In-stent restenosis with “Inflammatory” neointima following everolimus-eluting stent implantation in vivo optical coherence tomography and histopathological assessment

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Abstract

A 53-year-old male presented with acute myocardial infarction and was subsequently implanted with a 4.0 × 28 mm everolimus-eluting platinum chromium stent in his proximal left anterior descending artery. Eight months after the implantation, he developed exertional angina and underwent coronary angiography, which revealed significant in-stent restenosis (ISR). Percutaneous coronary intervention was performed 1 month later, and the pre-procedural optical coherence tomography (OCT) revealed a diffusely bordered and rapidly attenuated signal-poor region with invisible stent struts at ISR site, potentially indicating a “lipid-laden” neointima. The ISR lesion was excised using a novel directional coronary atherectomy catheter. The histological analysis of the retrieved restenotic tissues revealed substantial inflammation characterized by abundant foamy macrophages and T-cell infiltration. This “inflammatory” neointimal tissue with numerous macrophages (without a necrotic core) detected on OCT was not expected owing to the absence of a known feature of macrophages on OCT (i.e., high backscattering with remarkable attenuation). The current histological confirmation of in vivo OCT findings of restenotic neointima indicated that a “lipid-laden” neointima on OCT may not necessarily reflect necrotic core accumulation, and this could be attributed to substantial inflammation with abundant macrophages.

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Tsuji, Y., Koide, M., Katsura, K., Fujita, H., Ishibashi-Ueda, H., & Otsuka, F. (2018). In-stent restenosis with “Inflammatory” neointima following everolimus-eluting stent implantation in vivo optical coherence tomography and histopathological assessment. International Heart Journal, 59(5), 1142–1145. https://doi.org/10.1536/ihj.17-602

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