4.6 Article

Predicting Successful Guidewire Crossing Through Chronic Total Occlusion of Native Coronary Lesions Within 30 Minutes The J-CTO (Multicenter CTO Registry in Japan) Score as a Difficulty Grading and Time Assessment Tool

Journal

JACC-CARDIOVASCULAR INTERVENTIONS
Volume 4, Issue 2, Pages 213-221

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcin.2010.09.024

Keywords

angioplasty; chronic total occlusion; coronary artery disease; percutaneous coronary intervention; stents

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Objectives This study sought to establish a model for grading lesion difficulty in interventional chronic total occlusion (CTO) treatment. Background Owing to uncertainty of success of the procedure and difficulties in selecting suitable cases for treatment, performance of interventional CTO remains infrequent. Methods Data from 494 native CTO lesions were analyzed. To eliminate operator bias, the objective parameter of successful guidewire crossing within 30 min was set as an end point, instead of actual procedural success. All observations were randomly assigned to a derivation set and a validation set at a 2:1 ratio. The J-CTO (Multicenter CTO Registry of Japan) score was determined by assigning 1 point for each independent predictor of this end point and summing all points accrued. This value was then used to develop a model stratifying all lesions into 4 difficulty groups: easy (J-CTO score of 0), intermediate (score of 1), difficult (score of 2), and very difficult (score of >= 3). Results The set end point was achieved in 48.2% of lesions. Independent predictors included calcification, bending, blunt stump, occlusion length > 20 mm, and previously failed lesion. Easy, intermediate, difficult, and very difficult groups, stratified by J-CTO score, demonstrated stepwise, proportioned, and highly reproducible differences in probability of successful guidewire crossing within 30 min (87.7%, 67.1%, 42.4%, and 10.0% in the derivation set and 92.3%, 58.3%, 34.8%, and 22.2% in the validation set, respectively). Areas under receiver-operator characteristic curves were comparable (derivation: 0.82 vs. validation: 0.76). Conclusions This model predicted the probability of successful guidewire crossing within 30 min very well and can be applied for difficulty grading. (J Am Coll Cardiol Intv 2011;4:213-21) (C) 2011 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation

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