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  3. Long-Term Prognostic Impact of OCT-Derived High-Risk Plaque Features: Extended Follow-Up of the CLIMA Study.
 

Long-Term Prognostic Impact of OCT-Derived High-Risk Plaque Features: Extended Follow-Up of the CLIMA Study.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/88747
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.jcin.2025.04.044
PubMed ID
40500004
Description
Background
The long-term prognostic impact of presumed high-risk morphologic plaque features detected by intracoronary optical coherence tomographic (OCT) imaging remains largely unknown.
Objectives
The aim of this study was to assess the relationship between OCT plaque characteristics and cardiovascular outcomes throughout 5 years as part of the CLIMA (Relationship Between OCT Coronary Plaque Morphology and Clinical Outcome) study.
Methods
In the multicenter, international, prospective CLIMA study, 1,003 patients underwent OCT evaluation of the untreated proximal left anterior descending coronary artery. The 4 prespecified high-risk criteria were thin-cap fibroatheroma (TCFA), minimum luminal area <3.5 mm2, lipid arc >180°, and the presence of macrophages. The primary composite endpoint was cardiac death or target segment myocardial infarction (TS-MI).
Results
At 5-year follow-up (median 1,825 days; Q1-Q3: 1,137-1,825 days), the presence of all 4 OCT criteria, observed in 3.6% of patients at baseline, was independently associated with the primary endpoint (adjusted HR: 4.33; 95% CI: 2.01-9.33). The individual risks for cardiac death (HR: 3.73; 95% CI: 1.59-8.73) and TS-MI (HR: 7.02; 95% CI: 2.37-20.77) were significantly increased in patients with vs without all 4 OCT criteria. The combined presence of 4 OCT criteria remained significantly associated with the primary endpoint independently of high-intensity lipid-lowering therapy (adjusted HR: 2.94; 95% CI: 1.21-7.11). The presence of any TCFA was observed in 18.3% of patients and was similarly predictive of cardiac death and/or TS-MI.
Conclusions
The simultaneous presence of 4 OCT high-risk features, although infrequent, was independently associated with cardiac death or TS-MI on long-term follow-up. The presence of any TCFA was 5-fold as prevalent and similarly predictive of 5-year adverse outcomes. (Relationship Between OCT Coronary Plaque Morphology and Clinical Outcome [CLIMA]; NCT02883088).
Date of Publication
2025-06-09
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health
Keyword(s)
clinical events
•
coronary artery disease
•
myocardial infarction
•
optical coherence tomography
•
thin-cap fibroatheroma
•
vulnerable plaque
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Biccirè, Flavio Giuseppe
Fabbiocchi, Franco
Gatto, Laura
La Manna, Alessio
Ozaki, Yukio
Romagnoli, Enrico
Marco, Valeria
Boi, Alberto
Fineschi, Massimo
Piedimonte, Giulio
Cerrato, Enrico
Musto, Carmine
Taglieri, Nevio
Di Giorgio, Alessandro
Vizzari, Giampiero
Ruscica, Giovanni
Canova, Paolo Angelo
Vergallo, Rocco
Burzotta, Francesco
Limbruno, Ugo
Albertucci, Mario
Räber, Lorenz
Clinic of Cardiology
Crea, Filippo
Alfonso, Fernando
Arbustini, Eloisa
Stone, Gregg W
Prati, Francesco
Additional Credits
Clinic of Cardiology
Series
JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions
Publisher
Elsevier
ISSN
1876-7605
1936-8798
Access(Rights)
restricted
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