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      Analysis of FFR Measurement Clinical Impact and Cost-Effectiveness Compared to Angiography In Multi-Arterial Patients Undergoing PCI

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          Abstract

          The study by Quintella et al. 1 published in this issue of the journal, brings us valuable information about the use of an important physiological evaluation tool in the hemodynamic laboratory. FFR-guided treatment (myocardial fractional flow reserve), used in the percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with bare-metal stent (BMS) implantation in multi-arterial patients treated in the Unified Health System (SUS) has been shown to be useful in decreasing the incidence of new revascularization of the target vessel (clinical restenosis), as well as being cost-effective when compared to the angiography-guided treatment. The value of FFR to predict major adverse cardiovascular events (MCAEs) prior to PCIs has been established for many years. Its ability to detect ischemia and, with this, to guide the most appropriate treatment, has undergone the test of time, and passed. The 15-year follow-up of the DEFER 2 study in single-vessel patients, and the 5-year studies, FAME 1, 3 and FAME 2, 4 in multiarterial patients, showed consistent and unquestionable results, with a better, or at least similar, clinical progression, in the FFR-guided groups, using less stents with fewer lesions and consequently lower costs, as well as evidenced the safety of leaving lesions whose FFR was not indicative of ischemia only on drug treatment. The limited value of angiography to predict ischemia has long been known. Sant'Anna et al. 5 showed a weak correlation between angiography, expressed as a percentage of stenosis diameter (SD), and FFR (rho = - 0.33), especially in intermediate lesions (between 40% and 70%). This disagreement between SD and physiology has already been documented in several other studies, such as that by Toth et al. 6 and Park et al., 7 which also showed disagreement rates between FFR and angiography of 36% and 39% respectively. In a study published in 2007, 8 in 250 patients (452 lesions) assessed by FFR before PCI, 32% of the lesions had their initially planned treatment strategy modified after FFR measurement, which is a major change because it would imply inadequate treatment in more than one third of the patients. More recently, Ciccarelli et al. 9 in a FAME 2 substudy, analyzed the value of angiography compared to FFR to predict the natural history of coronary lesions, correlating MCAE index with the angiographic and physiological importance of these lesions in patients (n = 607) who were initially left only on drug treatment. In the subgroups in which FFR was discordant of angiography (FFR > 0.80 and SD ≥ 50% or FFR ≤ 0.80 and SD < 50%), clinical progression was worse in those in whom FFR was ≤ 0, 80, even if the lesion was not significant, and benign in those in whom FFR was > 0.80, regardless of SD. In the study by Quintella et al., 1 MCAE that was reduced in the FFR group was due to the need for new revascularization of the target vessel, with no difference in mortality or infarction. Even with the limited number of patients involved in the study, this data is in agreement with what was presented in the FAME studies, in which, after 5 years of progression, only the need for new revascularization remains different in the groups. We call the attention to the low rate of clinical restenosis in the FFR group (5.8%) of the study by Quintella et al., 1 because he used only BMS, which may be due to the fact that much less lesions were treated compared to the angio group (1.14 vs. 2.22 stents per patient), and with better selection criteria. Another interesting finding of the study is the cost-effectiveness (CE) relationship, measured by the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER), which represents the ratio between the costs of technologies under analysis, and their effectiveness. This ratio is usually adjusted for quality of life, and expressed as QALY (quality-adjusted life year). Costs below USD 20,000/QALY are accepted to be highly supportive of the technology tested. The ICER calculated for the study by Quintella et al. 1 was of R$ 21,156, 55, totally within the CE criteria, mainly if we consider that only BMS were used, that is, if DES were used, ICER would be even lower. Fearon et al. 10 have published an interesting study on FFR CE in the population of FAME 1, 10 in which the author points out that the FFR-guided strategy has a lower cost compared to that guided by angiography in 90.74%, and is cost-effective in 99.96% of cases, being one of those rare situations where a new technology not only improves outcomes, but also saves resources. Siebert et al. 11 found similar findings in the Australian population, where 1.776 USD would also be saved per patient over 1 year with the use of FFR during PCI. Although we cannot extrapolate these results from other countries to ours, because the prices practiced and the reimbursement system are different, we can still assume that now, when SUS begins to allow the use of drug-eluting stents at a more competitive price, the strategy of use of FFR becomes even more attractive.

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          Fractional flow reserve versus angiography for guidance of PCI in patients with multivessel coronary artery disease (FAME): 5-year follow-up of a randomised controlled trial.

          In the Fractional Flow Reserve Versus Angiography for Multivessel Evaluation (FAME) study, fractional flow reserve (FFR)-guided percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) improved outcome compared with angiography-guided PCI for up to 2 years of follow-up. The aim in this study was to investigate whether the favourable clinical outcome with the FFR-guided PCI in the FAME study persisted over a 5-year follow-up.
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            Evolving concepts of angiogram: fractional flow reserve discordances in 4000 coronary stenoses.

            The present analysis addresses the potential clinical and physiologic significance of discordance in severity of coronary artery disease between the angiogram and fractional flow reserve (FFR) in a large and unselected patient population.
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              Economic evaluation of fractional flow reserve-guided percutaneous coronary intervention in patients with multivessel disease.

              The Fractional Flow Reserve Versus Angiography for Multivessel Evaluation (FAME) study demonstrated significantly improved health outcomes at 1 year in patients randomized to multivessel percutaneous coronary intervention guided by fractional flow reserve (FFR) compared with percutaneous coronary intervention guided by angiography alone. The economic impact of routine measurement of FFR in this setting is not known. In this study, 1005 patients were randomly assigned to FFR-guided or angiography-guided percutaneous coronary intervention and followed up for 1 year. A prospective cost-utility analysis comparing costs and quality-adjusted life-years was performed with a time horizon of 1 year. Quality-adjusted life-years were calculated with the use of utilities determined by the EuroQuol 5 dimension health survey with US weights. Direct medical costs included those of the index procedure and hospitalization and costs for major adverse cardiac events during follow-up. Confidence intervals for both quality-adjusted life-years and costs were estimated by the bootstrap percentile method. Major adverse cardiac events at 1 year occurred in 13.2% of those in the FFR-guided arm and 18.3% of those in the angiography-guided arm (P=0.02). Quality-adjusted life-years were slightly greater in the FFR-guided arm (0.853 versus 0.838; P=0.2). Mean overall costs at 1 year were significantly less in the FFR-guided arm ($14 315 versus $16 700; P<0.001). Bootstrap simulation indicated that the FFR-guided strategy was cost-saving in 90.74% and cost-effective at a threshold of US $50 000 per quality-adjusted life-years in 99.96%. Sensitivity analyses demonstrated robust results. Economic evaluation of the FAME study reveals that FFR-guided percutaneous coronary intervention in patients with multivessel coronary disease is one of those rare situations in which a new technology not only improves outcomes but also saves resources. Clinical Trial Registration- URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00267774.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Arq Bras Cardiol
                Arq. Bras. Cardiol
                abc
                Arquivos Brasileiros de Cardiologia
                Sociedade Brasileira de Cardiologia - SBC
                0066-782X
                1678-4170
                January 2019
                January 2019
                : 112
                : 1
                : 48-49
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Campus Macaé, Macaé, RJ - Brazil
                [2 ]Serviço de Hemodinâmica da Clínica Santa Helena, Cabo Frio, RJ - Brazil
                [3 ]Fundação Técnico-Educacional Souza Marques, Rio de Janeiro, RJ - Brazil
                Author notes
                Mailing Address: Fernando Mendes Sant'Anna, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Campus Macaé - Ensino e Graduação - Av. Aluízio da Silva Gomes, 50. Postal Code 27930-960, Macaé, RJ - Brazil. E-mail: fmsantanna@ 123456gmail.com
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3998-8813
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6987-3905
                Article
                10.5935/abc.20180261
                6317620
                30673015
                80a69eb9-c10e-49ce-af1d-b7ba99f704f0

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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                Short Editorial

                fractional flow reserve,myocardial,cost-benefit analysis,coronary artery disease/economics,angioplasty, balloon coronary,stents

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