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Safety and Efficacy of Low Temperature Rota-flush Solution for the Treatment of RA-related Myocardial Injury in Patients With Severe Calcified Lesion Undergoing Rotational Atherectomy (RA) (LOTA-II)
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating low temperature rota-flush solution for Myocardial Injury. Completed, enrolled 132 participants across 8 sites.
Detailed Summary
Calcified lesions related to coronary artery are a type of atherosclerosis, accompanied by severe calcified lesions of the stenosis, which is a difficult point for PCI interventional therapy. Calcified lesions have poor response to balloon dilatation and the device can not be successfully placed, which reduce the success rate of operation. Furthermore, the stent is under-expanded and the adherence is poor, which significantly increases the incidence of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACEs). Intracoronary rotational atherectomy (RA) was developed by David Auth in the early 1980s. In 1988, Bertrand has completed the first case of coronary RA. RA was recommended for treatment of severe calcified lesions in ACC/AHA Guidelines for Coronary Interventional Therapy in 2011 (IIa, C). However, many studies have found that the incidence of RA-related myocardial injury is relatively high, and affect the efficacy of RA and prognosis in patients with severe calcified lesions. It has been reported that 58 consecutive patients with stable angina requiring PCI with RA to a calcified coronary lesion have 68% 5-fold increase in high sensitivity troponin after RA. The objective of this randomized control trial is to gain a clinical insight on the use of low temperature rota-flush solution for the treatment of RA-related myocardial injury in patients with heavy calcified lesions. The primary objective is assess efficacy and safety of low temperature rota-flush solution for the treatment of RA-related myocardial injury in patients with severe calcified lesions.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
Patients with severe calcified lesions undergoing RA were performed with low temperature rota-flush solution. The investigators used thermal insulation equipment to keep rota-flush solution at 0~5℃. The EKG and blood pressure were monitored during the RA procedure. After RA, the investigators monitored levels of myocardial injury biomarkers for 3 days every 8 hours.