Fractional flow reserve assessment of left main stenosis in the presence of downstream coronary stenoses

Andy S C Yong, David Daniels, Bernard De Bruyne, Hyun Sook Kim, Fumiaki Ikeno, Jennifer Lyons, Nico H J Pijls, William F. Fearon*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

81 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background.Several studies have shown that fractional flow reserve (FFR) measurement can aid in the assessment of left main coronary stenosis. However, the impact of downstream epicardial stenosis on left main FFR assessment with the pressure wire in the nonstenosed downstream vessel remains unknown. Methods and Results.Variable stenoses were created in the left main coronary arteries and downstream epicardial vessels in 6 anaesthetized male sheep using balloon catheters. A total of 220 pairs of FFR assessments of the left main stenosis were obtained, before and after creation of a stenosis in a downstream epicardial vessel, by having a pressure-sensor wire in the other nonstenosed downstream vessel. The apparent left main FFR in the presence of downstream stenosis (FFRapp) was significantly higher compared with the true FFR in the absence of downstream stenosis (FFRtrue; 0.80±0.05 versus 0.76±0.05; estimate of the mean difference, 0.035; P<0.001). The difference between FFRtrue and FFRapp correlated with composite FFR of the left main plus stenosed artery (r=.0.31; P<0.001) indicating that this difference was greater with increasing epicardial stenosis severity. Among measurements with FFRapp >0.80, 9% were associated with an FFRtrue of <0.75. In all instances, the epicardial lesion was in the proximal portion of the stenosed vessel, and the epicardial FFR (combined FFR of the left main and downstream stenosed vessel) was .0.50. Conclusions.A clinically relevant effect on the FFR assessment of left main disease with the pressure wire in a nonstenosed downstream vessel occurs only when the stenosis in the other vessel is proximal and very severe.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)161-165
Number of pages5
JournalCirculation: Cardiovascular Interventions
Volume6
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2013
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Fractional flow reserve
  • Left main coronary artery
  • Stenosis

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