Intravascular fibrin molecular imaging improves the detection of unhealed stents assessed by optical coherence tomography in vivo
European Heart Journal

Abstract
Fibrin deposition and absent endothelium characterize unhealed stents that are at heightened risk of stent thrombosis. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is increasingly used for assessing stent tissue coverage as a measure of healed stents, but cannot precisely identify whether overlying tissue represents physiological neointima. Here we assessed and compared fibrin deposition and persistence on bare metal stent (BMS) and drug-eluting stent (DES) using near-infrared fluorescence (NIRF) molecular imaging
Rabbits underwent implantation of one BMS and one DES without overlap in the infrarenal aorta (
Intravascular NIRF fibrin molecular imaging improves the detection of unhealed stents, using clinically translatable technology that complements OCT. A sizeable percentage of struts deemed covered by OCT are actually covered by fibrin, particularly in DES, and therefore such stents might remain prothrombotic. These findings have implications for the specificity of standalone clinical OCT assessments of stent healing.
Contributors

Tetsuya Hara
Author

Giovanni J. Ughi
Author

Jason R. McCarthy
Author

S. Sibel Erdem
Author

Adam Mauskapf
Author

Samantha C. Lyon
Author

Ali M. Fard
Author

Elazer R. Edelman
Author

Guillermo J. Tearney
Author

Farouc A. Jaffer
Author
Massachusetts General Hospital - Harvard Medical School Boston , United States of America

