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Barriers Limiting OCT Penetration in Clinical Practice

Not yet recruiting
Conditions
Coronary Artery Disease (CAD) (E.G., Angina, Myocardial Infarction, and Atherosclerotic Heart Disease (ASHD))
Registration Number
NCT07193693
Lead Sponsor
Consorzio Futuro in Ricerca
Brief Summary

The updated guidelines from the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) for chronic coronary syndrome (CCS) have upgraded the use of IVUS and OCT to a class IA recommendation for complex PCI, based on evidence showing a reduction in serious clinical events, including mortality, compared to conventional angiography alone. Despite this, IVUS and OCT are underutilized in daily practice due to factors such as time, cost, and limited technology availability. Investigating the reasons behind this underuse is necessary, especially now that these technologies are more accessible and cost-effective. Additionally, OCT could be particularly helpful in specific cases such as coronary bifurcations and severe calcifications, warranting further evaluation of its use in these settings.

The objective of the study OCT2ACT is to investigate:

* The main reasons/barriers limiting the use of intracoronary imaging in complex PCI cases where it is indicated as suggested by guidelines;

* The main reasons behind the selection of IVUS or OCT in such patients;

* In cases where OCT is used, how this technology can influence the procedural planning and optimization in complex clinical settings.

The participating centers will include three cohorts of patients:

1. Cohort intracoronary imaging NO: patients who meet the inclusion/exclusion criteria, but did not undergo intracoronary imaging (IVUS or OCT) due to operator's decision.

The aim is to describe the main reasons/barriers for not using imaging.

2. Cohort intracoronary imaging YES according to guidelines recommendation: patients who meet the inclusion/exclusion criteria and underwent intracoronary imaging as recommended by guidelines.

The aim is to understand the main reasons for the decision to use IVUS or OCT and the clinical benefits perceived by the operator.

3. Cohort intracoronary imaging YES outside guidelines recommendation: patients who meet the inclusion/exclusion criteria and underwent intracoronary imaging (IVUS or OCT) outside.

Detailed Description

The last update of European Society of Cardiology (ESC) chronic coronary syndrome (CCS) guidelines upgraded the use of intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) imaging and optical coherence tomography (OCT) to class IA in the setting of complex percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) (in particular left main, true bifurcations, and long lesions).

This strong level of recommendation is based on the recent evidence that intracoronary imaging reduces the incidence of hard clinical endpoints, including mortality, as compared to conventional angiography alone.

Yet, there is compelling evidence documenting the under-utilization of IVUS and OCT in daily practice. Many potential reasons, including time, costs, limited availability of technology, expertise of the operators have been suggested. However, no specific study investigated the reasons behind this malpractice. In particular, these reasons should be investigated now that intracoronary imaging has been upgraded to class I recommendation and that many technologies are available significantly reducing the economic burden. In addition, there are some particular anatomic subsets where OCT could be particularly helpful (bifurcations, severe calcification, acute coronary syndrome patients) and it could be interesting to assess the penetration of this technology in this subset of patients. Finally, these devices can be used also in anatomical subsets (diagnosis and procedural guidance) outside from Guidelines recommendations and it is important to assess their safety and clinical advantage in this setting.

Objective

The OCT2ACT study aims to investigate:

* The main reasons/barriers limiting the use of intracoronary imaging in complex PCI where it is indicated as suggested by guidelines

* The main reasons behind the selection of IVUS or OCT in complex PCI

* In complex PCI guided by OCT, How OCT can influence the procedural planning and optimization in complex clinical settings.

The OCT2ACT is an observational, prospective, multicenter, investigator-driven study.

Participating centers will include three different cohorts of patients:

1. Cohort intracoronary imaging NO In this cohort, the investigators will include all the patients matching inclusion/exclusion criteria, but in whom intracoronary imaging (IVUS or OCT) was not used (operator's decision). The aim is to have a description of the main reasons/barriers that led to the avoidance of imaging utilization.

2. Cohort intracoronary imaging YES according to guidelines recommendation In this cohort, the investigators will include all the patients matching inclusion/exclusion criteria in whom intracoronary imaging (IVUS or OCT) was used (operator's decision) according to guidelines recommendation. The aim is to understand the main reasons behind the decision to use IVUS or OCT and the clinical advantages perceived by the operators.

3. Cohort intracoronary imaging YES outside guidelines recommendation In this cohort, the investigators will include all the patients matching inclusion/exclusion criteria in whom OCT was used (operator's decision) outside Guidelines recommendations. The aim is to understand the main reasons behind the decision to use OCT outside guidelines recommendation, its safety and the clinical advantages perceived by the operators.

After Ethic Committee approval and site initiation visit, each participating center will recruit consecutive patients for a time window of 3 months.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
1000
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Cohort intracoronary imaging NO: Reasons/barriers for not using intracoronary imagingFrom the enrollment to the end of the procedure

As suggested in the consensus document by Cabana et al, the main reasons/barriers will be classified according to the following groups:

Attitudes (lack of agreement and inertia of previous practice):

* Clinical and angiographic data are sufficient

* Intracoronary imaging would not change my PCI strategy

* Intracoronary imaging has low added value on improving clinical outcome

Knowledge (lack of awareness and familiarity):

* Intracoronary imaging not feasible for technical or anatomical reasons (e.g., tortuous vessels, etc.)

* Lack of confidence in interpretation of images

* Lack of confidence in translating imaging features into an actionable PCI plan

* Inadequate support by device specialists in the cath lab

Behavior (external barriers):

* Time constraint

* Device costs

* Absence of adequate coding / reimbursement

Cohort intracoronary imaging YES according to guidelines recommendations: Reasons behind the selection of IVUS or OCTFrom enrollment to the end of the procedure

The operator has to define the reason behind the choice of the imaging modality with particular regard to the anticipated benefit related to such choice.

Cohort intracoronary imaging YES outside guidelines recommendations: Reasons behind the selection of OCT or IVUS outside guidelines recommendationsfrom enrollment to the end of the procedure

The operator has to define the reason behind the choice of the imaging modality with particular regard to the anticipated benefit related to such choice in a setting that is outside guidelines recommendations

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Cohort intracoronary imaging NO: secondary endpointsfrom September to December 2025

Association between baseline and procedural characteristics and missing use of intracoronary imaging

Cohort intracoronary imaging YES outside guidelines recommendations: safety endpointsfrom enrollment to the end of the procedure

Procedural complications related to OCT or IVUS use. The safety endpoints will be recorded in both the cohorts intracoronary imaging YES and compared to investigate differences.

Cohort intracoronary imaging YES outside guidelines recommendations: secondary endpointsfrom September to December 2025

Description of OCT penetration over IVUS in bifurcations, LM and stent failure

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