1 / 47

Virtual Histology:From Theory to Vulnerable Plaque Detection

Virtual Histology:From Theory to Vulnerable Plaque Detection. Shaoliang Chen MD Nanjing First Hospital Nanjing Cardiovascular Hospital. Acute coronary syndrome (ACS) commonly results from rupture of thin-cap fibroatheroma (TCFA), and occasionally results from erosion or calcified nodules.

morwen
Télécharger la présentation

Virtual Histology:From Theory to Vulnerable Plaque Detection

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Virtual Histology:From Theory to Vulnerable Plaque Detection Shaoliang Chen MD Nanjing First Hospital Nanjing Cardiovascular Hospital

  2. Acute coronary syndrome (ACS) commonly results from rupture of thin-cap fibroatheroma (TCFA), and occasionally results from erosion or calcified nodules. Pathological features of TCFA are the presence of thin fibrous cap (<65μm) and a large lipid core. Bruke AP et al. N Eng J Med.1997;336:1276-1282 Falk E, et al. Circulation. 1995; 92: 657-671 Virmani R, et al. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 2000; 20: 1262

  3. IVUS – Listening through walls US signal Lipid Backscattered signal or RF data Backscattered signal or RF data Lumen Vessel

  4. catheter blood 150 wall 100 50 0 -50 -100 -150 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 From Conventional IVUS imaging toRadiofrequency Signal Processing • Conventional IVUS images are derived from the envelope of the RadioFrequency signal recorded by the US transducer • More information can be derived from the processing of the raw RF signal itself for: • tissue characterization • evaluation of mechanical properties • assessment of flow

  5. Virtual histology IVUS (VH-IVUS) uses amplitude and frequency of echoes Amplitude Frequency VH- IVUS differentiates coronary plaque into 4 types Especially, Necrotic Core component is known to related to plaque vulnerability.

  6. “Conventional” IVUS Assessment ofPatients Presenting with ACS

  7. Echolucent Plaque=Vulnerable Plaque?

  8. Echolucent Plaque and VH

  9. Echolucent Plaque and VH(n=53) Adjacend of Echolucent Zone Echolucent Zone VH Phenotype of Echolucent Lesion Yang AHA 2008

  10. Plaque Classification 1. “ Adaptive Intimal Thickening ” Plaque comprised of nearly all fibrous tissue (<5% of fibrofatty, calcification and/or NC plaque). 2. Pathological Intimal Thickening” – Mainly mixture of fibrous, fibrofatty (>5%), and necrotic core and some calcified tissue <5%.

  11. Plaque Classification “Fibro-Atheroma” – Fibrotic cap and significant Necrotic Core (confluent NC >5% of total plaque volume) in fibrotic and/or fibrofatty tissue It will very likely be that the most important goal is to differentiate the FibroAtheroma plaque types from the other three plaque types during assessments of high risk lesions for rupture.

  12. Definition of thin-cap fibroatheroma (TCFA) by VH-IVUS In at least 3 consecutive frames, (1)Percent Necrotic Core area to plaque area> 10% without evident overlying fibrous component (2)Percent plaque area to vessel area > 40% Rodriguez-Granillo et al. J Am Coll Cardiol ,2005; 46:2038-42

  13. Not only volume of NC, but also extent of NC contact with lumen are important. Measurement of angle of NC contact with lumen (NCCL) was performed by a MATLABTM at Thoraxcenter, Erasmus MC, by Dr. Garcia-Garcia HM. Blue area; major NCCL, 28.3% purple plus blue area Total NCCL, 30.5% Red line; angle of the major NCCL, 9° White and red line; angle of the total NCCL, 35° Overall NC 31.1% Sawada T, Shite J et al Eur Heart J 2008; 29:1136-46

  14. By necrotic core angle contact with lumen,VH-IVUS may estimate thin fibrous cap.However, IVUS can not visualize surfacefibrous cap due to limited resolution >100μm.

  15. Thin-Cap FibroAtheroma (TCFA) Courtesy of Renu Virmani

  16. VH is entirely dependent on drawing accurate borders

  17. Is VH-TCFA really vulnerable?

  18. Recent MI Culprit lesion Prox Distal

  19. Acute Plaque Rupture 79 years old male Unstable, DM (type II), hypertension, lipid disorder, prior MI VH IVUS; TCFA with three layers

  20. 52-yo Male with Abn Nuc Scan (DB)

  21. Post-intervention (Peak CK-MB release measured 21.2 ng/ml) Pre-intervention

  22. Global VH-IVUS Registry

  23. Serial VH Evaluation

  24. Case Examples Baseline PIT TCFA TCFA TCFA Follow-up TCFA ThCFA Fibrotic TCFA

  25. Changes of plaque morphology 25% TCFA n=20 65% 10% 3% 1% 6% ThCFA n=93 90% 10% PIT n=62 71% Kubo T, JACC in press Fibrotic/fibrocalcific plaques did not change.

  26. Changes at MLA site Plaque Area Lumen Area

  27. Serial VH in Patients After Stenting:DES vs BMS Kubo ACC2008

  28. Serial VH of DES Baseline Follow-up Stented segment Reference segment

  29. Serial VH of BMS Baseline Follow-up Stented segment Reference segment

  30. Abutting Necrotic Core to the Lumen * p<0.05 Kubo ACC2008

  31. The PROSPECT Trial700 pts with ACS UA (with ECGΔ) or NSTEMI or STEMI >24o 1-2 vessel CAD undergoing PCI at up to 40 sites in U.S., Europe Metabolic S. •Waist circum • Fast lipids •Fast glu •HgbA1C •Fast insulin •Creatinine Biomarkers •Hs CRP •IL-6 •sCD40L •MPO •TNFα •MMP9 •Lp-PLA2 •others PCI of culprit lesion(s) Successful and uncomplicated Formally enrolled PI: Gregg W. Stone Sponsor: Abbott Vascular; Partner: Volcano

  32. 3-vessel imaging post PCICulprit artery, followed bynon-culprit arteries

  33. 3-vessel imaging post PCICulprit artery, followed bynon-culprit arteries

  34. PROSPECT MethodologyIVUS/VH Core Lab Analysis Lesions are classified into 5 main sub-types based on VH composition

  35. PROSPECT: Acute MI

  36. PROSPECT: Acute MI

  37. MLA: 6.1 mm2

  38. PROSPECT: Baseline FeaturesN = 697

  39. PROSPECT: Imaging SummaryLength of coronary arteries analyzed

  40. PROSPECT: Imaging Summary Non culprit angio and IVUS lesions (LM, P/MLAD, PLCX and P/M/DRCA only)

  41. PROSPECT: Imaging Summary Non culprit angio and IVUS lesions (LM, P/MLAD, PLCX and P/M/DRCA only)

  42. PROSPECT: Imaging Summary Per pt incidence of IVUS lesions with MLA <4.0 mm2

  43. PROSPECT: Imaging Summary Presence of ≥1 VH lesion subtypes (2765 lesions in 614 pts)

  44. PROSPECT: Imaging Summary Per patient incidence of VH-TCFAs

  45. Longitudinal sections from 50 autopsy pts10.9 meters examined from 148 coronary arteries 44% of pts had ≥1 TCFA (range 0 - 6) Mean 0.46 TCFAs/pt (0.55 vs. 0.38 in pts dying of CV ds. vs. other) - 1.21/pt in hearts with ruptured plaques - Cheruvu PK et al. JACC 2007;50:940–9

More Related