The INTERCLIMA (Interventional Strategy for Non-culprit Lesions With Major Vulnerability Criteria Identified by Optical Coherence Tomography in Patients With Acute Coronary Syndrome) is a multi-center, prospective, randomized trial of optical coherence tomography (OCT)-based versus physiology-based (i.e. fractional flow reserve\[FFR\]/instantaneous Wave-Free Ratio\[iFR\]/resting full-cycle ratio\[RFR\]) treatment of intermediate (40-70% diameter stenosis), non-culprit coronary lesions in acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients undergoing coronary angiography. About 1420 patients with ACS will be randomized into the study at approximately 40 sites worldwide.
The optimal strategy in patients with intermediated stenosis (40-70% diameter stenosis) at coronary angiography is currently under debate. Pure angiographic stenosis evaluation is often inadequate and alternative assessments of coronary plaques entered the clinical practice, such as functional assessment (FFR/iFR/RFR) and intravascular imaging (OCT and intravascular ultrasound \[IVUS\]). Based on preliminary data, current American College of Cardiology (ACC) and American Heart Association (AHA) revascularization guidelines recommend the use of flow fractional reserve (FFR, class IIa of evidence) to assess angiographic intermediate coronary lesions in patients with stable ischemic heart disease and guide intervention. However, controversial data has recently emerged on the role of functional assessment of intermediate coronary lesions in both acute and chronic settings. On the other hand, in recent studies, the presence of coronary plaques with vulnerability criteria at OCT identified patients at high risk of cardiac mortality and target vessel MI. This study aims to assess the clinical effectiveness of an OCT-based strategy to guide revascularization in non-culprit intermediate coronary stenosis in patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS), on the basis of the presence of morphological markers of plaque vulnerability. Patients with intermediate coronary lesions in non-culprit intervention-naïve major coronary segments (diameter ≥2.5 mm) and fulfilling all inclusion/exclusion criteria will be eligible. Enrolled patients will be randomized 1:1 to either OCT or FFR/RFR/iFR based treatment. In the OCT-guided arm, non-culprit intermediate lesions will be treated with PCI with implantation of a second-generation drug eluting stent (DES) when a FCT \<75 µm plus at least 2 of 3 other OCT criteria of plaque vulnerability (i.e., MLA \<3.5 mm2, lipid arc with circumferential extension \>180°, and the presence of clusters of macrophages) and/or an MLA \<2 mm2 are detected by OCT. In the absence of the above-mentioned 4 vulnerability criteria, interventional procedures will be performed at discretion of the operator if a luminal thrombus is detected by OCT. In the physiology-guided arm, non-culprit intermediate lesions will be treated with PCI with implantation of a second-generation DES when an iFR or RFR ≤0.89 or an FFR ≤0.80 are measured, otherwise interventional procedures will be deferred. The primary endpoint, a composite of cardiac death and target vessel spontaneous myocardial infarction, will be assessed after 2 and 5 years.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
1,420
OCT images will be acquired by means of the FD C7 XR system or the OPTIS system (both St. Jude Medical, St. Paul, MN, USA) with a non-occlusive technique.(33) The acquired OCT coronary images will be analyzed on-line using a proprietary OCT console (St Jude Medical, Inc., USA). Definitions and cut-offs for OCT vulnerability parameters derived from available consensus documents and from main IVUS/OCT studies.
The iFR and FFR measurements will be obtained using a coronary-pressure guidewire (Pressure Wire / Certus or Aeris for FFR assessment and PressureWire™ X Guidewire/QUANTIEM™ for the RFR assessment by Abbott Vascular, Abbott Park, Illinois, U.S.A; Comet by Boston Scientific, Marlborough, MA, USA), OptoWire by Opsens, Quebec, Canada, or Verrata by Philips, San Diego, CA, USA.).
University Hospital of Patras
Pátrai, AX, Greece
RECRUITINGOspedale C. e G. Mazzoni
Ascoli Piceno, AP, Italy
RECRUITINGEnte ecclesiastico Ospedale Regionale Generale "F. Miulli"
Acquaviva delle Fonti, BA, Italy
RECRUITINGPoliclinico University Hospital
Bari, BA, Italy
Number of patients with cardiac death or non-fatal spontaneous target-vessel myocardial infarction
Composite outcome. Cardiac death will be defined as any death due to heart disease, including heart failure, myocardial infarction, arrhythmia, and sudden unexpected death. Any spontaneous myocardial infarction will be attributed to the randomized intermediate lesion if not clearly attributable to the non-target vessels.
Time frame: 2 years
Number of patients with cardiac death
Cardiac death will be defined as any death due to heart disease, including heart failure, myocardial infarction, arrhythmia, and sudden unexpected death.
Time frame: 2 years
Number of patients with non-fatal spontaneous target-vessel Myocardial infarction (excluding peri-procedural MI)
Any spontaneous myocardial infarction will be attributed to the randomized intermediate lesion if not clearly attributable to the non-target vessels.
Time frame: 2 years
Number of patients with target lesion revascularization (either percutaneous or surgical)
Repeated lesion revascularization will be considered in case of repeated percutaneous coronary intervention and coronary artery bypass grafting the enrolled lesions.
Time frame: 2 years
Number of patients with composite of cardiac death and any myocardial infarction
Composite outcome. Cardiac death will be defined as any death due to heart disease, including heart failure, myocardial infarction, arrhythmia, and sudden unexpected death. Any spontaneous myocardial infarction will be collected regardless of the culprit vessel involved.
Time frame: 2 years
Number of patients with target vessel failure
Composite endpoint including cardiac death, non-fatal target-vessel MI, ischemia-driven target lesion revascularization.
Time frame: 2 years
Number of patients with composite endpoint of peri-procedural complications
* contrast-induced nephropathy: a 25% increase in serum creatinine (SCr) from baseline or a 0.5 mg/dL (44 µmol/L) increase in absolute SCr value-within 48-72 hours after intravenous contrast administration. * dissection requiring bail-out stenting. * post-procedural MI: an increase within 48 hours after the index procedure of creatine kinase\[CK\]-MB (U/L) \>5 times or Troponin (ng/L) \>35 times above the normal value along with at least one of the followings: 1) symptoms of ischemia; 2) new or presumed new significant ST or T changes or new left bundle branch block; 3) new pathologic Q waves on an electrocardiogram; 4) new loss of viable myocardium or new regional wall motion abnormality; 5) reduced flow or major dissection in the coronary at angiography; or 6) intracoronary thrombus by angiography or autopsy. A stand-alone biomarker definition will be accepted in case of increase in the cardiac biomarker CK-MB \>10 times or Troponin \>70 times above the upper normal values.
Time frame: Peri-procedural
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Di Venere Hospital
Bari, BA, Italy
RECRUITINGASST Papa Giovanni XXIII
Bergamo, BG, Italy
RECRUITINGAzienda Ospedaliera San Pio
Benevento, BN, Italy
RECRUITINGAzienda Ospedaliero_Universitaria IRCCS Policlinico di St.Orsola
Bologna, BO, Italy
RECRUITINGARNAS Brotzu
Cagliari, CA, Italy
RECRUITINGP.O. San Giuseppe Moscati
Aversa, CE, Italy
RECRUITING...and 24 more locations