Inducing persistent flow disturbances accelerates atherogenesis and promotes thin cap fibroatheroma development in D374Y-PCSK9 hypercholesterolemic minipigs
File(s)CIRCULATIONAHA.115.016270.full.pdf (5.55 MB)
Accepted version
Author(s)
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
BACKGROUND: -Although disturbed flow is thought to play a central role in the development of advanced coronary atherosclerotic plaques, no causal relationship has been established. We evaluated whether inducing disturbed flow would cause the development of advanced coronary plaques, including thin cap fibroatheroma (TCFA). METHODS AND RESULTS: -D374Y-PCSK9 hypercholesterolemic minipigs (N=5) were instrumented with an intracoronary shear-modifying stent (SMS). Frequency-domain optical coherence tomography was obtained at baseline, immediately post-stent, 19, and 34 weeks and used to compute shear stress metrics of disturbed flow. At 34 weeks, plaque type was assessed within serially-collected histological sections and co-registered to the distribution of each shear metric. The SMS caused a flow-limiting stenosis and blood flow exiting the SMS caused regions of increased shear stress on the outer curvature and large regions of low and multidirectional shear stress on the inner curvature of the vessel. As a result, plaque burden was ~3-fold higher downstream of the SMS compared to both upstream of the SMS and in the control artery (p<0.001). Advanced plaques were also primarily observed downstream of the SMS, in locations initially exposed to both low (p<0.002) and multidirectional (p<0.002) shear stress. TCFA regions demonstrated significantly lower shear stress that persisted over the duration of the study compared to other plaque types (p<0.005). CONCLUSIONS: -These data support a causal role for lowered and multidirectional shear stress in the initiation of advanced coronary atherosclerotic plaques. Persistently lowered shear stress appears to be the principal flow disturbance needed for the formation of TCFA.
Date Issued
2015-09-15
Date Acceptance
2015-07-06
Citation
Circulation, 2015, 132 (11), pp.1003-1012
ISSN
0009-7322
Publisher
American Heart Association
Start Page
1003
End Page
1012
Journal / Book Title
Circulation
Volume
132
Issue
11
Copyright Statement
This is not the final published version, which can be accessed at https://circ.ahajournals.org/content/early/2015/07/15/CIRCULATIONAHA.115.016270.abstract
Sponsor
Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust
British Heart Foundation
Identifier
PII: CIRCULATIONAHA.115.016270
Grant Number
None
RG/11/13/29055
Subjects
atherogenesis
optical coherence tomography
shear stress
thin cap fibroatheroma
Publication Status
Published
Date Publish Online
2015-07-15