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– When Spencer B. King III, MD, shared his thoughts about the future of interventional cardiology at the Annual Cardiovascular Conference at Snowmass sponsored by the American College of Cardiology, he felt compelled to offer a cautionary note about his past accuracy as a prognosticator.

Dr. Spencer B. King III
Bruce Jancin/MDedge News
Dr. Spencer B. King III

It was way back at a poster session during the 1976 annual meeting of the American Heart Association in Miami Beach that he first met Andreas Gruentzig, MD, the father of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), who was presenting his initial revolutionary work on what he called “coronary transluminal angioplasty” in dogs.

“I looked at the poster and told him it would never work,” recalled Dr. King, professor emeritus of medicine at Emory University in Atlanta.

He soon changed his mind, however, because, to great acclaim, Dr. Gruentzig performed his successful first in-human coronary angioplasty the next year.

He noted that the Snowmass conference has played a significant role in the development of interventional cardiology in the United States. Dr. Gruentzig attended the conference in 1980, and Dr. King and others took that opportunity to persuade him to leave the bureaucratic confines of Zurich and join him at Emory later that year. The two cardiologists worked closely thereafter, refining angioplasty and conducting clinical trials until Dr. Gruentzig’s death in an airplane crash in Georgia in 1985 at age 46 years.

Turning to the future, Dr. King addressed a number of recent developments in interventional cardiology and rated their chances of significantly improving outcomes in patients with stable ischemic heart disease. He graded the innovations’ potential with use of a four-bar schema, akin to the WiFi signal power rating on a cell phone.
 

Noninvasive diagnostics to assess anatomy and physiology

“I think coronary CT angiography [CTA] will become the new diagnostic angiogram,” he predicted. “CTA has gotten much better. Outside the United States, in Europe and particularly in Japan and increasingly in China, CTA is becoming extremely common.”

Dr. King cited a recent multicenter study of blinded heart team treatment decision making on the basis of either CTA or conventional invasive angiography in 223 patients with left main or triple-vessel coronary artery disease (CAD). The level of agreement was impressively high: Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) was recommended for 28% of patients on the basis of CTA and 26% with conventional angiography, which suggests the feasibility of treatment decision making based solely on noninvasive imaging, history, and clinical examination (Eur Heart J. 2018 Nov 1;39[41]:3689-98).

“The other thing I like about the potential for noninvasive imaging to guide our interventions is that it may [replace] the diagnostic angiogram, which has largely become extinct,” the cardiologist continued. “If you think about it, patients are referred for an angiogram, and as far as informed consent is concerned, the patient is told to pack his bags, go off to some other city, get in the cath lab, and take the family because of what they might do to you. They might put stents in you, they might operate on you. We don’t have any idea because we don’t know what you have. And the patient has to buy into this. With CTA, the potential is there for people to actually know what you’re going to do to them before you do it.”

Coronary artery calcium scoring for primary risk assessment has taken on a prominent role in the latest practice guidelines. “I think it’s mostly helpful in getting people out of the system because they don’t have any calcium,” in Dr. King’s view.

PET and MRI will remain secondary noninvasive technologies. They will be used mostly to diagnose microvascular disease, but that’s information that doesn’t have much influence on whether interventional procedures are performed.

Overall, he gave noninvasive diagnostic tools high marks for their potential to improve outcomes in patients with stable ischemic heart disease.

“I give it a pretty robust three bars. Maybe you could give it four,” he said.
 

 

 

New pharmacologic therapies

Citing in particular the proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) inhibitors and the sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitors, Dr. King declared, “It may be that the biggest, newest device in interventional cardiology going forward is not a device at all, it’s medical therapy.”

Interventional cardiologists either need to become expert in advanced medical therapies or else have access to someone in their group who prescribes those medications deftly.

“The future care of our patients will require more than percutaneous coronary intervention,” he emphasized.

So, four bars for the new medical therapies.
 

PCI and coronary artery bypass surgery

Both get one bar.

“PCI will be a partner of advanced antiatherosclerotic therapies, but will not be replaced by limiting antianginal therapy to medical treatment only,” Dr. King predicted.

Regarding CABG, he highlighted a recent systematic review and pooled analysis of 11,518 patients with stable ischemic heart disease randomized to CABG or PCI using drug-eluting or bare-metal stents in 11 clinical trials. CABG demonstrated a significant mortality benefit over PCI in patients with multivessel disease, particularly among those with diabetes or a higher degree of coronary disease complexity. However, there was no benefit in terms of 5-year all-cause mortality for CABG over PCI in those with left main disease (Lancet. 2018 Mar 10;391[10124]:9399-48).

“CABG will not go away. I predict that about 25% of revascularizations will continue to be done by surgery,” the cardiologist said. “For patients who can have complete revascularization by PCI, it’ll be done with advanced technology, but probably only by a subset of operators. We have a huge number of interventional cardiologists in this country, and some of them do a lot of these kinds of cases and some don’t.”
 

Endovascular imaging to optimize stent deployment and characterize plaque

Studies suggest that the use of intravascular ultrasound and other endovascular imaging technologies ends up providing better results than when they’re not employed.

“We see greatly increased use of IVUS [intravascular ultrasound], and not so much of optical coherence tomography, because of technical problems. So I give this at least two bars as far as moving practice forward,” according to Dr. King.
 

Bioresorbable scaffolds

This technology, which he noted “was supposed to solve all of our problems,” has tripped and fallen because of its associated increased risk of scaffold thrombosis. He cited a recent network meta-analysis of 91 randomized, controlled trials comparing bioresorbable scaffolds to current-generation metallic drug-eluting stents in more than 105,000 patients. The bioresorbable scaffolds had a significantly higher rate of scaffold thrombosis in the first 30 days after implantation, as well as from 31 days through 1 year and also beyond 1 year. In fact, there was a rising trend for scaffold thrombosis in the bioresorbable device group after the 1 year mark through a mean 3.7 years of follow-up (EuroIntervention. 2018 Mar 20;13[16]:1904-13).

“The overall impact of bioresorbable scaffolds has been nil. We don’t have them. Bioresorbable scaffolds may become noninferior to the best metal stents, but to become mainstream, they should show superiority,” the cardiologist said.

 

 

One bar, based on the uncertain possibility that new bioresorbable scaffolds now in early stages of development ultimately pan out.
 

Future training needs

PCI operator volumes are low, and that raises a host of issues regarding future training needs. Should fewer interventionalists be trained? Should training in endovascular imaging be a mandatory part of PCI training? Should interventional cardiology be divided into distinct coronary, structural heart, and peripheral vascular subspecialty domains involving different people, a change that is already informally underway in many places? How are operators who are interested in becoming experts in PCI for chronic total occlusion, diffuse disease, left main disease, or other complex cases going to get enough experience to be able to concentrate in those areas?

These are questions that will need to be addressed in the coming years. The answers will surely affect the delivery of interventional cardiology care.

Dr. King reported having no financial conflicts regarding his presentation.

SOURCE: King SB.

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– When Spencer B. King III, MD, shared his thoughts about the future of interventional cardiology at the Annual Cardiovascular Conference at Snowmass sponsored by the American College of Cardiology, he felt compelled to offer a cautionary note about his past accuracy as a prognosticator.

Dr. Spencer B. King III
Bruce Jancin/MDedge News
Dr. Spencer B. King III

It was way back at a poster session during the 1976 annual meeting of the American Heart Association in Miami Beach that he first met Andreas Gruentzig, MD, the father of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), who was presenting his initial revolutionary work on what he called “coronary transluminal angioplasty” in dogs.

“I looked at the poster and told him it would never work,” recalled Dr. King, professor emeritus of medicine at Emory University in Atlanta.

He soon changed his mind, however, because, to great acclaim, Dr. Gruentzig performed his successful first in-human coronary angioplasty the next year.

He noted that the Snowmass conference has played a significant role in the development of interventional cardiology in the United States. Dr. Gruentzig attended the conference in 1980, and Dr. King and others took that opportunity to persuade him to leave the bureaucratic confines of Zurich and join him at Emory later that year. The two cardiologists worked closely thereafter, refining angioplasty and conducting clinical trials until Dr. Gruentzig’s death in an airplane crash in Georgia in 1985 at age 46 years.

Turning to the future, Dr. King addressed a number of recent developments in interventional cardiology and rated their chances of significantly improving outcomes in patients with stable ischemic heart disease. He graded the innovations’ potential with use of a four-bar schema, akin to the WiFi signal power rating on a cell phone.
 

Noninvasive diagnostics to assess anatomy and physiology

“I think coronary CT angiography [CTA] will become the new diagnostic angiogram,” he predicted. “CTA has gotten much better. Outside the United States, in Europe and particularly in Japan and increasingly in China, CTA is becoming extremely common.”

Dr. King cited a recent multicenter study of blinded heart team treatment decision making on the basis of either CTA or conventional invasive angiography in 223 patients with left main or triple-vessel coronary artery disease (CAD). The level of agreement was impressively high: Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) was recommended for 28% of patients on the basis of CTA and 26% with conventional angiography, which suggests the feasibility of treatment decision making based solely on noninvasive imaging, history, and clinical examination (Eur Heart J. 2018 Nov 1;39[41]:3689-98).

“The other thing I like about the potential for noninvasive imaging to guide our interventions is that it may [replace] the diagnostic angiogram, which has largely become extinct,” the cardiologist continued. “If you think about it, patients are referred for an angiogram, and as far as informed consent is concerned, the patient is told to pack his bags, go off to some other city, get in the cath lab, and take the family because of what they might do to you. They might put stents in you, they might operate on you. We don’t have any idea because we don’t know what you have. And the patient has to buy into this. With CTA, the potential is there for people to actually know what you’re going to do to them before you do it.”

Coronary artery calcium scoring for primary risk assessment has taken on a prominent role in the latest practice guidelines. “I think it’s mostly helpful in getting people out of the system because they don’t have any calcium,” in Dr. King’s view.

PET and MRI will remain secondary noninvasive technologies. They will be used mostly to diagnose microvascular disease, but that’s information that doesn’t have much influence on whether interventional procedures are performed.

Overall, he gave noninvasive diagnostic tools high marks for their potential to improve outcomes in patients with stable ischemic heart disease.

“I give it a pretty robust three bars. Maybe you could give it four,” he said.
 

 

 

New pharmacologic therapies

Citing in particular the proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) inhibitors and the sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitors, Dr. King declared, “It may be that the biggest, newest device in interventional cardiology going forward is not a device at all, it’s medical therapy.”

Interventional cardiologists either need to become expert in advanced medical therapies or else have access to someone in their group who prescribes those medications deftly.

“The future care of our patients will require more than percutaneous coronary intervention,” he emphasized.

So, four bars for the new medical therapies.
 

PCI and coronary artery bypass surgery

Both get one bar.

“PCI will be a partner of advanced antiatherosclerotic therapies, but will not be replaced by limiting antianginal therapy to medical treatment only,” Dr. King predicted.

Regarding CABG, he highlighted a recent systematic review and pooled analysis of 11,518 patients with stable ischemic heart disease randomized to CABG or PCI using drug-eluting or bare-metal stents in 11 clinical trials. CABG demonstrated a significant mortality benefit over PCI in patients with multivessel disease, particularly among those with diabetes or a higher degree of coronary disease complexity. However, there was no benefit in terms of 5-year all-cause mortality for CABG over PCI in those with left main disease (Lancet. 2018 Mar 10;391[10124]:9399-48).

“CABG will not go away. I predict that about 25% of revascularizations will continue to be done by surgery,” the cardiologist said. “For patients who can have complete revascularization by PCI, it’ll be done with advanced technology, but probably only by a subset of operators. We have a huge number of interventional cardiologists in this country, and some of them do a lot of these kinds of cases and some don’t.”
 

Endovascular imaging to optimize stent deployment and characterize plaque

Studies suggest that the use of intravascular ultrasound and other endovascular imaging technologies ends up providing better results than when they’re not employed.

“We see greatly increased use of IVUS [intravascular ultrasound], and not so much of optical coherence tomography, because of technical problems. So I give this at least two bars as far as moving practice forward,” according to Dr. King.
 

Bioresorbable scaffolds

This technology, which he noted “was supposed to solve all of our problems,” has tripped and fallen because of its associated increased risk of scaffold thrombosis. He cited a recent network meta-analysis of 91 randomized, controlled trials comparing bioresorbable scaffolds to current-generation metallic drug-eluting stents in more than 105,000 patients. The bioresorbable scaffolds had a significantly higher rate of scaffold thrombosis in the first 30 days after implantation, as well as from 31 days through 1 year and also beyond 1 year. In fact, there was a rising trend for scaffold thrombosis in the bioresorbable device group after the 1 year mark through a mean 3.7 years of follow-up (EuroIntervention. 2018 Mar 20;13[16]:1904-13).

“The overall impact of bioresorbable scaffolds has been nil. We don’t have them. Bioresorbable scaffolds may become noninferior to the best metal stents, but to become mainstream, they should show superiority,” the cardiologist said.

 

 

One bar, based on the uncertain possibility that new bioresorbable scaffolds now in early stages of development ultimately pan out.
 

Future training needs

PCI operator volumes are low, and that raises a host of issues regarding future training needs. Should fewer interventionalists be trained? Should training in endovascular imaging be a mandatory part of PCI training? Should interventional cardiology be divided into distinct coronary, structural heart, and peripheral vascular subspecialty domains involving different people, a change that is already informally underway in many places? How are operators who are interested in becoming experts in PCI for chronic total occlusion, diffuse disease, left main disease, or other complex cases going to get enough experience to be able to concentrate in those areas?

These are questions that will need to be addressed in the coming years. The answers will surely affect the delivery of interventional cardiology care.

Dr. King reported having no financial conflicts regarding his presentation.

SOURCE: King SB.

 

– When Spencer B. King III, MD, shared his thoughts about the future of interventional cardiology at the Annual Cardiovascular Conference at Snowmass sponsored by the American College of Cardiology, he felt compelled to offer a cautionary note about his past accuracy as a prognosticator.

Dr. Spencer B. King III
Bruce Jancin/MDedge News
Dr. Spencer B. King III

It was way back at a poster session during the 1976 annual meeting of the American Heart Association in Miami Beach that he first met Andreas Gruentzig, MD, the father of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), who was presenting his initial revolutionary work on what he called “coronary transluminal angioplasty” in dogs.

“I looked at the poster and told him it would never work,” recalled Dr. King, professor emeritus of medicine at Emory University in Atlanta.

He soon changed his mind, however, because, to great acclaim, Dr. Gruentzig performed his successful first in-human coronary angioplasty the next year.

He noted that the Snowmass conference has played a significant role in the development of interventional cardiology in the United States. Dr. Gruentzig attended the conference in 1980, and Dr. King and others took that opportunity to persuade him to leave the bureaucratic confines of Zurich and join him at Emory later that year. The two cardiologists worked closely thereafter, refining angioplasty and conducting clinical trials until Dr. Gruentzig’s death in an airplane crash in Georgia in 1985 at age 46 years.

Turning to the future, Dr. King addressed a number of recent developments in interventional cardiology and rated their chances of significantly improving outcomes in patients with stable ischemic heart disease. He graded the innovations’ potential with use of a four-bar schema, akin to the WiFi signal power rating on a cell phone.
 

Noninvasive diagnostics to assess anatomy and physiology

“I think coronary CT angiography [CTA] will become the new diagnostic angiogram,” he predicted. “CTA has gotten much better. Outside the United States, in Europe and particularly in Japan and increasingly in China, CTA is becoming extremely common.”

Dr. King cited a recent multicenter study of blinded heart team treatment decision making on the basis of either CTA or conventional invasive angiography in 223 patients with left main or triple-vessel coronary artery disease (CAD). The level of agreement was impressively high: Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) was recommended for 28% of patients on the basis of CTA and 26% with conventional angiography, which suggests the feasibility of treatment decision making based solely on noninvasive imaging, history, and clinical examination (Eur Heart J. 2018 Nov 1;39[41]:3689-98).

“The other thing I like about the potential for noninvasive imaging to guide our interventions is that it may [replace] the diagnostic angiogram, which has largely become extinct,” the cardiologist continued. “If you think about it, patients are referred for an angiogram, and as far as informed consent is concerned, the patient is told to pack his bags, go off to some other city, get in the cath lab, and take the family because of what they might do to you. They might put stents in you, they might operate on you. We don’t have any idea because we don’t know what you have. And the patient has to buy into this. With CTA, the potential is there for people to actually know what you’re going to do to them before you do it.”

Coronary artery calcium scoring for primary risk assessment has taken on a prominent role in the latest practice guidelines. “I think it’s mostly helpful in getting people out of the system because they don’t have any calcium,” in Dr. King’s view.

PET and MRI will remain secondary noninvasive technologies. They will be used mostly to diagnose microvascular disease, but that’s information that doesn’t have much influence on whether interventional procedures are performed.

Overall, he gave noninvasive diagnostic tools high marks for their potential to improve outcomes in patients with stable ischemic heart disease.

“I give it a pretty robust three bars. Maybe you could give it four,” he said.
 

 

 

New pharmacologic therapies

Citing in particular the proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) inhibitors and the sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitors, Dr. King declared, “It may be that the biggest, newest device in interventional cardiology going forward is not a device at all, it’s medical therapy.”

Interventional cardiologists either need to become expert in advanced medical therapies or else have access to someone in their group who prescribes those medications deftly.

“The future care of our patients will require more than percutaneous coronary intervention,” he emphasized.

So, four bars for the new medical therapies.
 

PCI and coronary artery bypass surgery

Both get one bar.

“PCI will be a partner of advanced antiatherosclerotic therapies, but will not be replaced by limiting antianginal therapy to medical treatment only,” Dr. King predicted.

Regarding CABG, he highlighted a recent systematic review and pooled analysis of 11,518 patients with stable ischemic heart disease randomized to CABG or PCI using drug-eluting or bare-metal stents in 11 clinical trials. CABG demonstrated a significant mortality benefit over PCI in patients with multivessel disease, particularly among those with diabetes or a higher degree of coronary disease complexity. However, there was no benefit in terms of 5-year all-cause mortality for CABG over PCI in those with left main disease (Lancet. 2018 Mar 10;391[10124]:9399-48).

“CABG will not go away. I predict that about 25% of revascularizations will continue to be done by surgery,” the cardiologist said. “For patients who can have complete revascularization by PCI, it’ll be done with advanced technology, but probably only by a subset of operators. We have a huge number of interventional cardiologists in this country, and some of them do a lot of these kinds of cases and some don’t.”
 

Endovascular imaging to optimize stent deployment and characterize plaque

Studies suggest that the use of intravascular ultrasound and other endovascular imaging technologies ends up providing better results than when they’re not employed.

“We see greatly increased use of IVUS [intravascular ultrasound], and not so much of optical coherence tomography, because of technical problems. So I give this at least two bars as far as moving practice forward,” according to Dr. King.
 

Bioresorbable scaffolds

This technology, which he noted “was supposed to solve all of our problems,” has tripped and fallen because of its associated increased risk of scaffold thrombosis. He cited a recent network meta-analysis of 91 randomized, controlled trials comparing bioresorbable scaffolds to current-generation metallic drug-eluting stents in more than 105,000 patients. The bioresorbable scaffolds had a significantly higher rate of scaffold thrombosis in the first 30 days after implantation, as well as from 31 days through 1 year and also beyond 1 year. In fact, there was a rising trend for scaffold thrombosis in the bioresorbable device group after the 1 year mark through a mean 3.7 years of follow-up (EuroIntervention. 2018 Mar 20;13[16]:1904-13).

“The overall impact of bioresorbable scaffolds has been nil. We don’t have them. Bioresorbable scaffolds may become noninferior to the best metal stents, but to become mainstream, they should show superiority,” the cardiologist said.

 

 

One bar, based on the uncertain possibility that new bioresorbable scaffolds now in early stages of development ultimately pan out.
 

Future training needs

PCI operator volumes are low, and that raises a host of issues regarding future training needs. Should fewer interventionalists be trained? Should training in endovascular imaging be a mandatory part of PCI training? Should interventional cardiology be divided into distinct coronary, structural heart, and peripheral vascular subspecialty domains involving different people, a change that is already informally underway in many places? How are operators who are interested in becoming experts in PCI for chronic total occlusion, diffuse disease, left main disease, or other complex cases going to get enough experience to be able to concentrate in those areas?

These are questions that will need to be addressed in the coming years. The answers will surely affect the delivery of interventional cardiology care.

Dr. King reported having no financial conflicts regarding his presentation.

SOURCE: King SB.

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