Culprit plaque morphology determines inflammatory risk and clinical outcomes in acute coronary syndrome
European Heart Journal

Abstract
Rupture of the fibrous cap (RFC) and erosion of an intact fibrous cap (IFC) are the two predominant mechanisms causing acute coronary syndromes (ACS). It is uncertain whether clinical outcomes are different following RFC-ACS vs. IFC-ACS and whether this is affected by a specific inflammatory response. The prospective, translational OPTIcal-COherence Tomography in Acute Coronary Syndrome study programme investigates the impact of the culprit lesion phenotype on inflammatory profiles and prognosis in ACS patients.
This analysis included 398 consecutive ACS patients, of which 62% had RFC-ACS and 25% had IFC-ACS. The primary endpoint was a composite of cardiac death, recurrent ACS, hospitalization for unstable angina, and target vessel revascularization at 2 years [major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE+)]. Inflammatory profiling was performed at baseline and after 90 days. Patients with IFC-ACS had lower rates of MACE+ than those with RFC-ACS (14.3% vs. 26.7%,
This study demonstrates a distinct inflammatory response and a lower risk of MACE+ following IFC-ACS. These findings advance our understanding of inflammatory cascades associated with different mechanisms of plaque disruption and provide hypothesis generating data for personalized anti-inflammatory therapeutic allocation to ACS patients, a strategy that merits evaluation in future clinical trials.
Contributors

Teresa Gerhardt
Author

Claudio Seppelt
Author

Youssef S Abdelwahed
Author

Denitsa Meteva
Author

Christopher Wolfram
Author

Philip Stapmanns
Author

Aslihan Erbay
Author

Lukas Zanders
Author

Gregor Nelles
Author

Johanna Musfeld
Author

Lara Sieronski
Author

Barbara E Stähli
Author

Rocco Vergallo
Author

Arash Haghikia
Author

Carsten Skurk
Author

Fabian Knebel
Author

Henryk Dreger
Author

Tobias D Trippel
Author

Himanshu Rai
Author

Michael Joner
Author

Jens Klotsche
Author

Peter Libby
Author

Filippo Crea
Author

David M Leistner
Author



