Improvement of Radiation Management in Percutaneous Interventions of Chronic Total Occlusions in a Multicenter Registry.
- Autori: Werner GS, Avran A, Boudou N, Galassi AR, Garbo R, Bufe A, Bryniarski L, Christiansen EH, Kalnins A, Lismanis A, Hildick-Smith D, Grancini L, Vadalà G, Mashayekhi K.
- Anno di pubblicazione: 2025
- Tipologia: Articolo in rivista
- OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/674004
Abstract
Background: Excess radiation exposure is a limiting factor in percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for chronic total coronary occlusion (CTO). Objectives: The aim of this study was to analyze changes in radiation dose for CTO PCI with increasing risk awareness during the past decade and the determinants of these changes. Methods: A total of 16,439 procedures performed by 14 operators continuously participating in the European Registry of CTO-PCI from 2012 to 2023 were analyzed. Changes in air kerma (AK) were assessed, and a dose rate index (DRI) was calculated as AK per fluoroscopy time (FT). Results: Lesion complexity increased from a median J-CTO (Multicenter CTO Registry in Japan) score of 2 (Q1-Q3: 1-3) to 3 (Q1-Q3: 2-3) (P < 0.001), and technical success improved from 89.1% to 94.9% (P < 0.001), with stable FT. AK decreased from 2.50 Gy (Q1-Q3: 1.54-4.04 Gy) to 1.20 Gy (Q1-Q3: 0.66-2.12 Gy), a reduction of 52.0% (P < 0.001). Excess radiation of AK >5 Gy was reduced from 15.8% in 2012-2013 to 3.7% in 2022-2023. Clinical determinants of excess radiation were body mass index, gender, and previous bypass surgery; procedural determinants were FT, retrograde approach, and intravascular ultrasound use; and equipment determinants were radiographic equipment updates and fluoroscopy dose mode. Operators reduced DRI by 21.7% from 62.6 mGy/min (Q1-Q3: 44.7-89.3 mGy/min) to 49.0 mGy/min (Q1-Q3: 35.4-71.2 mGy/min) before a radiographic equipment update; after the update, DRI was further reduced to 31.5 mGy/min (Q1-Q3: 22.0-45.6 mGy/min), a decrease of 28.0% (P < 0.001) The interoperator comparison of DRI indicated considerable variability in radiation management. Conclusions: AK for CTO PCI was reduced during the past decade to a level such that most procedures no longer must be aborted because of excess radiation. Equipment updates were instrumental, but interoperator differences remained.