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Article
Peri-strut low-intensity areas in optical coherence tomography correlate with peri-strut inflammation and neointimal proliferation: an in-vivo correlation study in the familial hypercholesterolemic coronary swine model of in-stent restenosis.
Coronary artery disease
  • Armando Tellez
  • Maxwell E Afari, Maine Medical Center
  • Piotr P Buszman
  • Paul Seifert
  • Yanping Cheng
  • Krzysztof Milewski
  • Jennifer C McGregor
  • Javier A Garza
  • Mary B Roberts
  • Geng Hua Yi
  • Greg L Kaluza
  • Juan F Granada
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-1-2014
MeSH Headings
Animals, Coronary Artery Disease, Coronary Restenosis, Coronary Vessels, Disease Models, Animal, Drug-Eluting Stents, Fibrin, Graft Occlusion, Vascular, Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II, Hyperplasia, Inflammation, Male, Neointima, Stents, Swine, Tomography, Optical Coherence
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Peri-strut low-intensity area (PLI) is a common imaging finding during the evaluation of in-stent neointima using optical coherence tomography (OCT). We aimed to determine the biological significance of PLI by comparing in-vivo OCT images with the corresponding histological sections obtained from the familial hypercholesterolemic swine model of coronary stenosis.

METHODS: A total of 26 coronary vessels of nine familial hypercholesterolemic swine were injured with 30% balloon overstretch and then immediately followed by everolimus eluting or bare metal stent placement at 20% overstretch. At 30 days, all stented vessels were subjected to in-vivo OCT analysis and were harvested for histological evaluation. For OCT analysis, stent cross-sections (three per stent) were categorized into presence (PLI+) or absence (PLI-) of PLI. In histology, inflammation and fibrin deposition were scored semiquantitatively from 0 (none) to 3 (severe).

RESULTS: PLI was found in 64.9% of stent sections. Peri-strut inflammation was more frequently observed in OCT sections PLI (+) compared with PLI (-) (56.0 vs. 7.4%, P=0.01). In contrast, peri-strut fibrin deposits was similar in both groups (PLI+=58.0% vs. PLI-=59.3%, P=0.94). Histological neointimal thickness was significantly higher in PLI (+) sections (mean±SE: 0.68±0.06 vs. 0.34±0.02 mm; P56% PLI, area under the curve=0.86, P

CONCLUSION: The presence of PLI in OCT correlates with neointimal thickness and appears to have a diagnostic value in the recognition of peri-strut inflammation, therefore possibly serving as a surrogate for in-vivo assessment of stent efficacy.

Citation Information
Armando Tellez, Maxwell E Afari, Piotr P Buszman, Paul Seifert, et al.. "Peri-strut low-intensity areas in optical coherence tomography correlate with peri-strut inflammation and neointimal proliferation: an in-vivo correlation study in the familial hypercholesterolemic coronary swine model of in-stent restenosis." Coronary artery disease Vol. 25 Iss. 7 (2014) p. 595 - 601 ISSN: 1473-5830
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/maxwell-afari/6/