Circulation Reports
Online ISSN : 2434-0790

This article has now been updated. Please use the final version.

Impact of Antiplatelet Therapy on 5-Year Outcomes After Fractional Flow Reserve-Guided Deferral of Revascularization in Nonsignificant Obstructive Coronary Artery Disease
Tairo KuritaShoichi Kuramitsu Masanobu IshiiAkihiro TakasakiTakenori DomeiHitoshi MatsuoKazunori HorieHirohiko AndoHidenobu TeraiYuetsu KikutaTakayuki IshiharaTatsuya SaigusaTomohiro SakamotoNobuhiro SuematsuYasutsugu ShionoTaku AsanoKenichi TsujitaKatsuhiko MasamuraTatsuki DoijiriFumitoshi ToyotaManabu OgitaJun ShiraishiKen HaradaHiroyuki IsogaiReo AnaiShinjo SonodaHiroyoshi YokoiNobuhiro TanakaKaoru Dohion behalf of the J-CONFIRM Investigators
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Article ID: CR-24-0069

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Abstract

Background: Because the clinical benefit of antiplatelet therapy (APT) for patients with nonsignificant coronary artery disease (CAD) remains poorly understood, we evaluated it in patients after fractional flow reserve (FFR)-guided deferral of revascularization.

Methods and Results: From the J-CONFIRM (Long-Term Outcomes of Japanese Patients with Deferral of Coronary Intervention Based on Fractional Flow Reserve in Multicenter Registry), we investigated 265 patients with deferred lesions who did not require APT for secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease. A 2-year landmark analysis assessed the relationship between APT at 2 years and 5-year major cardiac adverse events (MACE: composite of all-cause death, target vessel-related myocardial infarction, clinically driven target vessel revascularization). Of the 265 patients, 163 (61.5%) received APT. The 5-year MACE did not significantly differ between the APT and non-APT groups after adjustment for baseline clinical characteristics (9.2% vs. 6.9%, inverse probability weighted hazard ratio, 1.40 [95% confidence interval, 0.53–3.69]; P=0.49). There was a marginal interaction between the effect of APT on MACE and FFR values (< or ≥0.84) (P for interaction=0.066).

Conclusions: The 5-year outcomes after FFR-guided deferral of revascularization did not significantly differ between the APT and non-APT groups, suggesting that APT might not be a critical requirement for nonsignificant obstructive CAD patients not requiring APT for secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease.

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