Abstract
Intravascular imaging (IVI) was introduced 35 years ago to assess coronary artery pathology and plaque vulnerability. However, from its first applications it became apparent that it can also be useful in percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) planning and optimizing PCI results. In the early days of PCI, IVI was used to examine the efficacy of emerging endovascular devices and the vessel wall response to therapy, while in the drug-eluting stent (DES) era, IVI was used to guide DES implantation and assess final results post-intervention. The first studies assessing the role of IVI in guiding PCI with DES have failed to demonstrate a prognostic benefit for the use of IVI; however, more recent large-scale randomized trials have underscored its value in this setting. IVI, with its high resolution, allows optimal stent sizing, prompt identification and correction of common causes of stent failure, and it has been shown that it improves outcomes in complex procedures. This review summarizes the evidence supporting the role of IVI in PCI planning in DES era, synopsizes the studies that have highlighted the value of IVI in predicting stent failure, discusses the limitations of the first randomized trials that failed to demonstrate a prognostic benefit from its use, and presents the results of the more recent large-scale outcome studies that underscored its role in complex PCI planning.