Coronary microevaginations characterize culprit plaques and their inflammatory microenvironment in a subtype of acute coronary syndrome with intact fibrous cap: results from the prospective translational OPTICO-ACS study
European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging

Abstract
Coronary microevaginations (CMEs) represent an outward bulge of coronary plaques and have been introduced as a sign of adverse vascular remodelling following coronary device implantation. However, their role in atherosclerosis and plaque destabilization in the absence of coronary intervention is unknown. This study aimed to investigate CME as a novel feature of plaque vulnerability and to characterize its associated inflammatory cell–vessel–wall interactions.
A total of 557 patients from the translational OPTICO-ACS study programme underwent optical coherence tomography imaging of the culprit vessel and simultaneous immunophenotyping of the culprit lesion (CL). Two hundred and fifty-eight CLs had a ruptured fibrous cap (RFC) and one hundred had intact fibrous cap (IFC) acute coronary syndrome (ACS) as an underlying pathophysiology. CMEs were significantly more frequent in CL when compared with non-CL (25 vs. 4%,
This study provides novel evidence for a pathophysiological involvement of CME in the development of IFC-ACS and provides first evidence for a distinct pathophysiological pathway for IFC-ICB, driven by CME-derived flow disturbances and inflammatory activation involving the innate immune system.
Registration of the study at
Contributors

Claudio Seppelt
Author

Youssef S Abdelwahed
Author

Denitsa Meteva
Author

Gregor Nelles
Author

Barbara E Stähli
Author

Lara Sieronski
Author

Carsten Skurk
Author

Arash Haghikia
Author

David Sinning
Author

Henryk Dreger
Author

Fabian Knebel
Author

Tobias D Trippel
Author

Maximilian Krisper
Author

Teresa Gerhardt
Author

Himanshu Rai
Author

Jens Klotsche
Author

Michael Joner
Author

David M Leistner
Author



