Volume 106, Issue 1 pp. 90-104
ORIGINAL ARTICLE - CLINICAL SCIENCE

Physiological Insight Into the Discordance Between Non-Hyperemic Pressure Ratio-Guided and Fractional Flow Reserve-Guided Revascularization

Masahiro Hada

Masahiro Hada

Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Tsuchiura Kyodo General Hospital, Ibaraki, Japan

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Masahiro Hoshino

Masahiro Hoshino

Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Tsuchiura Kyodo General Hospital, Ibaraki, Japan

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Eisuke Usui

Eisuke Usui

Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Tsuchiura Kyodo General Hospital, Ibaraki, Japan

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Yoshihisa Kanaji

Yoshihisa Kanaji

Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Tsuchiura Kyodo General Hospital, Ibaraki, Japan

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Tatsuhiro Nagamine

Tatsuhiro Nagamine

Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Tsuchiura Kyodo General Hospital, Ibaraki, Japan

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Kai Nogami

Kai Nogami

Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Tsuchiura Kyodo General Hospital, Ibaraki, Japan

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Hiroki Ueno

Hiroki Ueno

Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Tsuchiura Kyodo General Hospital, Ibaraki, Japan

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Mirei Setoguchi

Mirei Setoguchi

Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Tsuchiura Kyodo General Hospital, Ibaraki, Japan

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Kodai Sayama

Kodai Sayama

Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Tsuchiura Kyodo General Hospital, Ibaraki, Japan

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Takahiro Watanabe

Takahiro Watanabe

Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Tsuchiura Kyodo General Hospital, Ibaraki, Japan

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Hikaru Shimosato

Hikaru Shimosato

Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Tsuchiura Kyodo General Hospital, Ibaraki, Japan

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Takashi Mineo

Takashi Mineo

Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Tsuchiura Kyodo General Hospital, Ibaraki, Japan

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Yoshihiro Hanyu

Yoshihiro Hanyu

Department of Cardiology, Hiratsuka Kyosai Hospital, Kanagawa, Japan

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Toru Misawa

Toru Misawa

Department of Cardiology, Japanese Red Cross Musashino Hospital, Tokyo, Japan

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Masao Yamaguchi

Masao Yamaguchi

Department of Cardiology, Yokohama Minami Kyosai Hospital, Kanagawa, Japan

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Tomoyo Sugiyama

Tomoyo Sugiyama

Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Institute of Science Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

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Tadashi Murai

Tadashi Murai

Cardiovascular Center, Yokosuka Kyosai Hospital, Kanagawa, Japan

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Taishi Yonetsu

Taishi Yonetsu

Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Institute of Science Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

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Tetsuo Sasano

Tetsuo Sasano

Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Institute of Science Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

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Tsunekazu Kakuta

Corresponding Author

Tsunekazu Kakuta

Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Tsuchiura Kyodo General Hospital, Ibaraki, Japan

Correspondence: Tsunekazu Kakuta ([email protected])

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First published: 31 March 2025
Citations: 1

ABSTRACT

Background

Five-year outcomes from the two major trials indicated higher mortality with instantaneous wave-free ratio (iFR)-guided revascularization compared to fractional flow reserve (FFR)-guidance, despite similar outcomes in deferred patients. This discrepancy likely comes from discordant revascularization decisions.

To precisely assess the characteristic differences, including microvascular function, between resting full-cycle ratio (RFR)-guided and FFR-guided strategies, we performed virtual randomization, specially targeting discordant lesions, to simulate RFR-guided and FFR-guided groups. Microvascular resistance reserve (MRR) was utilized to assess microvascular function independently of epicardial stenosis.

Methods and Results

We retrospectively analyzed 837 intermediate lesions in 620 patients, from our institutional physiological database, with a median follow-up of 6.9 years. Using thresholds of FFR ≤ 0.80 and RFR ≤ 0.89, lesions were categorized into concordant-high (n = 280), high-RFR/low-FFR (n = 105), low-RFR/high-FFR (n = 93), and concordant-low (n = 359) groups. Discordant and concordant lesions were virtually randomized into RFR- and FFR-guided groups. Patients were followed for 6.9 (4.6–9.1) years. Age, sex, percentage diameter stenosis, and MRR differed significantly between the RFR/FFR discordant groups. After randomization, no significant characteristic-based differences were observed between both concordant and discordant virtual RFR/FFR-guided groups. Compared with the patients with FFR-guided would-be-revascularized lesions, those with RFR-guided would-be-revascularized lesions with discordant RFR/FFR results had significantly lower MRR, higher age, and tended to be female. MRR significantly predicted all-cause death in the total and would-be-revascularized cohorts, but not in deferred patients.

Conclusions

In discordant lesions of virtually randomized RFR- and FFR-guided strategies, RFR-guided would-be-revascularized lesions were associated with impaired microvascular function (low MRR) compared with FFR-guided would-be-revascularized lesions, which may underlie the reported increased mortality in iFR-guided revascularized patients.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Data Availability Statement

All anonymous data supporting this manuscript can be shared by contacting the corresponding author.

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