Coronary Neointimal Healing After Intravascular Lithotripsy Compared With Orbital Atherectomy Assessed by Serial Optical Coherence Tomography

,

Coronary atherectomy has been used to modify heavily calcified coronary lesions prior to implantation of drug-eluting stents (DES) during percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI).Intravascular lithotripsy (IVL) has emerged as a novel therapy for the treatment of coronary calcification, which is increasingly used in clinical practice due to its safety, effectiveness, and ease of use. 1,2Recently, we first described optical coherence tomography (OCT) visualization of the healing process after IVL-assisted PCI with DES implantation. 3However, the effect of IVL on neointimal healing after implantation of DES in calcified coronary lesions, compared with that of atherectomy, has not been previously evaluated.Therefore, we sought to investigate the effects of orbital atherectomy (OA) and IVL on the neointimal healing process after DES implantation using serial OCT.
We retrospectively identified 19 patients (median age, 73 years; male, 57.9%) who underwent successful PCI with DES implantation after lesion preparation with OA (n ¼ 8) or IVL (n ¼ 11) and returned for clinically indicated follow-up catheterization at a median of 10 months IQR, 6-16) after the index PCI.There was no significant difference in baseline patient demographics and comorbidities between the OA and IVL groups.OCT was performed at baseline, after OA or IVL, after DES implantation, and during follow-up.Stent expansion was calculated by minimal stent area (MSA)/reference vessel lumen area by OCT.Crosssectional areas of lumen, stent, intrastent lumen, and intrastent tissue were analyzed frame-by-frame at 0.2 mm intervals, which were then used to perform a volumetric analysis: volume or volumetric area (mm 3 ) ¼ P cross-section area (mm 2 ) Â 0.2 mm.From follow-up OCT, neointimal volume (mm 3 ) was calculated as volume of tissue growth between stent struts and intrastent lumen.Percent neointimal volume (%) was calculated as neointimal volume (mm 3 )/volumetric stent area (mm 3 ).Volumetric measures were compared after being normalized to a 1 mm segment (mm 3 /mm; indexed volumetric area or indexed volume) to account for differences in stent length.All data are presented as median and IQR and compared by using the Mann-Whitney test.The study protocol was compliant with the Declaration of Helsinki and approved by the institutional review board at St. Francis Hospital.The need for informed consent for retrospective case review was waived due to minimal risk.
The present study is the first comparative OCT analysis of neointimal healing response after OA-vs IVL-assisted DES implantation.The results of the present study suggest that neointimal healing response at a median follow-up of 10 months was not different between OA-and IVLassisted PCI with DES implantation, supporting the use of either device for the treatment of heavily calcified coronary lesions to facilitate stent implantation.However, potential bias could not be excluded due to the small sample size, and various follow-up durations might have affected outcomes.Larger studies with clinical outcomes are warranted to investigate the long-term effects of OA and IVL-assisted DES implantation.

Declaration of competing interest
Akiko Maehara has been a consultant for Boston Scientific, an advisory board member for SpectraWave, and has received speaker honoraria from Nipro.Evan S. Shlofmitz has been a consultant to Abbott Vascular, Medtronic, and Opsens Medical.Allen Jeremias has received institutional grants and consulting fees from Abbott Vascular and Philips/Volcano; and has received consultant fees from ACIST and Boston Scientific.Richard A. Shlofmitz has been a speaker for Shockwave Medical.Ziad A. Ali reports institutional grants from Abbott, Abiomed, Acist Medical, Boston Scientific, Cardiovascular Systems Inc, Medtronic, Opsens Medical, Philips, and Shockwave Medical; personal fees from Amgen, AstraZeneca, Boston Scientific; equity from Elucid, Lifelink, SpectraWave, Shockwave Medical, and Vital Connect.All other authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose.The need for informed consent for retrospective case review was waived due to minimal risk.

FUFigure 1 .
Figure 1.Neointimal healing response assessed by optical coherence tomography (OCT) after orbital atherectomy (OA)-or intravascular lithotripsy (IVL)-assisted percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with drug-eluting stent (DES) implantation.(A and B) Representative matched OCT cross-sections at baseline, after OA or IVL, after DES implantation, and during follow-up.White arrowheads indicate calcium fracture after OA or IVL.Follow-up OCT cross-sections demonstrate healing process and growth of neointimal tissue covering stent struts.(C) Quantitative parameters of neointimal healing process between OA-and IVL-assisted DES implantation are presented in box and whisker plots.Horizontal line indicates median value, box indicates the interquartile range, and whiskers indicate the minimum and maximum values excluding outliers.