The use of fractional flow reserve (FFR) to guide coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) is controversial and not ubiquitously adopted across the units. There is no definitive evidence that the use of FFR improves early clinical outcomes after CABG, with the exception of a simplification of the procedure. FFR use may help in defining the indication to the use arterial grafts, but there is no evidence that preoperative FFR lead to any benefits in terms of patency when venous grafts are used. On these grounds a large multicentric all-comers observational study is planned. The aim is to achieve a real-life picture of the FFR practice in CABG across several European and non-European units. This study will inform on the effective use rate of FFR in the CABG practice and its clinical effectiveness when compared to standard angiography-based CABG.
Background The use of fractional flow reserve (FFR) to guide coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) is controversial. A large retrospective study on 627 patients by Toth et al. showed that FFR-guided surgery was associated with a lower number of graft anastomoses and a lower rate of on-pump surgery compared with angiography-guided coronary artery bypass graft surgery. This did not result in a higher event rate during up to 36 months of follow-up and was associated with a lower rate of angina. The six years follow-up of the same study showed that FFR-guided CABG was associated with a significant reduction in the rate of overall death or myocardial infarction at 6-year follow-up as compared with angiography-guided CABG. However, the three randomized studies on FFR-based CABG have achieved contradictive results. The FARGO (Fractional Flow Reserve Versus Angiography Randomization for Graft Optimization) and GRAFFITI (GRAft patency after FFR-guided versus angiography-guided CABG) did not report a significant impact on hard outcomes at 1 year. Conversely, the IMPAG trial support the use of preoperative FFR in total arterial CABG. Authors found a significant association between the preoperative FFR measurement of the target vessel and the anastomotic functionality at 6 months, with a cut-off of 0.78. Authors concluded that integration of FFR measurement into the preoperative diagnostic workup could lead to improved anastomotic graft function. The currently available randomized evidences might have been flawed by limitations including underpowering, entry selectivity bias, cross over among treatment, difference in the type of conduits used and presence of unexpected confounders related to surgeons' reluctance to base their surgical strategy on FFR. These drawbacks not only hamper the reliability of the results, but more importantly, reduce their translatability to the real-life clinical world. Given the lack of definitive evidences and the difficulty of RCT to capture the real-life scenario of the clinical practice, we plan to perform a large multicentric all-comers study comparing the practice of FFR in CABG across several European and non-European units. The main aim is to obtain information on * Use rate of FFR in preoperative planning of surgical candidates * Effective adherence to FFR guidance during elective surgery and identification of factors eventually limiting observance to FFR information * Short and long-term outcomes of FFR-based CABG in comparison to standard angiography-based CABG * Post hoc analysis in relation to type of conduit used, completeness of revascularization, surgeon experience, volume/outcome relationship.
Measurement of fractional flow reserve in the preoperative work-up for oronary artery bypass surgery
Use rate of FFR in preoperative planning of surgical candidates
Frequency and rate of usage of fractional flow reserve measurement in the routine practice of Cath labs
Time frame: 10 years
Effective adherence to FFR guidance during elective surgery and identification of factors eventually limiting observance to FFR information
To check if CABG operations are performed according to the guidance provided by FFR in terms of location and number of lesions to be bypassed
Time frame: 10 years
Survival of FFR-based CABG in comparison to standard angiography-based CABG
Comparing mortality rate among the two groups
Time frame: 10 years
Myocardial infarction rate in FFR-based CABG in comparison to standard angiography-based CABG
Comparing onset of myocardial infarction among the two groups
Time frame: 10 years
Major cardiovascular events rate in FFR-based CABG in comparison to standard angiography-based CABG
Comparing occurrence of major cardiovascular events among the two groups
Time frame: 10 years
Target vessel revascularization rate in FFR-based CABG in comparison to standard
Comparing perioperative mortality, myocardial infarction, major cardiovascular events, target vessel revascularization, long-term survival, long-term freedom from coronary intervention among the two groups
Time frame: 10 years
Freedom from coronary intervention in FFR-based CABG compared to standard angiography-based CABG
Comparing long-term freedom from coronary intervention among the two groups
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Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Time frame: 10 years
Type of conduit used
Post-hoc analysis to investigated the use rate of arterial or venous conduit and the impact on clinical outcomes of the different conduits. This is crucial considering that the most recent randomized trial found a benefit of preoperative FFR when arterial conduits are used for CABG
Time frame: 10 years
Completeness of revascularization
to investigate if the use of preoperative FFR is associated to incomplete revascularization (i.e. reduced number of bypassed lesion)
Time frame: 10 years
Surgeon experience effect
Measuring relation between surgeon's experience (measured as number of CABG cases performed) on mortality and other outcomes. Studies have demonstrated a learning curve of at least 50 cases
Time frame: 10 years
Volume/outcome relationship
Measuring relation between center's experience (measured as number of CABG cases/year) and outcomes.Centers performing high volumes of these procedure might produce better outcomes.
Time frame: 10 years