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LAURA MANISCALCO

Reclassification of CTO Crossing Strategies in the ERCTO Registry According to the CTO-ARC Consensus Recommendations

  • Authors: Vadalà G.; Mashayekhi K.; Boukhris M.; Behnes M.; Pyxaras S.; Christiansen E.H.; Gutiérrez-Chico J.L.; Maniscalco L.; Stojkovic S.; Bozinovic N.Z.; Boudou N.; Garbo R.; Werner G.S.; Avran A.; Gasparini G.L.; La Scala E.; Ladwiniec A.; Sianos G.; Goktekin O.; Gorgulu S.; Agostoni P.; Rathore S.; Ayoub M.; Diletti R.; di Mario C.; Bulum J.; Galassi A.R.
  • Publication year: 2024
  • Type: Articolo in rivista
  • OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/665361

Abstract

Background: The CTO-ARC (Chronic Total Occlusion Academic Research Consortium) recognized that a nonstandardized definition of chronic total occlusion (CTO) percutaneous coronary intervention approaches can bias the complications' attribution to each crossing strategy. Objectives: The study sought to describe the numbers, efficacy, and safety of each final CTO crossing strategy according to CTO-ARC recommendations. Methods: In this cross-sectional study, data were retrieved from the European Registry of Chronic Total Occlusions between 2021 and 2022. Results: Out of 8,673 patients, antegrade and retrograde approach were performed in 79.2% and 20.8% of cases, respectively. The antegrade approach included antegrade wiring and antegrade dissection and re-entry, both performed with or without retrograde contribution (antegrade wiring without retrograde contribution: n = 5,929 [68.4%]; antegrade wiring with retrograde contribution: n = 446 [5.1%]; antegrade dissection and re-entry without retrograde contribution: n = 353 [4.1%]; antegrade dissection and re-entry with retrograde contribution: n = 137 [1.6%]). The retrograde approach included retrograde wiring (n = 735 [8.4%]) and retrograde dissection and re-entry (n = 1,073 [12.4%]). Alternative antegrade crossing was associated with lower technical success (70% vs 86% vs 93.1%, respectively; P < 0.001) and higher complication rates (4.6% vs 2.9% vs 1%, respectively; P < 0.001) as compared with retrograde and true antegrade crossing. However, alternative antegrade crossing was applied mostly as a rescue strategy (96.1%). Conclusions: The application of CTO-ARC definitions allowed the reclassification of 6.7% of procedures as alternative antegrade crossing with retrograde or antegrade contribution which showed higher MACCE and lower technical success rates, as compared with true antegrade and retrograde crossing.