eISSN: 1897-4295
ISSN: 1734-9338
Advances in Interventional Cardiology/Postępy w Kardiologii Interwencyjnej
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2/2018
vol. 14
 
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Editorial

Severely calcified coronary stenoses: novel challenges, old remedy

Giuseppe Di Gioia
,
Carmine Morisco
,
Emanuele Barbato

Adv Interv Cardiol 2018; 14, 2 (52): 115–116
Online publish date: 2018/06/19
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The presence of severe calcifications in coronary artery stenoses makes percutaneous revascularizations particularly challenging, and represents the most frequent cause of stent failure. Inability to implant or properly expand the stent is not infrequent with heavily calcified coronary stenoses, leading to increased stent restenosis or thrombosis. For these reasons, surgical revascularization has been traditionally preferred in patients with heavily calcified coronary lesions. Due to the ageing of the patients undergoing coronary angiography, percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is increasingly attempted in these patients following the improved performance of novel drug-eluting stents. Yet, a very old therapy is being used to address this novel challenge, namely rotational atherectomy (RA). Rotational atherectomy was introduced in interventional cardiology in 1988, even before the widespread availability of bare metal stents. Thirty years after its introduction, this technology has basically remained the same, even if the technique has evolved. The old concept of debulking has given way to the modern plaque modification technique, which means in practice applying the least ablation force needed in order to ease stent deployment and implantation [1]. Current RA technique has improved PCI outcomes, as suggested by several studies [2–4]. Nevertheless, RA has remained largely underused, representing 1 to 5% of the total PCI volume [1]. Possible reasons for this limited adoption include underestimation of calcification in coronary angiography, perceived complexity of the technique and potential RA-related complications, which are mentioned in the two recent observational analyses published in this issue of the journal [5, 6].
In the first series of 156 consecutive patients treated with RA at a high volume PCI center, no difference was found in terms of in-hospital complications or 12-month clinical outcome between elective and bail-out RA [5]. Of note, only 27.6% of the patients received elective RA, while in the vast majority RA was carried out after unsuccessful traditional PCI. On one hand, this can probably be explained by the reluctance of the operators to readily perform a technique that might be perceived as complex and potentially cumbersome, as suggested by the fact that even in the group of elective RA, the latter was performed at the occasion of a staged procedure in most of the cases. On the other hand, the higher rate of bailout RA...


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