
Patients on the extreme end of the coronary artery disease spectrum, like those with recurring acute coronary syndrome (ACS), have unique phenotypes and plaque healing compared to patients with longer-term clinical stability, a new study suggests.
The observations, single-center study included 105 patients with recurrent ACS (at least 3 myocardial infarctions [MI] or at least 4 ACS with at least 1 MI); patients with a single unheralded acute MI followed by 3 years of clinical stability (sAMI); and longstanding stable angina. Patients all underwent optical coherence tomography, with data analyzed between January and August 2018. Coronary plaque features and healed coronary plaque prevalence in nonculprit segments comprised the primary study outcome measures. Median time of clinical stability was 9 years in the long-standing stable angina group and 8 years in the sAMI group.
In vivo coronary atherosclerotic phenotype and plaque healing in patients at the extremes of the #coronaryarterydisease spectrum https://t.co/iBi8pjdFQC
— JAMA Cardiology (@JAMACardio) March 13, 2019