Severely calcified coronary stenoses are difficult to treat with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) using current techniques and there is little specific evidence on how to best treat these cases. It is hypothesized that balloon lithoplasty is superior to conventional balloons for lesion preparation of severely calcified coronary lesions before stent implantation in terms of procedural failure and 1-year target vessel failure.
Severely calcified coronary stenoses are difficult to treat with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) using current techniques. Severe calcifications make it difficult to sufficiently prepare lesions before stenting, to advance stents, and to achieve full stent expansion. There is increased risk of vessel dissection and perforation with angioplasty on severely calcified lesions, and long-term outcomes of PCI are adversely affected. Because severely calcified lesions are often excluded from interventional studies, there is little specific evidence on how to best treat these cases. Only a few randomized studies have specifically explored this question, focusing on the use of rotational atherectomy Recently, the technique of balloon-based lithoplasty was made commercially available. With this technique, calcifications are cracked with the creation of high-frequency pressure oscillations in a special angioplasty balloon. Standard techniques are used to deliver and dilate the balloon. The method was developed for treatment of otherwise non-dilatable lesions, and first reported results have been encouraging. The lithoplasty device used in the current study (Shockwave IVL, Shockwave Medical, CA, USA) has received CE-mark and post-approval safety has recently been confirmed for treatment of severely calcified coronary lesions in patients. Besides obvious benefits in non-dilatable lesions for which interventional cardiologists have few other options, it is possible this technique could change the way all severely calcified lesions are treated. Balloon lithoplasty could theoretically crack plates of calcium in the vessel wall in an orderly fashion, which could lead to safer and quicker preparation of severely calcified lesions. Furthermore, a better softening of vessel wall calcium could allow full and symmetric expansion of coronary stents, which could lead to better long-term stent patency.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
The lithoplasty balloon should be utilized as early as possible. If it is necessary for passage of the lithoplasty balloon, the lesion may first be predilated with an undersized conventional balloon, non-compliant or semi-compliant. If passage of the lithoplasty balloon is still not possible, it is recommended to perform rotational atherectomy with a small burr size. The lithoplasty balloon is sized 1:1 to reference diameter. Lithoplasty is performed with the balloon dilated at 4 atmospheres, and 10 shocks are delivered, after which the balloon is expanded to 6 atmospheres for 30 seconds, and then deflated. Up to 8 series of balloon expansion/deflation can be delivered in this manner if necessary, and several balloons may be used for long lesions.
Lesion preparation is performed starting with conventional balloons, non-compliant or semi-compliant. Unless fully satisfactory dilatation is achieved with conventional balloons, it is recommended to also use modified balloons (scoring balloons, cutting balloons). If balloons cannot be passed or if dilatation is inadequate, the lesion may first be predilated with an undersized conventional, non-compliant, or semi-compliant balloon. If necessary, rotational atherectomy with a small burr size can be used to facilitate adequate balloon preparation.
University Hospital Leuven
Leuven, Belgium
Gentofte University Hospital
Gentofte Municipality, Copenhagen, Denmark
Aalborg University Hospital
Aalborg, Denmark
Aarhus University Hospital Skejby
Aarhus, Denmark
Number of patients with combined outcome of strategy failure
Failed stent delivery, residual area stenosis ≥ 20% (OCT-assessed) after PCI, or target vessel failure. Residual area stenosis will be defined as \[1 - in-stent minimal lumen area/reference area\]. The reference area will be calculated by averaging the proximal and distal reference areas, which will be determined by measuring the lumen contours on most healthy-looking frame of the final OCT in the 0-5 mm edge segments. If a reference cannot be measured on the final OCT, it will be measured on a pre-stent OCT or by using quantitative coronary angiography if pre-stent OCT is unavailable. Target vessel failure will be defined as cardiac death, target vessel-related myocardial infarction, or clinically driven target vessel revascularization). Failed or no stent delivery is defined as failure to deliver and deploy 1 or more coronary stents to cover the intended length of the intended target lesion.
Time frame: 1 year
Number of patients with composite and components of in-hospital major adverse cardiac events (MACE)
Cardiac death, Any myocardial infarction, Stroke
Time frame: In-hospital
Number of patients with composite and components of major adverse cardiac events (MACE)
Cardiac death, Any myocardial infarction, Stroke
Time frame: 1 year
Number of patients with in-hospital procedure-related adverse events
Periprocedural myocardial infarction, Coronary dissection (beyond intended by lesion preparation), Coronary perforation/rupture
Time frame: In-hospital
Number of patients with components of the primary outcome
Failed stent delivery, Residual area stenosis \>20% (OCT-assessed) after PCI, Target vessel failure
Time frame: 1 year
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TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
200
Rigshospitalet
Copenhagen, Denmark
Odense University Hospital
Odense, Denmark
Zealand University Hospital, Roskilde Sygehus
Roskilde, Denmark
North-Estonia Medical Center
Tallinn, Estonia
Trondheim University Hospital
Trondheim, Norway
Number of patients with components of target vessel failure
Cardiac death, Target vessel-related myocardial infarction, Clinically driven target vessel revascularization
Time frame: 1 year
OCT outcomes at index procedure
Stent expansion
Time frame: During procedure
OCT outcomes at 1 year procedure
In-stent late lumen loss
Time frame: 1 year