In this study, multimodal imaging of atherosclerosis and dosage of new circulating biomarkers will be used to compare patients with stable or unstable coronary artery disease
Acute complications of coronary and cerebrovascular atherosclerosis -i.e., acute coronary syndromes (ACS) and strokes - remain the principal cause of death worldwide. Identification of patients at high risk of developing such complications is therefore of utmost importance. Post-MORTEM studies suggest that vulnerable coronary atherosclerotic plaques are characterized by a large, metabolically active, necrotic core, covered by a thin fibrous cap, which may rupture, leading to acute thrombosis, myocardial infarction and, potentially, sudden death. These anatomic features of plaque vulnerability are not visible on standard coronary imaging, such as coronary angiography, but might be recognized using more recent imaging modalities. In addition, new circulating biomarkers of atherosclerosis, particularly biomarkers involved in plaque destabilization, can be measured in peripheral blood and may be used to appreciate overall patient vulnerability. Design and Methods- In the present study, 2 groups of 44 patients with moderate-to-high risk non-ST elevation ACS or stable coronary artery disease (CAD) will be compared. All the patients will undergo percutaneous coronary intervention of culprit vessels after imaging of the entire coronary tree (culprit and non-culprit lesions) using intravascular ultrasound with radiofrequency data analysis (IVUS-VH). Before discharge, fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography combined with multidetector computed tomography (FDG PET-MDCT) of the carotid arteries and the thoracic aorta, along with MDCT coronary angiography, will be performed and a blood sample will be obtained for subsequent measurements of emerging or new biomarkers. Objectives - 1. The primary objective is to compare plaque phenotypes between patients with ACS vs stable CAD. For each imaging modality (coronary IVUS-VH, MDCT coronary angiography, AORTO-carotid FDG PET-CT) comparisons will be performed on a per-lesion and per-patient basis. 2. Secondary objectives include: i) An evaluation of the accuracy of each plaque imaging modality and biomarkers for diagnosis of unstable CAD; ii) A comparison of the diagnostic performance of each plaque imaging modality and biomarkers for diagnosis of unstable CAD; iii) A comparison of coronary plaque phenotype between culprit and non-culprit lesions (using IVUS-VH and MDCT coronary angiography); and iv) An exploratory feasibility study of PET-CT imaging of coronary artery atherosclerotic plaques. It's important to underline that this study must be considered as an interventional study. Indeed, in this study patients have many imaging modality : coronary IVUS-VH, MDCT coronary angiography and AORTO-carotid FDG PET-CT while in common practice patients have only FDG PET-CT which is the routinely technique used.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
85
All the patients will undergo percutaneous coronary intervention of culprit vessels after imaging of the entire coronary tree (culprit and non-culprit lesions) using intravascular ultrasound with radiofrequency data analysis (IVUS-VH). Before discharge, fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography combined with multidetector computed tomography (FDG PET-MDCT) of the carotid arteries and the thoracic aorta, along with MDCT coronary angiography, will be performed and a blood sample will be obtained for subsequent measurements of emerging or new biomarkers.
All the patients will undergo percutaneous coronary intervention of culprit vessels after imaging of the entire coronary tree (culprit and non-culprit lesions) using intravascular ultrasound with radiofrequency data analysis (IVUS-VH). Before discharge, fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography combined with multidetector computed tomography (FDG PET-MDCT) of the carotid arteries and the thoracic aorta, along with MDCT coronary angiography, will be performed and a blood sample will be obtained for subsequent measurements of emerging or new biomarkers.
Département de Cardiologie, Hôpital Bichat, Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris
Paris, France
Three imaging modalities are used to compare plaque phenotypes between patients with ACS vs stable CAD. (coronary IVUS-VH, MDCT coronary angiography, AORTO-carotid FDG PET-CT)
Each imaging modality provides a set of quantitative or semi-quantitative measures of plaque vulnerability (eg, necrotic core volume and presence of thin-cap fibroatheroma on IVUS-VH; presence of calcium and positive remodeling on MDCT coronary angiography; and FDG uptake measured by target-to-background on aorto-carotid FDG PET-CT)
Time frame: Performed within 7 days of inclusion
New circulating biomarkers
Time frame: Measured on a blood sample performed within 7 days of inclusion
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