Coronary Intervention for Stable Angina Pectoris: The use of Fractional Flow Reserve as a decision making tool for Coronary Angioplasty

Coronary angioplasty is a definitive, percutaneous intervention to improve myocardial oxygen supply. The benefit of coronary angioplasty for stable angina pectoris is still a controversy. The COURAGE trial had shown that angioplasty for stable angina pectoris gave no additional benefit compared with...

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Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Indonesian Heart Association 2013-10-01
Series:Majalah Kardiologi Indonesia
Online Access:http://www.ijconline.id/index.php/ijc/article/view/305
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spelling doaj-7b2b1ff32c73443c97d7e83ef422fea42020-11-25T02:05:13ZengIndonesian Heart AssociationMajalah Kardiologi Indonesia0126-37732620-47622013-10-0134110.30701/ijc.v34i1.305Coronary Intervention for Stable Angina Pectoris: The use of Fractional Flow Reserve as a decision making tool for Coronary AngioplastyCoronary angioplasty is a definitive, percutaneous intervention to improve myocardial oxygen supply. The benefit of coronary angioplasty for stable angina pectoris is still a controversy. The COURAGE trial had shown that angioplasty for stable angina pectoris gave no additional benefit compared with optimal medical therapy, while the recently done FAME II trial showed the opposite. FAME II trial proved that angioplasty could reduce MACEs in stable angina pectoris patients. The conflicting results from COURAGE and FAME II trials is due to the difference in decision making methodology used for angioplasty. COURAGE used plain angiogram while FAME II utilized Fractional Flow Reserve (FFR) as a tool to decide whether a lesion should undergo angioplasty. The result of FAME II demonstrate FFR is far more reliable to determine coronary lesion which cause ischemia, hence a better decision making tool for angioplasty. The specificity of FFR is proven high, while angiography has an excessive false positives. The use of FFR before angioplasty is still low although there is a considerable evidence that FFR is a better decion making tool for angioplasty compared to angiography. Health economic analysis displayed the use of FFR for stable angina pectoris is cost effective in the long term.http://www.ijconline.id/index.php/ijc/article/view/305
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
title Coronary Intervention for Stable Angina Pectoris: The use of Fractional Flow Reserve as a decision making tool for Coronary Angioplasty
spellingShingle Coronary Intervention for Stable Angina Pectoris: The use of Fractional Flow Reserve as a decision making tool for Coronary Angioplasty
Majalah Kardiologi Indonesia
title_short Coronary Intervention for Stable Angina Pectoris: The use of Fractional Flow Reserve as a decision making tool for Coronary Angioplasty
title_full Coronary Intervention for Stable Angina Pectoris: The use of Fractional Flow Reserve as a decision making tool for Coronary Angioplasty
title_fullStr Coronary Intervention for Stable Angina Pectoris: The use of Fractional Flow Reserve as a decision making tool for Coronary Angioplasty
title_full_unstemmed Coronary Intervention for Stable Angina Pectoris: The use of Fractional Flow Reserve as a decision making tool for Coronary Angioplasty
title_sort coronary intervention for stable angina pectoris: the use of fractional flow reserve as a decision making tool for coronary angioplasty
publisher Indonesian Heart Association
series Majalah Kardiologi Indonesia
issn 0126-3773
2620-4762
publishDate 2013-10-01
description Coronary angioplasty is a definitive, percutaneous intervention to improve myocardial oxygen supply. The benefit of coronary angioplasty for stable angina pectoris is still a controversy. The COURAGE trial had shown that angioplasty for stable angina pectoris gave no additional benefit compared with optimal medical therapy, while the recently done FAME II trial showed the opposite. FAME II trial proved that angioplasty could reduce MACEs in stable angina pectoris patients. The conflicting results from COURAGE and FAME II trials is due to the difference in decision making methodology used for angioplasty. COURAGE used plain angiogram while FAME II utilized Fractional Flow Reserve (FFR) as a tool to decide whether a lesion should undergo angioplasty. The result of FAME II demonstrate FFR is far more reliable to determine coronary lesion which cause ischemia, hence a better decision making tool for angioplasty. The specificity of FFR is proven high, while angiography has an excessive false positives. The use of FFR before angioplasty is still low although there is a considerable evidence that FFR is a better decion making tool for angioplasty compared to angiography. Health economic analysis displayed the use of FFR for stable angina pectoris is cost effective in the long term.
url http://www.ijconline.id/index.php/ijc/article/view/305
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