Optimal Stent Deployment Strategy of Contemporary Stents (PERFECTPSP)
Coronary Artery Disease
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Coronary Artery Disease
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Stable angina patients or acute coronary syndrome patients with bystander stable coronary artery disease
With one or more significant epicardial stenosis in native coronary arteries suitable for direct stenting, according to the judgement of treating operator.
The use of fractional flow reserve (FFR) or resting indices like iFR and RFR to assess lesion severity is encouraged.
- Subject must be at least 18 years of age
- Written consent to participate in the study
Exclusion Criteria:
- Lesions not suitable for direct stenting, like (sub)-total stenosis, severely calcified lesions
- Culprit lesions of acute coronary syndrome cannot be randomized to the trial. After successful treatment of the ACS culprit lesion, patients however can be randomized in the trial in case of remaining stable non-culprit lesions that thought to be stented directly of during a staged procedure.
- Lesions not suitable for OCT catheter delivery and imaging, e.g. left main or ostial right coronary artery stenosis, lesions in coronary bypass grafts or tortuous anatomy
- Treatment for in-stent restenosis
- Bifurcation lesions in which a two-stent technique or a proximal postdilatation is planned.
- Treatment of coronary artery bypass grafts
- Creatine Clearance ≤ 30 ml/min/1.73 m2 (as calculated by MDRD formula for estimated GFR)
- Known hypersensitivity or allergy for cobalt chromium
- Known comorbidity associated with a life expectancy < 1 year
- Unable to understand and follow study-related instructions or unable to comply with study protocol
Sites / Locations
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Active Comparator
PSP technique
Direct Stenting
The definitions of the PSP technique are: Predilatation is mandatory with a balloon diameter equal to or maximally 0.5 mm less than the distal reference vessel diameter. We hypothesize that this lesion preparation and fracture of the calcium may result in better stent apposition, less recoil and higher minimal stent area (MSA) Also see endpoints. The DES should be deployed at 2 atm. above the nominal pressure. This relatively low stent deployment pressure may prevent stent edge dissections. The postdilatation is mandatory with a shorter length and (at least 0.25mm) larger diameter non-compliant balloon at 16 atm. The apposition, minimal stent area (MSA) and recoil may improve with this large, high pressure postdilatation. The slightly shorter balloon can prevent edge dissections.
• The DES is directly placed without any lesion preparation and deployed at a pressure at the discretion of the operator. Ideally a pressure would be achieved in which angiographic expansion of the DES is complete (without significant dog-boning)