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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Rational and design of the European randomized Optical Coherence Tomography Optimized Bifurcation Event Reduction Trial (OCTOBER)

Juan Luis Gutiérrez-chicoOlli A. KajanderJohn A. OrmistonMorten MadsenIndulis KumsarsIrene Santos-pardoJakob HjortPeep LaanmetsDarren MylotteChristian EekJanusz KockmanEvald Høj ChristiansenPaul KnaapenNils WittTruls RåmunddalSimon J WalshFrancesco BurzottaNiels Ramsing HolmLukasz KoltowskiLene Nyhus Andreasen

subject

Target lesionMalemedicine.medical_specialtyBiolääketieteet - Biomedicinemedicine.medical_treatment030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyCoronary AngiographyLesion03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePercutaneous Coronary InterventionMulticenter trialmedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineMyocardial infarctionTomographyAgedUnstable anginabusiness.industrySisätaudit - Internal medicineCoronary StenosisPercutaneous coronary interventionStentDrug-Eluting StentsMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseCoronary VesselsStenosisTreatment OutcomeOptical CoherenceSettore MED/11 - MALATTIE DELL'APPARATO CARDIOVASCOLAREFemaleRadiologymedicine.symptomCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessTomography Optical Coherence

description

Background Percutaneous coronary intervention in complex bifurcation lesions is prone to suboptimal implantation results and is associated with increased risk of subsequent clinical events. Angiographic ambiguity is high during bifurcation stenting, but it is unknown if procedural guidance by intravascular optical coherence tomography (OCT) improves clinical outcome. Methods and design OCTOBER is a randomized, investigator-initiated, multicenter trial aimed to show superiority of OCT-guided stent implantation compared to standard angiographic-guided implantation in bifurcation lesions. The primary outcome measure is a 2-year composite end point of cardiac death, target lesion myocardial infarction, and ischemia-driven target lesion revascularization. The calculated sample size is 1,200 patients in total, and allocation is 1:1. Eligible patients have stable or unstable angina pectoris or stabilized non–ST elevation myocardial infarction, and a coronary bifurcation lesion with significant main vessel stenosis and more than 50 % stenosis in a side branch with a reference diameter ≥2.5mm. Treatment is performed by the provisional side branch stenting technique or 2-stent techniques, and the systematic OCT guiding protocol is aimed to evaluate (1) plaque preparation, (2) lesion length, (3) segmental reference sizes, (4) lesion coverage, (5) stent expansion, (6) malapposition, (7) wire positions, and (8) ostial results. Implications A positive outcome of the OCTOBER trial may establish OCT as a routine tool for optimization of complex percutaneous coronary intervention, whereas a negative result would indicate that OCT remains a tool for ad hoc evaluation in selected cases.

10.1016/j.ahj.2018.08.003https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ahj.2018.08.003