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Brief Reviews |
From the Department of Internal Medicine/Division of Cardiology (M.M., A.Z.) and Department of Pathology (S.L.), School of Medicine, University of TexasHouston Health Science Center and Texas Heart Institute, Houston, Tex; the Department of Internal Medicine and President of the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (J.T.W.), Medical Director, Texas Heart Institute, and Chief of Cardiology at St. Lukes Episcopal Hospital, Houston, Tex; the Department of Internal Medicine/Division of Cardiology and Public Health (W.C.), Vice President of Biotechnology, School of Medicine, University of TexasHouston Health Science Center, and Associate Director of Cardiology Research Texas Heart Institute/St. Lukes Episcopal Hospital, Houston, Tex, and Division of Cardiology/Department of Internal Medicine, Medical School, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, The Texas Heart Institute at St. Lukes Episcopal Hospital, and President Bush Center for Cardiovascular Health at Memorial Hermann Hospital, Houston, Tex.
Correspondence to Dr Ward Casscells, The University of Texas Medical School at Houston, 6431 Fannin Street, MSB 1.252, Houston, TX 77030. E-mail s.ward.casscells{at}uth.tmc.edu
Series Editor: William Haynes
ATVB in Focus
Noninvasive Assessment of Atherosclerosis: from Structure to Function
Previous Brief Review in this Series:
Choudhury RP, Fuster V, Badimon JJ. Fisher EA, Fayad ZA. MRI and characterization of atherosclerotic plaque: emerging appliations and molecular imaging. 2002;22:10651074.
Bonetti PO, Lerman LO, Lerman A. Endothelial dysfunction: a marker of atherosclerotic risk. 2003;23:168175.
Oliver JJ, Webb DJ. Noninvasive assessment of arterial stiffness and risk of atherosclerotic events. 2003;23:554566.
| Abstract |
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15% have a second hot lesion. New imaging techniques may detect additional characteristics of plaques and new predictive models may assess the risk of vulnerable plaques and patients. This approach enables physicians to "buy time" by application of local therapies until systemic therapies stabilize plaques. This may also reduce the risk in subjects in whom systemic therapies do not work. Techniques to identify and treat vulnerable plaques are the focus of enormous research. Here, we discuss the potential benefit of locating individual vulnerable plaques. We review the multifocal nature of the disease in autopsy series and studies using angiography, IVUS, thermography, and angioscopy. The use of new imaging techniques and the development of predictive models may enable physicians to identify plaques that may benefit from local therapies.
Key Words: plaque rupture atherosclerosis stents coronary imaging
| Introduction |
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A series of landmark angiographic studies in the mid 1980s demonstrated that nearly two-thirds of all MI originate at atherosclerotic lesions that lack hemodynamic significance.26 Unfortunately, these "culprit" lesions, which have been termed vulnerable plaques, are undetectable using routine clinical methods of disease evaluation (eg, electrocardiography, angiography, stress test). Of utmost importance is the need to develop new diagnostic techniques for detecting vulnerable plaques. Several studies have shown that some patients may have >1 vulnerable plaque. This has led to the debate on whether it is justified to identify vulnerable plaques.
Reported herein, we review the currently available evidence implicating vulnerable plaques in the development of coronary events and disease progression. For the purpose of this report, the term vulnerable plaque will be used to describe plaques prone to disruption and/or thrombosis. We review emerging techniques for lesion detection and consider the benefits of detecting individual vulnerable plaques and whether focal and/or systemic therapies will be of value.
| Pathology of Plaque Rupture and Erosion |
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Most ruptured plaques have foci of hemorrhage of varying ages, at varying stages of organization and fibrosis, suggesting discrete episodes of rupture or erosion leading to thrombosis, followed by partial lysis, then re-endothelialization. Serial angiographic studies also suggest that episodic plaque growth is more common than continuous gradual growth, and that many such episodes are often asymptomatic.9 The fact that some acute thrombi remain mural, whereas others progress to complete occlusion, is probably attributable to differences in coagulability. Conditions that favor thrombosis include differences in smoking, hydration, hormones, catecholamines, fibrinogen, cholesterol, erythrocyte count, leukocyte count, platelet count, protein S, and protein C (including mutated protein C, such as factor V Leiden, etc), and local concentration of thromboxane A2, serotonin, ADP, and tissue factor.10 Another likely reason is low flow caused by upstream or downstream stenosis (whether fixed or vasospastic), which promotes thrombosis.11
| Techniques for Identification of Vulnerable Plaque |
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| Single Versus Multifocal Nature of the Disease |
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In recent years, the incidence of multiple thrombosis has been lower, but the incidence of plaque rupture or vulnerable plaque (defined as a large atheroma with a thin, inflamed cap, or an erosion) has been higher. This trend may be caused by the increasing use of heparin, aspirin, ticlopidine, and clopidogrel. For example, in a series of 168 sudden coronary deaths described by Davies, 73% of the victims had a mural or occlusive thrombus.21 Fissuring without thrombosis was seen in 7.7%. Among age-matched controls without clinical coronary disease, 8.7% exhibited fissuring without thrombosis, and fissuring was found in 17% of coronary patients who died of other causes. Five percent of these patients had a thrombus, which must have been clinically silent if the death was truly caused by noncoronary cause. In this series, however, no patient with a second thrombus was described.
In a series of sudden coronary deaths caused by plaque rupture and thrombosis reported by Farb, each victim had a second vulnerable plaque (defined as a thin cap overlying an atheroma; other high-risk features, such as inflammation, hemorrhage, calcification, angiogenesis, large core size, or fissuring, were not required).8 Burke studied 113 victims of sudden cardiac death, 59 of whom had coronary thrombosis.22 Rupture was found in 41 of these and 18 others were eroded. There were 79 plaques described as vulnerable because of a thin cap with macrophage infiltration, with or without rupture. These plaques were not thrombosed. Frink reported a series of 83 patients with sudden cardiac death in whom 211 disrupted plaques were found, 102 of which had luminal thrombosis.23 A study of 298 fatal MI by Arbustini found that 2% had no thrombus, 88% had a single thrombus, 9% had 2 thrombi, and 1% had 3 thrombi.24
In some of these series, a distinction was made between a luminal versus occlusive thrombus and between fresh versus organizing thrombus. Most of the second thrombi were mural or recent rather than occlusive or acute. In other words, simultaneous occurrence of 2 occlusive coronary thromboses is rare.
To summarize dozens of previous studies, most fatal infarcts and sudden deaths are caused by coronary thrombosis or by rupture or erosion of a single plaque, and most have an additional 1and occasionally 2vulnerable plaques. Many of the latter exhibit rupture, usually with mural rather than occlusive thrombus.25
Angiography Studies
Angiographic series likewise suggest that a second acute thrombus is rare, but a second vulnerable plaque is common, particularly in patients with acute MI.26 Studying angiographic progression in symptomatic patients, Shub noted progression over a 2-year period in only 22% of lesions, with an average of 1.1 progressing lesions per patient.12 This suggests that simultaneous lesion progression is uncommon. Ge et al found no instance of a second vulnerable plaque in an angiographic and ultrasound study of patients with stable and unstable angina pectoris.27 In a study of asymptomatic angiographic progression over an 8-month period in patients with stabilized angina awaiting surgery, Kaski et al reported that among the 24% of patients who showed progression, only 1 lesion progressed in each patient.28 Subsequently, the same group reported an average of 2.6 angiographically complex plaques per patient with unstable angina.29 In that study, a sensitive but nonspecific definition of angiographic complexity was used: either irregularity or angiographic thrombus. Angiographic findings in 350 patients with nonQ-wave MI were described by Kerensky et al.30 Fourteen percent had >1 culprit lesion. Goldstein et al reported a large series of patients with ST-segment elevation/Q-wave MI. Forty percent had a second vulnerable plaque, as defined by 2 or more of 4 criteria: slow flow, ulceration, irregular surface, or angiographic thrombosis.26 If those characteristics were evenly distributed, then
20% of the patients had a second thrombus.
Intravascular Ultrasound Studies
Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) is better than angiography at measuring the lumen area and can also detect calcification in some areas of low density in the plaque. With recent advances in radiofrequency signal analysis, integrated backscatter may be able to distinguish the very-low-density fatty areas from areas of hemorrhage.31,32 Ultrasound is also able to detect evidence of plaque remodeling and can identify large ruptures and clots, although it is not as sensitive as angiography in the detection of mural thrombosis or fissures. IVUS studies find plaque rupture in most patients with MI and in approximately half the patients with unstable angina or MI but in only a minority of patients with stable angina. Patients with unstable angina or MI have been found to have, in many or most cases, a second vulnerable plaque that is detectable by IVUS.33 Unfortunately, IVUS cannot easily distinguish caps of 0.4 mm in thickness from those that are 0.1 mm or less in thickness. This limitation may be, in the near future, addressed indirectly by the technique of elastography (also known as palpography), which can detect systolic dimpling of the thin-capped soft plaque.34
Optical Coherence Tomography Studies
Like ultrasound, optical coherence tomography (OCT) shows an image from a reflected wave, but because it uses near-infrared (shorter wave lengths than ultrasound) and interferometry, OCT yields much finer spatial resolution (
10 to 20 micrometers).35 Unfortunately, OCT requires inflation of a proximal balloon to obstruct blood flow (to flush the artery to obtain a clear field of view). This could cause ischemia and/or vessel injury, and the balloon precludes assessment of the proximal segments, as with angioscopy.
Angioscopy Studies
Intracoronary angioscopy is superior to angiography and ultrasound in detecting fissuring or thrombus, but it characterizes only the luminal surface and requires a proximal balloon. However, useful information has come from angioscopic clinical research. Eighty to 85% of plaques thought to be the culprit in MI are found by angioscopy to be thrombosed, versus half of those with unstable angina. In contrast, only 15% of those with stable angina have a thrombus by angioscopy.3641 Most of the thrombosed plaques have a complex topography, and most complex plaques are yellow.42 One study suggests that a bright, glistening yellow color is a specific predictor of infarction, although the sensitivity was only
50%.43
With regard to the prevalence of a second complex or thrombosed lesion, Sherman et al described none, whereas Uchida et al found that
20% of patients had a second yellow plaque, and nearly 10% had a second ulcerated plaque.37,43 Asakura et al found a second thrombus in 2% of the patients with MI, but most studies do not mention a second complex or thrombosed lesion.36 All of the many angioscopic series describe a very low incidence of a second disrupted plaque compared with angiographic and IVUS studies, but angioscopy identified additional yellow plaques in many patients with stable angina and most patients with an unstable angina or MI.
Thermography Studies
Normal arteries are uniform in temperature, but in living atherosclerotic plaques, there are hot spots that overlie regions where inflammatory cells are dense or close to the lumen surface. Further evidence that it is the inflammatory cells that generate the heat is suggested by the diminution in temperature by indomethacin in organ culture and by statins in a clinical series.44,45 Moreover, thermal heterogeneity correlated with levels of CRP.46 However, this could be a spurious finding, probably because patients with little thermal heterogeneity in the coronaries can have an elevated CRP caused by inflamed plaques elsewhere, or caused by arthritis, infection, trauma, or malignancy. In contrast, some patients have hot spots in their coronary arteries despite undetectable low levels in high-sensitivity CRP assays.47 The greatest thermal heterogeneity is found in patients with acute MI.48 Those with unstable angina pectoris have less heterogeneity, and patients with stable angina have the least. Yet among patients undergoing a percutaneous coronary intervention, those who do have hot plaques have the highest rate of adverse clinical events, according to Stefanadis et al.49
The number of hot plaques depends on the definition (the arbitrary temperature cutoff) such that if the temperature cutoff is 0.1°C, approximately half the patients with stable angina have >1 hot lesion; whereas if the cutoff is 0.2°C, only
15% have a second hot lesion. Larger temperature differences are found in the Stefanadis study patients probably becausecompared with the reports from New Zealand and Europemost were not using aspirin and statins and had higher CRP levels. Also, Stefanadis used a large, insulated thermistor that occluded flow, minimizing the dilutional cooling by the flowing blood.
| Value of Systemic Markers of Inflammation |
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Buffon et al found the gradient (from coronary ostium to sinus) in neutrophil MPO was similar across "culprit left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD)" and "nonculprit" coronary stenoses in other vessels.55 They concluded that plaque inflammation is diffuse. However, a few caveats should be noted. First, neutrophils (the main source of MPO) are rare even in inflamed plaques, moderately numerous in ruptured plaques, and omnipresent in MI plaques and reperfused microvessels.56 Buffons myeloperoxidase may have come mainly from micro-infarcts, which are expected, because the study included patients with angina at rest. Thus, their data may relate more to thrombosed or embolizing plaques than to vulnerable plaques. Second, the great cardiac vein does not receive blood exclusively from the LAD but from the entire left ventricle, particularly when there is a tight stenosis in the LAD that leads to the development of collaterals.57,58 Finally, noncoronary sites of inflammation may contribute to circulating levels of MPO.
If Most Patients Have Multiple Inflamed Plaques Detectable by CRP, Why Locate Vulnerable Plaques?
The lesions at higher risk have not only inflammation but also a thin and/or fissured cap. The risk is higher still if the plaque has a large lipid core and a history of rupture or remodeling. Moreover, by LaPlaces law, the wall stress (and presumably the risk) is higher if the lumen is large. Furthermore, the cap can be vulnerable if the endothelium is prothrombotic ("activated") or absent ("denuded"), or if the surface is irregular, which promotes thrombosis by means of the reduced shear rates and increased stasis.
Thrombosis is also promoted if there is an upstream or downstream flow-limiting stenosis. Moreover, the lesion has a greater capacity to cause clinical ischemia if it is proximal, because of the larger territory it serves. In addition, if collateralization is absent or inadequate, as is usually the case in patients with MI, the risk of infarction is obviously greater.
The severity of inflammation is probably critical, as well. van der Wal et al, who described inflammation as being widespread, nevertheless found that only 2.5% of plaques had moderate or severe infiltration by both macrophages and T lymphocytes, which regulate macrophages.59 Because macrophages can be activated by T cells, and because markers of T-cell activation in the coronary circulation identify patients at high risk for MI or death, it is likely that the lesions at highest risk are those with activated T cells and activated macrophages.
These features are likely to be detectable in the near future by some combination of CT, MRI, angiography, angioscopy, IVUS (particularly with elastography and/or integrated backscatter), OCT, thermography, near-infrared spectroscopy, or molecular imaging.14 Using a more complete list of predictive criteria will increase the sensitivity and specificity of detecting vulnerable plaques. A gradient of risks will result and will permit a cutoff based on whether the risk of that plaque exceeds the risk of therapy. These criteria could provide a relative risk for a given plaque. The absolute risk could then be estimated by summing the number and vulnerability of each individual plaque and adding the patients history and symptoms, family history, or genetic information, together with data from the physical examination, electrocardiogram, exercise test, and laboratory findings, such as risk factors for thrombosis and inflammation (including genetic polymorphisms). Long-term outcome studies are needed to estimate and validate the absolute risk score.
Even if the Number of Vulnerable Plaques Adds Prognostic Data, How Will This Help the Patient?
The usefulness of locating vulnerable plaque is unproven, but it must be recognized that prognosis is valuable to the patient, who may defer travel, relocation, or elective surgery, to cite just a few examples. Prognosis may prompt a patient to delay a major purchase or new venture, but not other things, such as a family meeting, a reconciliation, or even a last will and testament. More importantly, information about plaque vulnerability may lead to a life-saving change in diet, activity (eg, initial rest, followed by a gradual exercise program), or goals (eg, better management of low-density lipoprotein, blood pressure, and weight). This may influence the number and dose of medications, the patients adherence to a medical regimen, and the frequency of monitoring.
| Treatment |
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Administration of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol or apolipoprotein (Apo) A-I Milano are other potentially promising approaches toward stabilizing vulnerable plaques. Infusion of recombinant ApoA-I Milanophospholipid complexes produces rapid regression and stabilization of atherosclerotic plaques in animal models.65 A recent human clinical trial demonstrated significant regression of coronary atherosclerosis as measured by IVUS after infusion of a recombinant ApoA-I Milanophospholipid complex.66 Low-density lipoprotein apheresis, already used in some patients with familial hypercholesterolemia, is yet another possibility.6769
In addition to statins and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, other potential anti-inflammatory and antiproliferative treatments include corticosteroids, cyclosporin, antithymocyte globulin, and rapamycin.70 Short courses may be well-tolerated.
Numerous novel anti-inflammatory agents and local gene therapies are in development, targeting tumor necrosis factor-
, interferon-
, monocyte chemotactic protein-1, vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM1), and NF-
B. Other gene therapies are directed at enhancing local culprit lesions availability of prostacyclin or tissue factor pathway inhibitor (tissue factor pathology inhibitor), transforming growth factor-ß1, or interleukin-10. Even a simple warm infusion may be helpful, because there is evidence that gentle heating broadly downregulates the inflammatory process.71
However, long-term anti-inflammatory therapies are likely to be contraindicated because of the risks of infection, hypertension, renal failure, impaired healing, etc.72,73 Thus, it may be important to try to eliminate the antigens, such as oxidized low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and infection (such as influenza).74
Our experience is that many doctors and patients are unaware of the proven benefits of a Mediterranean-type diet and of cost-effective interventions, such as influenza vaccine, in reducing cardiovascular and all-cause mortality.74 However, even these approaches are not likely to stabilize all plaques quickly enough to eliminate the need for interventional therapies, and some patients cannot tolerate polypharmacy. Higher doses of available drugs or novel therapies may work faster in these circumstances.
Clinical trials are needed to test the hypothesis that some patients with vulnerable plaques benefit from stenting of a lesion that is only 50% stenosed and not flow-limiting, but which has vulnerable features. Or a longer stent may be chosen to dilate not only the ischemia-causing stenosis but also the adjacent vulnerable lesion. Because statins do not reduce mortality for several months, local interventional therapies are likely to be needed to "buy time" until the medical regimen confers significant protection. Even if occlusion of the 95% LAD stenosis rarely causes MI (because of extensive collaterals), opening that segment may ensure collateral support in case the right or circumflex coronary occludes. Numerous trials have found improved exercise tolerance but no survival benefit from elective stenting (mainly of flow-limiting lesions in stable patients).75 Yet stenting in acute MI (stenting of proven vulnerable plaques) saves more lives than does thrombolytic therapy.76 This suggests that stenting vulnerable plaques before MI could save even more livesthose now lost to cardiac arrest and heart failure caused by MI.
Finally, given the emerging technologies for local therapy and for gene therapy, it may be possible soon to evaluate peptides, such as fibroblast growth factor-2 or fibroblast growth factor-4, to accelerate endothelialization of eroded plaques, and to stimulate smooth muscle proliferation and matrix synthesis.77,78 Other angiogenic factors are also in clinical trials, although use of vascular endothelial growth factor, the best-studied, is hampered by pro-inflammatory properties.79,80
| Necessary Clinical Trials |
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Our prediction is that such trials will lead to a graded and patient-specific approach, rather than a one-size-fits-all approach. Because atherosclerosis is a systemic and multifocal disease, systemic and multifocal therapies (or a combination of them) are likely to be required. The effort and cost will be considerable, but the potential savings from prevention of MI and stroke may offset these costs, and the value of the lives saved will be incalculable.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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Received March 12, 2004; accepted July 30, 2004.
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