Understanding Coronary Revascularization: Anatomy vs. Physiology

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This content discusses the prevalence of angina in women compared to men, the importance of stable angina in predicting outcomes, the need for better diagnostic methods for coronary angiography, and the differences in obstructive CAD by sex and ethnicity in stable angina cases. It highlights the challenges and considerations in evaluating and managing coronary artery disease, particularly in women.


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  1. Coronary Revascularization: Anatomy vs. Physiology S. Elissa Altin, MD Assistant Professor Yale University VA Connecticut

  2. Disclosures I have no disclosures.

  3. Learning Objectives Prevalence of angina in women Prevalence of non-obstructive disease in women Anatomy vs. physiology for lesion assessment FFR iFR Microvascular disease measures in women

  4. Angina Prevalence in Women Angina is more prevalent among women than men (pooled random- effects sex ratio of 1.20 [95% CI 1.14 to 1.28], P<0.0001). Among Americans, ratio was 1.40 [95% CI 1.28 to 1.52], with non- whites>whites Hemingway et al. Circulation 2008;117:1526

  5. Stable Angina Portends Worse Outcomes, Regardless of Anatomy in Men and Women Jesperson et al. EHJ 2012.

  6. Learning Objectives Prevalence of angina in women Prevalence of non-obstructive disease in women Anatomy vs. physiology for lesion assessment FFR iFR Microvascular disease measures in women

  7. Better Diagnostic Methods Are Needed To Stratify Patients For Coronary Angiography The New England Journal of Medicine National Cath Lab Data Registry: 120 62% of patients undergoing elective cardiac catheterization do not have obstructive CAD 100 % of total patients 80 Majority of patients (84%) received noninvasive diagnostic testsprior to referral to catheterization 38% obstructive coronary artery disease 60 40 Low yield at invasive angiography is a diagnostic challenge 20 0 Pre-Coronary Angiography Post-Coronary Angiography N=397,954 N=149,739 Patel MR et al. N Engl J Med 2010;362:886-95.

  8. Significant CAD by Sex and Ethnicity in Stable Angina Women have significantly less obstructive CAD independent of ethnicity Shaw et al. Circulation 2008 ;117:1787

  9. In ACS Non-Obstructive CAD is more Common in Women Up to 20% of ACS patients referred for angiography have no significant CAD Of these ~60% are women and 40% are men Bugiardini et al. JAMA 2005;293:477-484 Daly et al. Circulation 2006;113:490-498 9

  10. Learning Objectives Prevalence of angina in women Prevalence of non-obstructive disease in women Anatomy vs. physiology for lesion assessment FFR iFR Microvascular disease measures in women

  11. Accuracy of Visual Assessment 20% overestimation of lesion severity by physician visual assessment compared to quantitative angiography PVA, Physician visual assessment; QCA, quantitative coronary angiography Zhang et al. JAMA Internal Medicine 2018.

  12. Anatomy vs. Physiology Based Outcomes Johnson et al. Circ: Cardiovasc Imaging 2013.

  13. Learning Objectives Prevalence of angina in women Prevalence of non-obstructive disease in women Anatomy vs. physiology for lesion assessment FFR iFR Microvascular disease measures in women

  14. Women have higher FFR for given degree of stenosis than men (LAD) No sex difference in anatomic stenosis severity Women have higher FFR values at maximum hyperemia compared with male patients with the same degree of LAD stenosis Kang et al. JACC CI 2013.

  15. FAME: Women have higher FFR values for the same degree of stenosis Kim et al. JACC CI 2012.

  16. FFR-Guided PCI Equally Beneficial in Men and Women Kim et al. JACC CI 2012.

  17. Learning Objectives Prevalence of angina in women Prevalence of non-obstructive disease in women Anatomy vs. physiology for lesion assessment FFR iFR Microvascular disease measures in women

  18. DEFINE-FLAIR Sub-study FFR-guided strategy was associated with a higher rate of revascularization than iFR-guided strategy in men, but not in women. No sex differences in outcomes for FFR vs iFR guided interventions Kim et al. JACC CI 2019.

  19. Learning Objectives Prevalence of angina in women Prevalence of non-obstructive disease in women Anatomy vs. physiology for lesion assessment FFR iFR Microvascular disease measures in women

  20. IMR similar between men and women, CFR lower (but due to increased resting flow) Kobayashi et al. JACC CI 2015. Morrow et al. BMJ Case Report 2019.

  21. Is Microvascular Dysfunction the Underlying Cause of Angina in Women without Obstructive CAD? Key Findings Kobayashi et al. JACC CI 2015. 1. Confirms that CFR is lower in women than men 2. BUT Microvascular function (IMR) is the same for men and women. 3. CFR is lower due to shorter resting transit time (OR higher coronary flow at rest) in women 157 patients (70% women), with angina and non-obstructive (<50%) CAD. Baseline intracoronary CFR, IMR, FFR. Coronary flow based on thermodilution (Mean transit time) Tmn=inverse correlate of absolute flow at rest and hyperemia IMR is a direct hyperemic measure; eliminates variability of resting vascular tone Resting transit time subject to substantial variation due to resting hemodynamics (BP, HR, contractility, coronary pathology)

  22. Resting Transit Time and Coronary Flow: Predictors Short transit time=higher coronary flow Predictors of shorter transit time at rest Female sex (p=0.006) HTN (p=0.02) Smaller vessels (NS) Adverse prognosis of abnormal CFR likely multifactorial: Atherosclerosis: Early macrovascular disease Microvascular Dysfunction Non-Atherosclerosis: HTN, diastolic dysfunction, compounded by other risk factors common to women including insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome, diabetes

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