
Severely calcified coronary lesion subsets remain among the most formidable challenges in percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), often compromising device delivery and stent expansion, contributing to suboptimal outcomes. The ROLLER COASTR-EPIC22 trial represents the first randomized head-to-head comparison of three plaque modification techniques—rotational atherectomy (RA), intravascular lithotripsy (IVL), and excimer laser coronary angioplasty (ELCA)—in this high-risk population.
This multicenter, prospective, randomized trial enrolled 171 patients with moderate to severe angiographic coronary calcification across eight high-volume Spanish centers. Patients were randomly assigned 1:1:1 to RA, IVL, or ELCA before drug-eluting stent implantation. The primary endpoint was stent expansion by optical coherence tomography (OCT), defined as minimum stent area (MSA) divided by reference vessel area. The study was powered for non-inferiority with RA as the reference comparator, though statistical power was diminished due to fewer than anticipated interpretable final OCT images.
In the intention-to-treat analysis, IVL achieved a mean stent expansion of 85.6% ± 13.3%, statistically non-inferior to RA (86.4% ± 14.1%; P=0.77). ELCA, with an expansion of 80.3% ± 13.3%, did not meet the prespecified non-inferiority margin compared to RA. However, in per-protocol analyses and cases without crossover to another technique, the difference between ELCA and RA became non-significant.