# Clinical outcomes of FFR and IVUS-guided PCI in patients with myocardial bridging and proximal LAD stenosis

**Authors:** Xi Wu, Mingxing Wu, Haobo Huang, Zhe Liu, He Huang, Lei Wang

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2025.1648221 · Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine · 2026-01-12

## TL;DR

A study found that using FFR and IVUS to guide PCI improves outcomes in patients with myocardial bridging and LAD stenosis.

## Contribution

This study introduces an FFR-guided and IVUS-optimized PCI strategy for treating patients with myocardial bridging and LAD stenosis.

## Key findings

- PCI patients had lower MACE rates compared to those on medical therapy.
- Stent extension into MB segments was linked to higher MACE incidence.
- IVUS revealed anatomical factors predictive of poor outcomes after MB stenting.

## Abstract

Myocardial bridging (MB), once considered benign, is increasingly recognized for its role in myocardial ischemia, especially when coexisting with proximal left anterior descending (LAD) artery stenosis. Optimal revascularization strategies remain uncertain for such dual pathology. This study assessed whether a fractional flow reserve (FFR)-guided and intravascular ultrasound (IVUS)-optimized percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) approach improves outcomes in this population.

In this retrospective single-center study, 238 patients with moderate MB and proximal intermediate LAD stenosis were enrolled. Patients were stratified based on FFR measurements: those with FFR > 0.80 received medical therapy alone (n = 96), while patients with FFR ≤ 0.80 underwent IVUS-guided PCI (n = 142). Baseline characteristics, procedural data, and two-year follow-up outcomes were compared. Major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) were recorded, and multivariate regression analysis identified predictors of poor outcomes.

Patients undergoing PCI (FFR ≤ 0.80) had significantly lower MACE rates than those managed conservatively (7.7% vs. 18.8%, p = 0.019), mainly due to reduced angina-related rehospitalization. PCI was an independent protective factor (Hazard Ratio = 0.526, p = 0.034). Among PCI patients, stent extension into the MB segment was linked with higher MACE incidence (18.6% vs. 3.0%, p = 0.001). IVUS revealed that stent extension correlated with severe MB compression, shorter distance between lesions, and more frequent dissections. Two anatomical factors—short MB-proximal lesion distance and MB dissection—were predictive of poor outcomes post-MB stenting.

An FFR-guided, IVUS-supported PCI strategy improves clinical outcomes in patients with MB and proximal LAD stenosis, particularly when avoiding stent placement in dynamically compressed MB segments. Procedural planning using IVUS and careful lesion assessment is essential. Functional evaluation alone may underestimate ischemia in MB; integration of anatomical and diastolic functional indices is recommended.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** myocardial ischemia (MONDO:0024644)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** angina (MESH:D000787), left anterior descending (LAD) artery stenosis (MESH:D012078), MB (MESH:D054084), myocardial ischemia (MESH:D017202), LAD stenosis (MESH:D000094629), cardiovascular (MESH:D002318), ischemia (MESH:D007511)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12832825/full.md

## References

34 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12832825/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12832825