iFR-guided CABG improves mid-term graft patency versus angiography alone in multivessel disease
This single-blinded randomized controlled trial compared coronary artery bypass grafting guided by angiography supplemented with instantaneous wave-free ratio assessment versus angiography alone in patients with multivessel coronary artery disease and at least one angiographically intermediate stenosis (50%-75%). The primary outcome was graft patency evaluated by coronary computed tomography angiography at 2, 12, and 36 months.
At 36 months, iFR-guided CABG demonstrated significantly higher left internal mammary artery-to-left anterior descending artery graft patency (80.5% vs. 56.8%; RR, 1.42 [95% CI, 1.03-1.95]; P = 0.03) and saphenous vein graft patency (90.2% vs. 70.3%; P = 0.046) compared to angiography-guided CABG. However, major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events showed no significant difference between groups (28% vs. 20%; RR, 1.40 [95% CI, 0.69-2.85]; P = 0.48). Safety and tolerability data were not reported.
Key limitations include 78% follow-up completion at 36 months, which may affect outcome reliability. The confidence interval for the LIMA-to-LAD patency result includes the null value at its lower bound, indicating some statistical uncertainty. While the RCT design supports causal inference for graft patency, the lack of significant MACCE difference and incomplete follow-up temper conclusions about long-term clinical benefit. The findings suggest iFR assessment may help optimize surgical target selection in CABG for intermediate lesions, but should be interpreted cautiously pending further validation.