Outcomes Research in Review

Comparison of Fractional Flow Reserve–Guided PCI and Coronary Bypass Surgery in 3-Vessel Disease


 

References

In this context, Fearon and the FAME-3 trial investigators studied the use of FFR-guided PCI with second-generation zotarolimus drug-eluting stents compared to CABG in patients with 3-vessel CAD. They randomized patients with angiographically identified 3-vessel CAD in a 1:1 ratio to receive FFR-guided PCI or CABG at 48 sites internationally. Patients with left main CAD, recent ST-elevation MI, cardiogenic shock, and left-ventricular ejection fraction <30% were excluded. The study results (composite primary end point incidence of 10.6% for patients with FFR-guided PCI vs 6.9% in the CABG group [HR, 1.5; 95% CI, 1.1-2.2; P = 0.35 for noninferiority]) showed that FFR-guided PCI did not meet the noninferiority criterion.

Although the FAME-3 study is an important study, there are a few points to consider. First, 24% of the lesions had a FFR measured at >0.80. The benefit of FFR-guided PCI lies in the number of lesions that are safely deferred compared to angiography-guided PCI. The small number of deferred lesions could have limited the benefit of FFR guidance compared with angiography. Second, this study did not include all comers who had angiographic 3-vessel disease. Patients who had FFR assessment of moderate lesions at the time of diagnostic angiogram and were found to have FFR >0.80 or were deemed single- or 2-vessel disease were likely treated with PCI. Therefore, as the authors point out, the patients included in this study may have been skewed to a higher-risk population compared to previous studies.

Third, the study may not reflect contemporary interventional practice, as the use of intravascular ultrasound was very low (12%). Intravascular ultrasound–guided PCI has been associated with increased luminal gain and improved outcomes compared to angiography-guided PCI.10 Although 20% of the patients in each arm were found to have chronic total occlusions, the completeness of revascularization has not yet been reported. It is possible that the PCI arm had fewer complete revascularizations, which has been shown in previous observational studies to be associated with worse clinical outcomes.11,12

Although the current guidelines favor CABG over PCI in patients with multivessel disease, this recommendation is stratified by anatomic complexity.6 In fact, in the European guidelines, CABG and PCI are both class I recommendations for the treatment of 3-vessel disease with low SYNTAX score in patients without diabetes.5 Although the FAME-3 study failed to show noninferiority in the overall population, when stratified by the SYNTAX score, the major adverse cardiac event rate for the PCI group was numerically lower than that of the CABG group. The results from the FAME-3 study are overall in line with the previous studies and the current guidelines. Future studies are necessary to assess the outcomes of multivessel PCI compared to CABG using the most contemporary interventional practice and achieving complete revascularization in the PCI arm.

Applications for Clinical Practice

In patients with 3-vessel disease, FFR-guided PCI was not found to be noninferior to CABG; this finding is consistent with previous studies.

—Shubham Kanake, BS, Chirag Bavishi, MD, MPH, and Taishi Hirai, MD, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO

Disclosures: None.

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