value of IVUS-guided intervention.
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Conclusions. The present meta-analysis of 8 RCTs and 3,276 patients demonstrated a significant reduction in MACE, TVR and TLR with IVUS-guided compared to angiography-
T
guided DES implantation in patients with complex lesions and clinical characterisitics. IVUS use
RI P
to optimize acute stent outcomes should thus strongly be considered when performing PCI in such patients. Additional adequately powered trials would be useful to further define the role of
SC
IVUS-guided PCI in patients with different risk profiles and lesion morphologies, and to
NU
determine the optimal IVUS parameters and guidance strategies to maximize event-free survival
AC
CE
PT
ED
MA
after DES in complex case scenarios.
References
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 1.
Panaich SS, Badheka AO, Arora S et al. Variability in utilization of drug eluting stents in United States: Insights from nationwide inpatient sample. Catheter Cardiovasc Interv
De Luca G, Dirksen MT, Spaulding C et al. Drug-eluting vs bare-metal stents in primary
RI P
2.
T
2015.
angioplasty: a pooled patient-level meta-analysis of randomized trials. Arch Intern Med
Bangalore S, Amoroso N, Fusaro M, Kumar S, Feit F. Outcomes with various drug-
NU
3.
SC
2012;172:611-21; discussion 621-2.
eluting or bare metal stents in patients with ST-segment-elevation myocardial infarction:
MA
a mixed treatment comparison analysis of trial level data from 34 068 patient-years of follow-up from randomized trials. Circulation Cardiovascular interventions 2013;6:378-
Palmerini T, Biondi-Zoccai G, Della Riva D et al. Clinical outcomes with drug-eluting
PT
4.
ED
90.
and bare-metal stents in patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction:
5.
AC
504.
CE
evidence from a comprehensive network meta-analysis. J Am Coll Cardiol 2013;62:496-
Iakovou I, Schmidt T, Bonizzoni E et al. Incidence, predictors, and outcome of thrombosis after successful implantation of drug-eluting stents. JAMA 2005;293:212630.
6.
Magalhaes MA, Minha S, Chen F et al. Clinical presentation and outcomes of coronary in-stent restenosis across 3-stent generations. Circulation Cardiovascular interventions 2014;7:768-76.
7.
Joner M, Finn AV, Farb A et al. Pathology of drug-eluting stents in humans: delayed healing and late thrombotic risk. J Am Coll Cardiol 2006;48:193-202.
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 8.
Mintz GS. Clinical utility of intravascular imaging and physiology in coronary artery disease. J Am Coll Cardiol 2014;64:207-22. McDaniel MC, Eshtehardi P, Sawaya FJ, Douglas JS, Jr., Samady H. Contemporary
T
9.
RI P
clinical applications of coronary intravascular ultrasound. JACC Cardiovascular interventions 2011;4:1155-67.
Jang JS, Song YJ, Kang W et al. Intravascular ultrasound-guided implantation of drug-
SC
10.
NU
eluting stents to improve outcome: a meta-analysis. JACC Cardiovascular interventions 2014;7:233-43.
Zhang Y, Farooq V, Garcia-Garcia HM et al. Comparison of intravascular ultrasound
MA
11.
versus angiography-guided drug-eluting stent implantation: a meta-analysis of one
ED
randomised trial and ten observational studies involving 19,619 patients.
PT
EuroIntervention : journal of EuroPCR in collaboration with the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the European Society of Cardiology 2012;8:855-65. Lodi-Junqueira L, de Sousa MR, da Paixao LC, Kelles SM, Amaral CF, Ribeiro AL.
CE
12.
AC
Does intravascular ultrasound provide clinical benefits for percutaneous coronary intervention with bare-metal stent implantation? A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Systematic reviews 2012;1:42. 13.
Moschovitis A, Cook S, Meier B. Percutaneous coronary interventions in Europe in 2006. EuroIntervention : journal of EuroPCR in collaboration with the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the European Society of Cardiology 2010;6:189-94.
14.
Singh V, Badheka AO, Arora S et al. Comparison of inhospital mortality, length of hospitalization, costs, and vascular complications of percutaneous coronary interventions guided by ultrasound versus angiography. Am J Cardiol 2015;115:1357-66.
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 15.
Hong SJ, Kim BK, Shin DH et al. Effect of Intravascular Ultrasound-Guided vs Angiography-Guided Everolimus-Eluting Stent Implantation: The IVUS-XPL
Tian NL, Gami SK, Ye F et al. Angiographic and clinical comparisons of intravascular
RI P
16.
T
Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA 2015;314:2155-63.
ultrasound- versus angiography-guided drug-eluting stent implantation for patients with
SC
chronic total occlusion lesions: two-year results from a randomised AIR-CTO study.
NU
EuroIntervention : journal of EuroPCR in collaboration with the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the European Society of Cardiology 2015;10:1409-17. Kim BK, Shin DH, Hong MK et al. Clinical Impact of Intravascular Ultrasound-Guided
MA
17.
Chronic Total Occlusion Intervention With Zotarolimus-Eluting Versus Biolimus-Eluting
ED
Stent Implantation: Randomized Study. Circulation Cardiovascular interventions
18.
PT
2015;8:e002592.
Higgins J GS. Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions. The
19.
AC
2016.
CE
Cochrane Collaboration 2008. http://www.cochrane-handbook.org. Accessed July 7,
Cutlip DE, Windecker S, Mehran R et al. Clinical end points in coronary stent trials: a case for standardized definitions. Circulation 2007;115:2344-51.
20.
Shamseer L, Moher D, Clarke M et al. Preferred reporting items for systematic review and meta-analysis protocols (PRISMA-P) 2015: elaboration and explanation. BMJ 2015;349:g7647.
21.
Higgins JPT, Green S (editors). Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions Version 5.1.0 [updated March 2011]. The Cochrane Collaboration, 2011. Available from www.cochrane-handbook.org. .
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 22.
DerSimonian R, Laird N. Meta-analysis in clinical trials. Control Clin Trials 1986;7:17788.
T
Higgins JP, Thompson SG. Quantifying heterogeneity in a meta-analysis. Statistics in medicine 2002;21:1539-58.
24.
Begg CB, Mazumdar M. Operating characteristics of a rank correlation test for
SC
publication bias. Biometrics 1994;50:1088-101.
Chieffo A, Latib A, Caussin C et al. A prospective, randomized trial of intravascular-
NU
25.
RI P
23.
ultrasound guided compared to angiography guided stent implantation in complex
26.
MA
coronary lesions: the AVIO trial. Am Heart J 2013;165:65-72. Jakabcin J, Spacek R, Bystron M et al. Long-term health outcome and mortality
ED
evaluation after invasive coronary treatment using drug eluting stents with or without the
PT
IVUS guidance. Randomized control trial. HOME DES IVUS. Catheter Cardiovasc Interv 2010;75:578-83.
Kim JS, Kang TS, Mintz GS et al. Randomized comparison of clinical outcomes between
CE
27.
AC
intravascular ultrasound and angiography-guided drug-eluting stent implantation for long coronary artery stenoses. JACC Cardiovascular interventions 2013;6:369-76. 28.
Tan Q, Wang Q, Liu D, Zhang S, Zhang Y, Li Y. Intravascular ultrasound-guided unprotected left main coronary artery stenting in the elderly. Saudi medical journal 2015;36:549-53.
29.
Zhang JQ SR, Pang W et al. Application of Intravascular Ultrasound in Stent Implantation for Small Coronary Arteries. Journal of Clinical & Invasive Cardiology 2016;3:1-8.
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 30.
Fujii K, Carlier SG, Mintz GS et al. Stent underexpansion and residual reference segment stenosis are related to stent thrombosis after sirolimus-eluting stent implantation: an
Liu X, Doi H, Maehara A et al. A volumetric intravascular ultrasound comparison of
RI P
31.
T
intravascular ultrasound study. J Am Coll Cardiol 2005;45:995-8.
early drug-eluting stent thrombosis versus restenosis. JACC Cardiovascular interventions
Wilensky RL, Selzer F, Johnston J et al. Relation of percutaneous coronary intervention
NU
32.
SC
2009;2:428-34.
of complex lesions to clinical outcomes (from the NHLBI Dynamic Registry). Am J
33.
MA
Cardiol 2002;90:216-21.
Levine GN, Bates ER, Blankenship JC et al. 2011 ACCF/AHA/SCAI Guideline for
ED
Percutaneous Coronary Intervention. A report of the American College of Cardiology
PT
Foundation/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines and the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions. J Am Coll Cardiol
Mariani J, Jr., Guedes C, Soares P et al. Intravascular ultrasound guidance to minimize
AC
34.
CE
2011;58:e44-122.
the use of iodine contrast in percutaneous coronary intervention: the MOZART (Minimizing cOntrast utiliZation With IVUS Guidance in coRonary angioplasTy) randomized controlled trial. JACC Cardiovascular interventions 2014;7:1287-93.
Figure Legends Figure 1. Flowchart for study selection. A systematic search identified randomized trials in which high-risk paitents and/or complex lesions were allocated to DES implnatation with IVUS-
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT guidance vs. angiography-guidance. Non-randomized trials were excluded fom this metaanalysis, as were trials in which most of all patients were treated with bare metal stents. The
RI P
stratified by stent type (personal communciation, Pedro Lemos).
T
MOZART trial(34) was excluded as DES were used in <10 patients, and randomization was not
SC
Figure 2. Forest plot of pooled relative risks (95% confidence intervals) for (A) MACE, (B) all-cause death, and (C) cardiovascular death, for IVUS-guided compared to angiography-
NU
guided PCI with DES. Squares represent the risk ratio of the individual studies; Horizontal
MA
lines represent the 95% confidence intervals (CI) of the risk ratio. The size of the squares reflects the weight that the corresponding study contributes in the meta-analysis. The diamonds
ED
represents the pooled risk ratio or the overall effect.
PT
Figure 3. Forest plot of pooled relative risks (95% confidence intervals) for (A) myocardial
CE
infarction, (B) target vessel revascularization, (C) target lesion revascularization, and (D) stent thrombosis, for IVUS-guided PCI compared to angiography-guided PCI with DES.
AC
Other notations as in Figure 2.
AC
CE
PT
ED
MA
NU
SC
RI P
T
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
AC
CE
PT
ED
MA
NU
SC
RI P
T
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
AC
CE
PT
ED
MA
NU
SC
RI P
T
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Table 1. Charateristics of the included trials AVIO 2013
CTO-IVUS 2015
HOME DES IVUS 2010
IVUS-XPL 2015
RESET 2013
Tan et al. 2015
Zhang et al. 2016
Center
Multicenter
Multicenter
Multicenter
Single-center
Multicenter
Multicenter
Single-center
Single-center
Inclusion criteria
CTO
Long lesions (≥28 mm), CTO, bifurcation lesions, small vessels (≤2.5mm), patients requiring ≥4 stents.
CTO
AHA lesion type B2/C, proximal LAD, left main disease, RVD <2.5 mm, lesion length >20 mm, instent restenosis, insulin dependent diabetes mellitus and ACS
Long coronary lesions requiring stent length ≥28 mm with RVD 2.5-4 mm
De novo lesion requiring a stent ≥28 mm in length in a vessel with a distal RVD ≥2.5 mm
Unprotected left main coronary artery stenosis
De novo lesion in a small vessel (diameter 2.25-2.75 mm)
Sample size
230
284
402
210
1400
543
123
84
DES+
DES
ZES/BES
SES, PES
EES
ZES, EES
SES
DES
Clinical FU
24 months
24 months
12 months
18 months
12 months
12 months
24 months
12 months
Primary endpoint
In-stent late lumen loss
Post-procedural in-lumen MLD
Cardiac death
MACE
MACE
MACE
MACE
Post-procedural in-lumen MLD
MACE
Death, MI, TLR, stent thrombosis
Cardiovascular death, MI or TVR
Cardiac death, MI, or TVR
Death, MI, TLR
Cardiac death, target lesion– related MI, or TLR
Cardiovascular death, MI,
Cardiac death, MI, or TLR
Cardiac death, MI, or TVR
NR
NR
Aspirin 300 mg for 1 month, then 100 mg lifelong, clopidogrel 75 mg for 12 months
NR
AC
Aspirin 100 mg, clopidogrel 75 mg for at least 12 months
CE
Dual antiplatelet regimen
Aspirin 100 mg lifelong, clopidogrel 75 mg for 6 months
Aspirin 100 mg lifelong, clopidogrel 75 mg for 12 months
stent thrombosis, or TVR
Aspirin 100 mg lifelong, clopidogrel 75 mg for 3-12 months*
* 3-month duration following E-ZES implantation versus 12-month duration following EES implantation, +predominatly first generation DES (76.1%). ACS: acute coronary syndrome, AHA: American heart association, CTO: chronic total occlusion, LAD: left anterior descending, DES: drug-eluting stents, BES: biolimus-eluting stent, PES: paclitaxel-eluting stent, SES: sirolimus-eluting stent, EES: everolimus-eluting stent, ZES: zotarolimus-eluting stent, MACE: major adverse cardiac events, MI: myocardial infarction, MLD: minimum lumen diameter, RVD: reference vessel diameter, TLR: target lesion revascularization, TVR: target vessel revascularization, NR: not reported.
AC
Stent type
PT CEP ED TE D MAMA NUNUS SCCRIP RI T PT
Year
AIR-CTO 2015
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Table 2. Patient characteristics CTO IVUS
67/66
64/64
61/61
HOME DES IVUS 59/60
Male, %
89/80
82/77
81/81
73/71
Diabetes, %
30/27
24/27
35/34
42/45
Hypertension,
75/70
70/67
63/64
67/61
22/28
70/77
NR
39/39
35/31
35/34
21/30
NR
Age, mean
%
CABG, %
3/4
AC
Previous
77/76
63/60
32/30
34/30
NR
65/63
61/66
41/47
64/60
67/65
61/62
NR
48/60
40/35
22/26
22/17
44/47
52/52
8/8
37/32
5/4
1/3
16/21
NR
NR
15/16
17/14
11/10
NR
NR
NR
NR
2/3
14/10
3/2
NR
NR
NR
SC
NU 66/63
MA
ED
PT
20/21
63/64
36/37
CE
Previous PCI,
64/64
50/60
smoker, %
%
Zhang et al.
62/69
%
Previous MI,
Tan et al.
66/55
%
Current
RESET
69/69
years
Dyslipidemia,
IVUSXPL
T
AVIO
RI P
AIRCTO
ACS, %
29/24
30/26
NR
72/60
49/49
47/49
70/66
NR
LVEF, %
55/56
55/56
NR
NR
63/62
NR
55/55
58/57
Data are presented as IVUS-guided / angiography-guided. ACS: acute coronary syndrome which includes acute MI and/or unstable angina, CABG: coronary atery bypass surgery, LVEF: left ventricular ejection fraction, MI: myocardial infarction, NR: not reported, PCI: percutaneous coronary intervention.
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Table 3. Angiographic and procedural characteristics CTO IVUS
LAD, %
44/37
53/49
42/47
HOME DES IVUS 56/54
LCX, %
21/15
NR
14/16
11/15
RCA, %
35/46
NR
44/37
29/24
LM, %
0/3
NR
0/0
3/4
Multivessel disease, %
49/57
NR
39/31
Preprocedural RVD, mm
2.65±0.37/ 2.60±0.34
2.67±0.46/ 2.62±0.41
2.69±0.44/ 2.64±0.55
Lesion length, mm
29.0±17.4/ 30.6±18.7
27.4±15.9/ 25.5±15.0
MLD, mm
NR
0.76±0.46/ 0.65±0.45
Baseline stenosis, %
100/100
71.6±15.8/ 75.5±16.1
Stent number
1.6±0.9/ 1.5±0.8
IVUSXPL 65/60
RESET
T
AVIO
62/68
RI P
AIRCTO
Tan et al.
Zhang et al.
NR
48/52
15/13
NR
49/51
21/25
23/20
NR
56/44
0/0
0/0
100/100
0/0
31/33
41/38
66/63
NR
3.17±0.43/ 2.95±0.34
2.89±0.45/ 2.85±0.45
2.82/2.80*
NR
2.40±0.23/ 2.39±0.27
18.1±7.3/ 17.6±6.7
34.7±10.8/ 35.2±10.5
29.6/30.6*
NR
17.0±4.2/ 15.1±5.5
NR
1.1±0.4/ 0.97±0.36
0.83±0.42/ 0.82±0.43
0.95/0.93*
1.90±0.22/ 1.92±0.21
0.91±0.3/ 0.90±0.31
NR
82.3±7.6/ 79.2±9.3
71.1±14.3/ 71.4±14.4
NR
NR
77.8±9.1/ 77.8±8.5
NR
1.7±0.8/ 1.6±0.7
1.3/1.3
1.3±0.5/ 1.3±0.5
NR
NR
NR
3.05±0.46/ 2.86±0.37
2.95±0.38/ 2.86±0.36
2.91±0.52/ 2.85±0.41
NR
NR
NR
3.43±0.09/ 3.44±0.12
2.64±0.25/ 2.45±0.20
55±23/ 52±25
23.9±6.74/ 23.2±6.51
43.6±18.7/ 41.5±17.6
23.6/22.1
39.3±13.1/ 39.2±12.3
32.4/32.3*
21.5±6.4/ 18.2±4.9
26.1±4.5/ 23.3±5.8
Postprocedure MLD, mm
2.62±0.45/ 2.40±0.47
2.55±0.46/ 2.39±0.42
2.64±0.35/ 2.56±0.41
2.94±0.31/ 2.87±0.24
2.64±0.42/ 2.56±0.39
2.55/2.55*
3.44±0.12/ 3.43±0.09
2.77±0.19/ 2.53±0.21
Post procedure
10.9±5.7/ 13.8±10.1
13.9±7.3/ 15.5±7.9
9.0±9.8/ 10.2±10.9
14.6±7.1/ 15.3±6.1
12.8±8.7/ 13.7±8.1
NR
NR
6.7±2.6/ 7.9±2.5
Stent length, mm
NU 29/25
MA
ED
26.8±17.3/ 26.4±17.6
PT
CE
AC
Stent diameter, mm
SC
14/15
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT diameter stenosis, % Data are presented as IVUS-guided / angiography-guided. *Median values, LAD: left anterior descending artery, LCx: left
AC
CE
PT
ED
MA
NU
SC
RI P
T
circumflex artery, LM: left main, MLD: minimal lumen diameter, NR: not reported, RCA: right coronary artery, RVD: reference vessel diameter.