Circulation Journal
Online ISSN : 1347-4820
Print ISSN : 1346-9843
ISSN-L : 1346-9843
INOCA
Basal Coronary Microvascular Resistance Predicting Death and Heart Failure in Patients Without Functional Coronary Stenosis
Tadashi Murai Hiroyuki HikitaMasao YamaguchiAki ItoTakayuki WarisawaHiroshi IkedaKen TakahashiHirotaka YanoJoonmo ChangTakahiro WatanabeHiroshi YoshikawaYoshinori KannoKeiichi HishikariAtsushi TakahashiHiroyuki FujiiTaishi YonetsuTetsuo SasanoTsunekazu Kakuta
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Supplementary material

2024 Volume 88 Issue 11 Pages 1788-1797

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Abstract

Background: Abnormal coronary microcirculation is linked to poor patient prognosis, so the aim of the present study was to assess the prognostic relevance of basal microvascular resistance (b-IMR) in patients without functional coronary stenosis.

Methods and Results: Analyses of 226 patients who underwent intracoronary physiological assessment of the left anterior descending artery included primary endpoints of all-cause death and heart failure, as well as secondary endpoints of cardiovascular death and atherosclerotic vascular events. During a median follow-up of 2 years, there were 12 (5.3%) primary and 21 (9.3 %) secondary endpoints. The optimal b-IMR cutoff for the primary endpoints was 47.1 U. Kaplan-Meier curve analysis demonstrated worse event-free survival of the primary endpoints in patients with a b-IMR below the cutoff (χ2=21.178, P<0.001). b-IMR was not significantly associated with the secondary endpoints (P=0.35). A low coronary flow reserve (CFR; <2.5) had prognostic value for both endpoints (primary endpoints: χ2=11.401, P=0.001; secondary endpoints: (χ2=6.015; P=0.014), and high hyperemic microvascular resistance (≥25) was associated only with the secondary endpoints (χ2=4.420; P=0.036). Incorporating b-IMR into a clinical model that included CFR improved the Net Reclassification Index and Integrated Discrimination Improvement for predicting the primary endpoints (P<0.001 and P=0.034, respectively).

Conclusions: b-IMR may be a specific marker of the risk of death and heart failure in patients without functional coronary stenosis.

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© 2024, THE JAPANESE CIRCULATION SOCIETY

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