Complex percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), encompassing an ever-expanding range of challenging lesion sets and patient populations, accounts for a significant proportion of PCI procedures being performed currently. Specific lesion types associated with lower rates of procedural success and higher rates of recurrence or major adverse cardiac events (MACE) include multivessel disease, unprotected left main coronary artery disease, fibrocalcific or undilatable lesions, chronic total occlusions, degenerated saphenous vein graft lesions, thrombotic lesions, and bifurcation disease. Validated tools and technical strategies currently exist to address most procedural scenarios encountered and should be familiar to the complex PCI operator. Anticipated clinical outcomes, projected resource utilization, and cost considerations should all factor into the decisions of when, how, and in whom to intervene.
J Raider Estrada - University of Chicago Medicine, Section of Cardiology, Chicago, Illinois, US
Jonathan D Paul - University of Chicago Medicine, Section of Cardiology, Chicago, Illinois, US
Atman P Shah - University of Chicago Medicine, Section of Cardiology, Chicago, Illinois, US
Sandeep Nathan - University of Chicago Medicine, Section of Cardiology, Chicago, Illinois, US