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Open artery hypothesis

The open artery hypothesis was first postulated by Eugene Braunwald in 1993 (Ref 1). He suggested that restoring blood flow in an occluded coronary artery, has time independent benefits. beyond the acute phase of myocardial infarction. The proposal was, it could improve left ventricular function, reduce remodeling, and potentially decrease mortality by mechanisms beyond myocardial salvage, such as reduced ventricular arrhythmias and improved healing and also potential channels of future collaterals.It was a great concept and sounded very logical and got world wide attention.

Is it really valid now as a therapeutic concept in CCS ? If so, why we struggle to show benefits in asymptomatic CTOs ?

The fact that, opening a CTO is not bringing the expected benefits is one of the most intellectual questions in coronary physiology. Most of us are not keen to go deep into this question.

Could Opening a CTO Confer More Risk Than Leaving It Closed?

Now get ready for some nasty truths. There are plausible mechanisms by which opening a CTO might increase the risk of recurrent events compared to a stable, closed artery.

1.Procedural Risks:

CTO-PCI is technically complex, with risks including periprocedural myocardial infarction ,coronary perforation, stent thrombosis, restenosis, and contrast-induced nephropathy. In this context , it is worth noting the DECISION-CTO trial reported a 2-3% rate of major procedural complications, which could of offset benefits of PCI in asymptomatic patients.

2.Restored Flow and Plaque Instability:

Opening a CTO restores blood flow to a previously ischemic territory, but the downstream vessel may have unstable or vulnerable plaques that were previously “protected” by the occlusion. Sudden reperfusion could trigger microembolization, increasing the risk of acute coronary syndromes (ACS).

3 .Stent-Related Issues:

CTO-PCI often requires not only long procedure times, it often requires long stents , or multiple stents, increasing the risk of stent thrombosis compared to a naturally occluded artery that has adapted with collaterals. Dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) post-PCI introduces bleeding risks, which may outweigh benefits in asymptomatic patients.

4.Collateral Regression:

CTOs often develop robust collateral circulation, which may provide adequate perfusion to the myocardium. After successful PCI, collaterals may regress, leaving the myocardium dependent on the newly opened vessel. If restenosis or reocclusion occurs, this could lead to ischemia or infarction, potentially worse than the pre-PCI state fed by the caring collaterals.

5. Inflammatory Response:

PCI also induces an inflammatory response in the vessel wall, which may promote neointimal hyperplasia or accelerate atherosclerosis in the treated segment, increasing the risk of future events. All these, bring a curious and serious assumption close to reality. (That is, opening a CTO could, in some cases, disrupt a stable, quiescent milieu into, potentially un-predictable terrain and lead to more events than leaving the artery closed.)

Why CTO-PCI May Not Outperform Medical Therapy in Asymptomatic Patients

The lack of clear benefit from CTO-PCI in asymptomatic patients, as seen in trials like the Occluded Artery Trial (OAT) and DECISION-CTO, may partly stem from these risks. Key reasons include:

  • Stable Collaterals: In asymptomatic CTOs, well-developed collaterals may provide sufficient perfusion, reducing ischemia-driven events. Opening the artery may not add significant benefit but introduces procedural and stent-related risks.
  • Optimal Medical Therapy (OMT): Advances in OMT (e.g., statins, beta-blockers, SGLT2 inhibitors) have significantly reduced event rates in stable coronary artery disease (CAD), making it harder for PCI to show incremental benefit.
  • Lack of Ischemia or Viability: Most importantly ,In asymptomatic patients, the absence of significant ischemia or already viable myocardium. reduces the potential for PCI to improve outcomes.

Squeezing the landmark studies on CTOs for some data

While no study has explicitly tested whether closed arteries are better than open ones , several trials and analyses have explored whether CTO-PCI increases event rates compared to leaving the artery closed.

Occluded Artery Trial (OAT)

  • Design: Note : It randomized 2,166 patients with an occluded infarct-related artery (post-MI, >24 hours) to PCI or OMT. OAT is not a strict CTO study.
  • Findings: At 4 years, there was no significant difference in major adverse cardiac events (MACE: death, MI, or heart failure) between PCI (17.2%) and OMT (15.6%) However, there was a trend toward more nonfatal MIs in the PCI group (7.0% vs. 5.3%, ) suggesting a potential for increased events post-PCI, possibly due to procedural complications or restenosis.
  • Implication: This supports the idea that opening an occluded artery may not always be beneficial and could introduce risks.

DECISION-CTO Trial

  • Design: Randomized 834 patients with CTOs to PCI + OMT vs. OMT alone.
  • Findings: At 3 years, there was no difference in MACE (death, MI, stroke, or revascularization) between groups. However, periprocedural complications (e.g., perforation, tamponade) occurred in the PCI arm, and there was a non-significant trend toward higher restenosis-related events.
  • Implication: The trial suggests that PCI does not consistently outperform OMT and may introduce risks that offset benefits in asymptomatic patients.

EXPLORE Trial

  • Design: Randomized 304 patients with STEMI and a CTO in a non-infarct-related artery to CTO-PCI or no PCI.
  • Findings: No significant difference in left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) or MACE at 4 months. A subset analysis showed a trend toward more revascularization events in the PCI group, possibly due to restenosis or reocclusion.
  • Implication: Opening a CTO did not improve outcomes and may have increased event rates in some cases.

A provocative proposal

Thanks to the absolute democracy in science , I can propose a concept, however crazy it may appear. Yes, it is the Closed artery hypothesis . It can be defined as follows: In asymptomatic patients with chronic total occlusions and well-developed collaterals, leaving the occluded artery closed may result in fewer recurrent cardiovascular events than opening it via PCI, due to the stability of the collateralized system and the risks associated with intervention.

The closed artery hypothesis could turn out to be a compelling concept that merits further investigation

Reference

1.Kim CB, Braunwald E. Potential benefits of late reperfusion of infarcted myocardium. The open artery hypothesis. Circulation. 1993 Nov;88(5 Pt 1):2426-36. doi: 10.1161/01.cir.88.5.2426. PMID: 8222135.

2.Kimmelstiel CD, Salem DN. The Open-Artery Hypothesis: An Overview. J Thromb Thrombolysis. 1997;4(2):227-237. doi: 10.1023/a:1008842917403. PMID: 10639257.


Postamble

What makes coronary blood flow dynamics so fascinating ?

A cardiologist’s primary job is to open the artery when it is closed in an emergency . This rule goes topsy-turvy when it happens in a chronic fashion**. Think about the two contrasting behavior of the same myocardium. In Stemi, it bounces back to life with emergent opening of the artery, while in the other, myocardium simply doesn’t bother about total shut down and possibly enjoys* the protection conferred by a closed artery.

*Objection my Lord. The word enjoys is brutal .Are you aware CTOs can be responsible for Stemi too ? ** But, Is it not Intriguing to note, OAT study included primarily ACS population and it looks so true , even acutely occluded coronary artery need some rest from reperfusion Injury.

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MASS 2  study , the 10 year follow-up results are just out in circulation   september 2010 .

It is a rare study , where “one  to one vs  one” was compared  ie  the effect of  medical,  CABG , and  PCI    in chronic CAD .This was done in a single centre in Brazil,  between 1995 -2000 . It was  followed  up till 2010. Interestingly ,  such a study  may not be possible in the future ,   as  many of us  have  prematurely  glorified  the PCI and CABG over medical therapy . Recruiting  patients   for medical therapy alone is becoming a  difficult  job even in  developing countries.  Even if we recruit , huge cross over is likely  to PCI, CABG for all fancy reasons.

So , in MASS 2 we have a rare treasure on hand . . . Let us give three cheers to those  Brazilians  who did this study ,  and  shall carefully analyse and  interpret the results.

Highlights ( According to my  interpretation)

  • A total of about  600 patients with 200 in each group.
  • The overall death at 10 years  is not greatly different . (Around 25 % )
  • But ,cardiac deaths were distinctly higher by few percentages in pure medical  arm
  • Need for crossover  from medical to surgery and PCI to surgery was significant.

CABG tended  to prevent future MI in this study . This  could be  most significant observation from  this study ,( A revelation in fact ! ).It is against the popular  belief  created by CASS  legacy.

What are  the observed difference  between MASS 2 –  5 year results , which was published in 2004 ,  and  the 10 year follow-up , as  on  2010 ?

At the end of 5 years in 2004 , the differences  among the three groups were not obvious.The benefits of CABG mainly appeared after the 5th year and at 10 years it was significant.

Shortcoming of MASS 2

  • It is a single centre study .Numbers were less (600) .
  • It need to be emphasised    CABG was done  with  pump in all patients  . So the currently prevalent off  pump CABG  may not be really  comparable with reference to outcome.
  • Only   bare metal stents were used in PCI .(If only DES was used  . . . Considering the host of issues for and against DES , it will  be a  wild guess to judge it’s implication .  It could  have  tilted , either in favor or against  the  PCI  limb .)
  • In medical  limb ,  statins were not used in all.  Further , the dose of statins were not aggressive.This makes medical therapy appear less effective.

Intriguing  thoughts

When we say medical   therapy is  being  compared with PCI and surgery , we are actually comparing ,

Medical therapy  alone

Medical  therapy+ PCI

Medical  therapy + CABG .

Every patient  in all three  groups  receive  statin , antiplatelet and beta blocking drugs and so on.  Even though  statistics  would  vouch for  additional  benefit ,  over and above medical therapy  , in a given CABG  individual ,  how much  of the  the  accrued benefit  is contributed by co- administering   medical therapy  .It  is beyond   reasoning even  with all  gimmicks of statistics.

To exactly quantify  the individual benefits and efficiency  of  PCI ,  CABG  and medical therapy  two more  study limbs are necessary .

  • PCI without drugs.
  • CABG without drugs.

Such a study is possible only in a virtual world ! .  Decision  making  in favor of CABG ,  especially   in chronic stable angina ,  will continue , to be  difficult in the absence of refractory angina .This is due to  the modest benefit of CABG ,   that is  expected,  at an additional risk , cost and  expertise.

Please remember, a person can survive  , only  with medical  therapy for > 10 years  but no one can ever live with PCI or CABG  for that period of time without  adjunct drugs  . Guess  which modality   is  going to win the race  against CAD  in the long run  ?

Final message

If  any one  asks  for  conclusion of MASS 2  study ,  don’t ever say  “CABG is superior to  medical therapy” . Please emphasize , “CABG + medical therapy could   be , marginally superior to medical  therapy alone in some of the patients with chronic stable angina. (Each word  in the above statement is  important !) .

So . . . MASS 2 : Is it a  shot in the arm or shot  in the head for CABG ,  we do not know !

http://circ.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/122/10/949

http://circ.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/full/122/10/949 .This study was done by Zerbini foundation Brazil

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