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IVI-guided Versus Angiography-guided PCI in Patients With Diabetes Mellitus

IVI-guided Versus Angiography-guided PCI in Patients With Diabetes Mellitus

Recruiting
18-80 years
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) serves as a beneficial instrument during percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) procedures, affording insight into lesion characteristics and stent implantation. The ULTIMATE trial recently evidenced that IVUS-guided Drug-Eluting Stent (DES) implantation notably ameliorated clinical outcomes in all-comers, especially in patients who underwent an optimal procedure defined by IVUS, as opposed to angiography guidance, resonating with findings from the IVUS-XPL study, OCTOBER trial, and RENOVATE COMPLEX PCI trial, further confirmed by more recent IVUS-ACS trial.

Optical coherence tomography (OCT) has a resolution 10 times higher than that of IVUS and can provide valuable information at each step of PCI.

Regrettably, a dearth of prospective, randomized, multicenter trials exists that scrutinize the benefits of IVI-guided as opposed to angiography-guided PCI in patients suffering from diabetes mellitus. However, several trials have presented subgroup analyses reporting the reduction of clinical events by IVUS but not OCT guidance in patients with diabetes mellitus, which served as the foundation for the design of this trial.

Description

The current study hypothesizes that IVI-guided PCI will be superior with respect to target vessel failure (TVF), including cardiac death, target-vessel myocardial infarction (TVMI), or clinically-driven TVR when compared with angiography-guided PCI in patients with diabetes mellitus.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Age between 18 ~ 80 years old,
  2. Confirmed diabetes mellitus
  3. Indications for undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention using a drug-eluting stent (Invasive or quantitative fractional flow reserve (QFR or FFR) <0.80)
  4. Silent angina, stable angina, unstable angina, or Non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Cardiogenic shock
  2. Previous coronary artery bypass graft (CABG)
  3. Left ventricular ejection fraction < 30%
  4. Requiring oral anticoagulation medications
  5. Any planned surgery within 12 months
  6. Severe chronic kidney disease defined as an estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) < 20 ml/min/1.73m2
  7. Platelet count < 100,000 mm3
  8. Contraindication to study medications or metal
  9. Women of childbearing potential
  10. Life expectancy < 1 year
  11. Any condition likely to interfere with study processes including medication compliance or follow-up visits (e.g. dementia, alcohol abuse, severe frailty, long distance to travel for follow-up visits, etc.)

Study details
    Diabetes

NCT06380868

Nanjing First Hospital, Nanjing Medical University

15 October 2025

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