OCT-guided PCI shows better early stent coverage than angiography in NSTE-ACS imaging study
This randomized optical coherence tomography imaging study enrolled 60 patients with non-ST elevation acute coronary syndrome undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention. Patients were assigned to OCT-guided PCI with 3-month OCT follow-up (O3 group), angiography-guided PCI with 3-month OCT follow-up (A3 group), or angiography-guided PCI with 6-month OCT follow-up (A6 group). The primary outcome was the proportion of covered struts at follow-up.
At 3-month follow-up, the OCT-guided group (O3) showed significantly higher stent coverage than the angiography-guided group (A3): 95.2% versus 92.3% of struts covered (p < 0.001). Incomplete strut apposition was lower in the O3 group (0.46%) compared to the A3 group (0.76%, p = 0.006). However, at 6 months, the angiography-guided group (A6) achieved 97.4% coverage, surpassing the 3-month OCT-guided result. The study identified optimal cut-off values for incomplete strut apposition predicting coverage: 200 μm at 3 months and 308 μm at 6 months.
Only one patient experienced target lesion revascularization during 3-year clinical follow-up (in the A3 group). The study was limited by its small sample size (60 patients), imaging-only endpoints, and lack of power for clinical outcomes. While OCT guidance appears to accelerate early vascular healing in this imaging study, the clinical significance of these findings remains uncertain and requires confirmation in larger trials with clinical endpoints.