Fibrous cap thickness best discriminated plaque type (<55 μm in ruptured plaques), while >75% area stenosis was present in 70% of plaque ruptures and 40% of thin-cap fibroatheromas.
Observational
295 coronary atherosclerotic plaques (stable fibroatheroma n=105, vulnerable thin-cap fibroatheroma n=88, disrupted plaque rupture n=102) from 213 patients (181 men, 32 women) who died suddenly.
Histomorphologic evaluation of fibrous cap thickness, percent luminal stenosis, macrophage area, necrotic core area, and calcified plaque area using recursive partitioning analysis.
Best discriminators of plaque type (stable vs vulnerable vs disrupted).surrogate
Fibrous cap thickness is the best discriminator of plaque vulnerability, and contrary to prior belief, most ruptured and vulnerable plaques have significant (>75%) luminal stenosis.
OBJECTIVES: The goal of this study was to identify histomorphologic characteristics of atherosclerotic plaques and to determine the amenability of some of these components to be used as markers for invasive and noninvasive imaging. BACKGROUND: Rupture of the atherosclerotic plaques is responsible for the majority of acute coronary events, and the culprit lesions demonstrate distinct histopathologic features. It has been tacitly believed that plaque rupture (PR) is associated with angiographically minimally occlusive lesions. METHODS: We obtained 295 coronary atherosclerotic plaques, including stable (fibroatheroma FA; n = 105), vulnerable (thin-cap fibroatheroma TCFA; n = 88), and disrupted plaques (plaque rupture PR; n = 102) from the hearts of 181 men and 32 women who had died suddenly. The hierarchical importance of fibrous cap thickness, percent luminal stenosis, macrophage area, necrotic core area, and calcified plaque area was evaluated by using recursive partitioning analysis. Because clinical assessment of fibrous cap thickness is not possible by noninvasive imaging, it was excluded from the second set of partitioning analysis. RESULTS: Thickness of the fibrous cap emerged as the best discriminator of plaque type; the cap thickness measured 84-μm cap thickness. Although the majority of TCFA were found in the 54- to 84-μm thickness group, those with <54-μm thickness were more likely to show <74% luminal stenosis (area under the curve: FA, 1.0; TCFA, 0.89; PR, 0.90). After exclusion of cap thickness, analysis of the plaque characteristics revealed macrophage infiltration and necrotic core to be the 2 best discriminators of plaque types (area under the curve: FA, 0.82; TCFA, 0.58; PR, 0.72). More than 75% cross-section area stenosis was seen in 70% of PR and 40% of TCFA; only 5% PR and 10% TCFA were <50% narrowed. CONCLUSIONS: This postmortem study defines histomorphologic characteristics of vulnerable plaques, which may help develop imaging strategies for identification of such plaques in patients at a high risk of sustaining acute coronary events.
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Jagat Narula
Masataka Nakano
Renu Virmani
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
Emory University
University of California, Irvine
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
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Narula et al. (Fri,) conducted a observational in Atherosclerotic Coronary Disease (n=213). Fibrous cap thickness best discriminated plaque type (<55 μm in ruptured plaques), while >75% area stenosis was present in 70% of plaque ruptures and 40% of thin-cap fibroatheromas.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69ecdb66eb2c6328dba62cdd — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jacc.2012.10.054