Utility of the ACC/AHA Lesion Classification to Predict Outcomes After Contemporary DES Treatment: Individual Patient Data Pooled Analysis From 7 Randomized Trials

Author:

Konigstein Maayan12ORCID,Redfors Björn13ORCID,Zhang Zixuan1,Kotinkaduwa Lak N.1,Mintz Gary S.1ORCID,Smits Pieter C.4ORCID,Serruys Patrick W.5ORCID,von Birgelen Clemens67ORCID,Madhavan Mahesh V.18ORCID,Golomb Mordechai19,Ben‐Yehuda Ori110ORCID,Mehran Roxana111ORCID,Leon Martin B.18,Stone Gregg W.10ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Clinical Trials Center Cardiovascular Research Foundation New York NY

2. Tel‐Aviv Medical Center and the Sackler Faculty of Medicine Tel‐Aviv University Tel Aviv Israel

3. Sahlgrenska University Hospital Gothenburg Sweden

4. Maasstad Ziekenhuis Rotterdam The Netherlands

5. Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine London United Kingdom

6. Department of Cardiology Thoraxcentrum Twente, Medisch Spectrum Twente Enschede The Netherlands

7. Department of Health Technology and Services Research, Technical Medical Centre University of Twente Enschede The Netherlands

8. Division of Cardiology NewYork‐Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center New York NY

9. Heart Institute Hadassah Medical Center Faculty of Medicine Hebrew University of Jerusalem Jerusalem Israel

10. University of California ‐ San Diego Health – La Jolla and Hillcrest Hospitals San Diego CA

11. The Zena and Michael A. Wiener Cardiovascular Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai New York NY

Abstract

Background Use of the modified American College of Cardiology (ACC)/American Heart Association (AHA) lesion classification as a prognostic tool to predict short‐ and long‐term clinical outcomes after percutaneous coronary intervention in the modern drug‐eluting stent era is uncertain. Methods and Results Patient‐level data from 7 prospective, randomized trials were pooled. Clinical outcomes of patients undergoing single lesion percutaneous coronary intervention with second‐generation drug‐eluting stent were analyzed according to modified ACC/AHA lesion class. The primary end point was target lesion failure (TLF: composite of cardiac death, target vessel myocardial infarction, or ischemia‐driven target lesion revascularization). Clinical outcomes to 5 years were compared between patients treated for noncomplex (class A/B1) versus complex (class B2/C) lesions. Eight thousand five hundred sixteen patients (age 63.1±10.8 years, 70.5% male) were analyzed. Lesions were classified as A, B1, B2, and C in 7.9%, 28.5%, 33.7%, and 30.0% of cases, respectively. Target lesion failure was higher in patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention of complex versus noncomplex lesions at 30 days (2.0% versus 1.1%, P =0.004), at 1 year (4.6% versus 3.0%, P =0.0005), and at 5 years (12.4% versus 9.2%, P =0.0001). By multivariable analysis, treatment of ACC/AHA class B2/C lesions was significantly associated with higher rate of 5‐year target lesion failure (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.39 [95% CI, 1.17–1.64], P =0.0001) driven by significantly higher rates of target vessel myocardial infarction and ischemia‐driven target lesion revascularization. Conclusions In this pooled large‐scale analysis, treating complex compared with noncomplex lesions according to the modified ACC/AHA classification with second‐generation drug‐eluting stent was associated with worse 5‐year clinical outcomes. This historical classification system may be useful in the contemporary era for predicting early and late outcomes following percutaneous coronary intervention.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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