THE ACCURACY OF DETAILED ANALYSIS OF OPTICAL COHERENCE TOMOGRAPHY IN DETECTION OF PLAQUE LIPID CONTENT: DUAL-IMAGING STUDY WITH OPTICAL COHERENCE TOMOGRAPHY AND NEAR-INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY
Aim: Lipid-rich plaque covered by a thin fibrous cap (FC) has been identified as a frequent morphological substrate for the development of acute coronary syndrome. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) permits the identification and measurement of the FC. Near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) has been approved for detection of coronary lipids. We aimed to assess the ability of detailed OCT analysis to identify coronary lipids, using NIRS as the reference method.
Sample and Methodology: In total, 40 patients with acute coronary syndrome underwent imaging of a non-culprit lesion by both NIRS and OCT. For each segment, the NIRS-derived 4mm segment with maximal lipid core burden index (maxLCBI4mm) was assessed. OCT analysis was performed using a semi-automated method including measurement of the fibrous cap thickness (FCT) of all detected fibroatheromas. Subsequent quantitative volumetric evaluation furnished FCT, FC surface area (FC SA), lipid arc, and FC (fibrous cap) volume data. OCT features of lipid plaques were compared with maxLCBI4mm. Predictors of maxLCBI4mm >400 was assessed by using univariable and multivariable analysis.
Results: OCT features (mean FCT, total FC SA, FC volume, maximal, mean, and total lipid arcs) strongly correlated with the maxLCBI4mm (p = 0.012 for the mean FCT, respectively p 400 were the maximal (p=0.002) and mean (p=0.002) lipid arc, and total FC SA (p=0.012).
Conclusion: We found a strong correlation between the OCT-derived features and NIRS findings. Detailed OCT analysis may be reliably used for detection of the presence of coronary lipids.