Postprocedural Contrast Mediated FFR Plus Intracoronary Infusion of Nitroglycerin in Multivessel Patients (PROMETEUS TRIAL)
NCT ID: NCT06273293
Last Updated: 2025-03-18
Study Results
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Basic Information
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RECRUITING
NA
150 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2024-05-31
2026-01-20
Brief Summary
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In recent years, functional assessment after intervention has also been increasingly implemented, which, like intracoronary imaging, can make us change our attitude and correlate with the prognosis. The lower implementation of this practice, especially in multivessel patients, may result from having to lose the position of the wire to check equalization, difficulty in crossing the wire, wear/breakage of the material after diagnosis (2-3 vessels), use more time and contrast, etc. These problems could be reduced, at least partially, with the use of the workhorse coronary guidewire pressure microcatheter to measure post-PCI functional assessment. Although the usefulness of post-PCI FFR has been demonstrated, there is no clearly established cut-off value (0.84-0.96) and it seems that in reality the values are a continuum of risk so that the higher the value, the better the prognosis . Furthermore, other simpler indices such as rest or hyperemic indices without adenosine have not been correlated with FFR in post-PCI.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the correlation between cFFR-NTG and other indices taking FFR as a reference in multivessel patients after undergoing intervention. Establish cut-off points and correlate it with adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) in a 1-year clinical follow-up.
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Detailed Description
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Patients with multivessel coronary artery disease are another field in the use of pressure guiding. In these patients, the use of FFR has demonstrated the reclassification of the severity of coronary lesions in up to 40% of cases, modifying the number of functionally significant lesions and making it possible to reorient therapeutic decisions, avoiding interventional treatment of non-significant lesions and with a better prognosis.
However, the use of FFR has some limitations such as the use of adenosine due to its cost, adverse effects (e.g. transient atrioventricular block, angina, headache, etc.) and time consuming. In addition, the presence of atrioventricular block, asthma or severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease are relative contraindications for its use. In this sense, in recent years new rest indices (iFR, RFR, dPR) and hyperemic indices without adenosine (cFFR-NTG, Pd/Pa-NTG or cFFR) have been developed , demonstrating an improvement in terms of outcomes with its use, so they can also be used as a tool to guide us to plan our strategy. These new indices, particularly the cFFR-NTG, are simpler, at least as safe and have an excellent correlation with the FFR with adenosine in the assessment of intermediate coronary lesions.
In recent years, functional assessment after intervention has also been increasingly implemented, which, like intracoronary imaging, can make us change our attitude and correlate with the prognosis. The lower implementation of this practice, especially in multivessel patients, may result from having to lose the position of the wire to check equalization, difficulty in crossing the wire, wear/breakage of the material after diagnosis (2-3 vessels), use more time and contrast, etc. These problems could be reduced, at least partially, with the use of the workhorse coronary guidewire pressure microcatheter to measure post-PCI functional assessment. Although the usefulness of post-PCI FFR has been demonstrated, there is no clearly established cut-off value (0.84-0.96) and it seems that in reality the values are a continuum of risk so that the higher the value, the better the prognosis . Furthermore, other simpler indices such as rest or hyperemic indices without adenosine have not been correlated with FFR in post-PCI.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the correlation between cFFR-NTG and other indices taking FFR as a reference in multivessel patients after undergoing intervention. Establish cut-off points and correlate it with adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) in a 1-year clinical follow-up.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
DIAGNOSTIC
NONE
Study Groups
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Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and guide wire post PCI in multivessel patients
Fractional Flow Reserve
Agreement measurements between the different post-ICP functional values (cFFR+NTG and FFR) will be performed at the end of the intervention on the treated vessels. The study protocol consists of 4 sequential steps (separated by at least 30 sec):
1. Determination of FFR with contrast and NTG: cFFR +NTG will be calculated with the lowest ratio after the infusion of 0.2 mg bolus of intracoronary NTG and pushed with contrast.
2. Determination of distal pressure between basal aortic pressure: The Pd/Pa will be obtained after about 30-60 seconds of the NTG bolus in step 1.
3. Determination of the diastolic dPR index: the average value (2-3 determinations).
4. Determination of fractional flow reserve with adenosine: The FFR will be obtained after continuous peripheral venous infusion with adenosine or with intracoronary boluses according to the protocol of each center.
Interventions
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Fractional Flow Reserve
Agreement measurements between the different post-ICP functional values (cFFR+NTG and FFR) will be performed at the end of the intervention on the treated vessels. The study protocol consists of 4 sequential steps (separated by at least 30 sec):
1. Determination of FFR with contrast and NTG: cFFR +NTG will be calculated with the lowest ratio after the infusion of 0.2 mg bolus of intracoronary NTG and pushed with contrast.
2. Determination of distal pressure between basal aortic pressure: The Pd/Pa will be obtained after about 30-60 seconds of the NTG bolus in step 1.
3. Determination of the diastolic dPR index: the average value (2-3 determinations).
4. Determination of fractional flow reserve with adenosine: The FFR will be obtained after continuous peripheral venous infusion with adenosine or with intracoronary boluses according to the protocol of each center.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Patients with multivessel coronary artery disease (multivessel coronary artery disease will be considered the presence of significant stenosis in 2 or more first or second order vessels greater than 1.5 mm in diameter with an angiographic reduction of their diameter ≥50% by visual estimation) subsidiary of percutaneous coronary revascularization in at least one of them and,
* Use of Navvus pressure microcatheter both for functional diagnosis and for post-PCI evaluation of the different vessels and,
* Patients who have signed the Informed Consent.
Exclusion Criteria
* Hemodynamically unstable patients, acute phase of a STEACS.
* Patient with significant comorbidity with limited life expectancy.
* Patients with the patient's express refusal to participate in the study.
* Pregnant or breastfeeding female patients.
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Fundación EPIC
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Locations
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Hospital Universitario San Juan de Alicante
Alicante, , Spain
Hospital Universitario de Badajoz
Badajoz, , Spain
Hospital Universitario Juan Ramón Jiménez
Huelva, , Spain
Hospital Universitario Virgen del Rocío
Seville, , Spain
Countries
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Central Contacts
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References
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Neumann FJ, Sousa-Uva M, Ahlsson A, Alfonso F, Banning AP, Benedetto U, et al. 2018 ESC/EACTS Guidelines on myocardial revascularization. Eur Heart J. 2019;40(2):87-165.
van Nunen LX, Zimmermann FM, Tonino PA, Barbato E, Baumbach A, Engstrom T, Klauss V, MacCarthy PA, Manoharan G, Oldroyd KG, Ver Lee PN, Van't Veer M, Fearon WF, De Bruyne B, Pijls NH; FAME Study Investigators. Fractional flow reserve versus angiography for guidance of PCI in patients with multivessel coronary artery disease (FAME): 5-year follow-up of a randomised controlled trial. Lancet. 2015 Nov 7;386(10006):1853-60. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(15)00057-4. Epub 2015 Aug 30.
Gutierrez-Barrios A, Noval-Morillas I, Camacho-Freire S, Puche JE, Gheorghe L, Silva E, Alarcon-Lastra I, Canadas-Pruano D, Gomez-Menchero A, Calle-Perez G, Diaz-Fernandez JF, Vazquez-Garcia R. Contrast FFR plus intracoronary injection of nitro-glycerine accurately predicts FFR for coronary stenosis functional assessment. Minerva Cardiol Angiol. 2021 Aug;69(4):449-457. doi: 10.23736/S2724-5683.20.05354-2. Epub 2020 Dec 1.
Patel MR, Jeremias A, Maehara A, Matsumura M, Zhang Z, Schneider J, Tang K, Talwar S, Marques K, Shammas NW, Gruberg L, Seto A, Samady H, Sharp ASP, Ali ZA, Mintz G, Davies J, Stone GW. 1-Year Outcomes of Blinded Physiological Assessment of Residual Ischemia After Successful PCI: DEFINE PCI Trial. JACC Cardiovasc Interv. 2022 Jan 10;15(1):52-61. doi: 10.1016/j.jcin.2021.09.042.
Thakur U, Khav N, Comella A, Michail M, Ihdayhid AR, Poon E, Nicholls SJ, Ko B, Brown AJ. Fractional Flow Reserve following Percutaneous Coronary Intervention. J Interv Cardiol. 2020 Jun 5;2020:7467943. doi: 10.1155/2020/7467943. eCollection 2020.
Other Identifiers
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EPIC35-PROMETEUS
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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