A simplified lesion classification for predicting success and complications of coronary angioplasty

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0002-9149(00)00724-4Get rights and content

Abstract

In 1988, the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) Task Force on Assessment of Diagnostic and Therapeutic Cardiovascular Procedures presented a classification of coronary lesions utilizing 26 lesion features to predict the success and complications of balloon angioplasty. Using data from the Registry of the Society for Cardiac Angiography and Interventions (SCAI) we evaluated the ability of this classification to predict success and complications. Lesion success, death in hospital, emergency cardiac bypass surgery, and major adverse events were evaluated in 41,071 patients who underwent single-vessel angioplasty from January 1993 to June 1996. Logistic models using the ACC/AHA lesion classification, vessel patency, or both, were compared. A new classification based on the interaction of the ACC/AHA classification plus lesion patency was compared with the existing ACC/AHA classification. Vessel patency, added to the ACC/AHA classification, improved prediction of lesion success (p ≤0.0001). Class A and patent B lesions had similar success and complication rates, so a simplified classification (SCAI) using only 7 lesion characteristics could be created. This system (I: non-C patent, II: C patent, III: non-C occluded, and IV: C occluded) improved prediction of lesion success compared with the ACC/AHA classification (Bayesian Information Criterion statistic: ACC/AHA 16539, SCAI 15956; and area under the receiver- operating characteristics curve 0.659, 0.693, respectively). The SCAI classification was preferred for predicting major complications and in-hospital death and was similar to the ACC/AHA classification for predicting emergency bypass surgery.

Section snippets

Methods

This study was based on data in the Society for Cardiac Angiography and Interventions’ Registry from January 1993 until July 1996 from 57 participating hospitals.8 Only the 41,071 single-vessel interventions were included to ensure that complications were directly related to the lesion specified.

Demographics

In the 41,071 patients who underwent single-vessel coronary interventions, 970 lesions were coded as A and also as 100% occluded (constituting 2.4% of the total and 7.5% of the total class A). Because that combination is not in the ACC/AHA classification (Table I), these clearly misclassified lesions were withdrawn from the data, and the analyses were performed on the remaining 40,101 patients. (The success rates of the occluded A and occluded B lesions were similar, 87.1% vs 87.6% suggesting a

Discussion

The original ACC/AHA Task Force on angiography devised the currently used classification system to attempt to control for lesion complexity for the prediction of outcomes. Shortly after its publication, Ellis et al3 and Myler14 demonstrated that the classification overall had value, but its ability to discriminate differences in the success and complication rates was not as great as originally anticipated. They each proposed modifying the classification by further subdividing the B and C

Acknowledgements

The investigators thank the other members of the Registry Committee of the Society for Cardiac Angiography and Interventions for their help in developing and maintaining the database, Howard Parker MD, PhD, and Claude Shaw and the Registry office at Axio Research Corporation for their efforts.

References (21)

There are more references available in the full text version of this article.

Cited by (0)

View full text