Assessing the landscape of percutaneous coronary chronic total occlusion treatment in Belgium and Luxembourg: the Belgian Working Group on Chronic Total Occlusions (BWGCTO) registry

Joren Maeremans, Peter Kayaert, Yoann Bataille, Johan Bennett, Claudiu Ungureanu, Steven Haine, Tom Vandendriessche, Jeroen Sonck, Benjamin Scott, Patrick Coussement, Daniël Dendooven, Bruno Pereira, Peter Frambach, Luc Janssens, Philippe Debruyne, Carlos Van Mieghem, Emanuele Barbato, Kristoff Cornelis, Francis Stammen, Frederic De VroeySteven Vercauteren, Benny Drieghe, Adel Aminian, Jan Debrauwere, Stéphane Carlier, Mark Coosemans, Bert Van Reet, Peter Vandergoten, Jo Andre Dens, (On behalf of the BWGCTO Investigators)

Onderzoeksoutput: Articlepeer review

6 Citaten (Scopus)

Samenvatting

BACKGROUND: Important developments in materials, devices, and techniques have improved outcomes of chronic total occlusion (CTO) percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), and resulted in a growing interest in CTO-PCI. The Belgian Working Group on Chronic Total Occlusions (BWGCTO) working group aims to assess the evolution within the CTO-PCI landscape over the next years.

METHODS: From May 2016 onwards, patients undergoing CTO-PCI were included in the BWGCTO registry by 15 centres in Belgium and Luxemburg. Baseline, angiographic, and procedural data were collected. Here, we report on the one-year in-hospital outcomes.

RESULTS: Over the course of one year, 411 procedures in 388 patients were included with a mean age of 64 ± 11 years. The majority were male (81%). Relatively complex CTOs were treated (Japanese CTO score =2.2 ± 1.2) with a high procedure success rate (82%). Patient- and lesion-wise success rates were 83 and 85%, respectively. Major adverse in-hospital events were acceptably low (3.4%). Antegrade wire escalation technique was applied most frequently (82%). On the other hand, antegrade dissection and re-entry and retrograde strategies were more frequently applied in higher volume centres and successful for lesions with higher complexity.

CONCLUSION: Satisfactory procedural outcomes and a low rate of adverse events were obtained in a complex CTO population, treated by operators with variable experience levels. Antegrade wire escalation was the preferred strategy, regardless of operator volume.

Originele taal-2English
Pagina's (van-tot)427-436
Aantal pagina's10
TijdschriftActa Cardiologica
Volume73
Nummer van het tijdschrift5
DOI's
StatusPublished - 28 nov 2017

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