A Comparison of Fractional Flow Reserve-Guided Percutaneous Coronary Intervention and Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery in Patients With Multivessel Coronary Artery Disease (FAME 3)
Coronary Disease, Coronary Stenosis
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Coronary Disease
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- 1. Age ≥ 21 years with angina and/or evidence of myocardial ischemia
- 2. Three vessel CAD, defined as ≥ 50% diameter stenosis by visual estimation in each of the three major epicardial vessels or major side branches, but not involving left main coronary artery, and amenable to revascularization by both PCI and CABG as determined by the Heart Team. Patients with a non-dominant right coronary artery may be included if only the left anterior descending artery (LAD) and left circumflex have ≥50% stenosis
- 3. Willing and able to provide informed, written consent
Exclusion Criteria:
- 1. Requirement for other cardiac or non-cardiac surgical procedure (e.g., valve replacement, carotid revascularization)
- 2. Cardiogenic shock and/or need for mechanical/pharmacologic hemodynamic support
- 3. Recent STEMI (<5 days prior to randomization)
- 4. Ongoing Non STEMI with biomarkers (cardiac troponin) still rising
- 5. Known left ventricular ejection fraction <30%
- 6. Life expectancy < 2 years
- 7. Requiring renal replacement therapy
- 8. Undergoing evaluation for organ transplantation
- 9. Participation or planned participation in another clinical trial, except for observational registries
- 10. Pregnancy
- 11. Inability to take dual antiplatelet therapy for six months
- 12. Previous CABG
- 13. Left main disease requiring revascularization
- 14. Extremely calcified or tortuous vessels precluding FFR measurement
- 15. Any target lesion with in-stent drug-eluting stent restenosis
Sites / Locations
- Palo Alto VA
- Stanford University
- Atlanta VA Medical Center
- Jesse Brown VA Medical Center
- University of Kansas Medical Center
- Lexinton VA
- University of Kentucky Medical Center
- Baystate Medical Center
- HealthEast St. Joseph's Hospital
- Penn Presbyterian Medical Center
- Centennial Heart
- Houston Methodist Hospital
- University of Virginia
- Peninsula Health
- St. Vincent's Hospital Melbourne
- Concord Hospital
- Royal North Shore
- University of Sydney
- Cardiovascular Center Aalst
- Le'Centre Hospitalier de l'Universite de Montreal
- York PCI Group INC
- University of Ottawa Heart Institute
- Masaryk University and University Hospital Brno
- Rigshospitalet University Hospital
- Cardiovascular Hospital
- Hungarian Institute of Cardiology
- Asan Medical Center
- Vilnius University Hospital Santariskiu Klinikos
- Catharina Hospital Eindhoven
- HagaZiekenhuis
- Isala Klinieken
- Waikato Hospital
- Stavanger University Hospital
- University Clinical Center of Serbia
- Clinical Center Kragujevac
- Sahlgrenska University Hospital
- Danderyds Sjukhus
- Karolinska Institutet, Dep of clinical science and education, Södersjukhuset
- Wales Heart Research Institute
- University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire
- Golden Jubilee National Hospital
- Kings College Hospital
- St. Thomas' Hospital
- Wythenshawe Hospital
- Oxford University Hospital NHS Trust
- Southampton University Hospitals NHS Trust
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Active Comparator
Active Comparator
FFR guided PCI
CABG
Patients undergoing PCI will have FFR measured with a St. Jude Medical coronary pressure wire across all lesions. If the FFR is ≤0.80, then PCI will be performed with the Medtronic Resolute Integrity (or Onyx) drug-eluting stent (DES) as per usual routine. If the FFR is >0.80 then PCI will be deferred. Only those sites with prior experience measuring FFR will be included in the FAME 3 trial. These patients in whom FFR of a particular lesion was not possible will be included in all analyses based on the intention to treat principle.
CABG will be performed as per clinical routine at each participating center. Both off-pump and on-pump surgery are acceptable, as long as the surgeon and the site are experienced in the particular technique. An internal mammary graft to the LAD should be attempted in all cases, if feasible. Complete arterial revascularization is strongly recommended, however, each center should use a conduit strategy with which they are most comfortable. All vessels ≥ 1,5 mm in diameter and with ≥ 50% stenosis should be bypassed, if technically feasible.