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Dive into the research topics where Stylianos A. Pyxaras is active.

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Featured researches published by Stylianos A. Pyxaras.


Circulation | 2011

Genetic Variation in Titin in Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy–Overlap Syndromes

Matthew R.G. Taylor; Sharon Graw; Gianfranco Sinagra; Carl Barnes; Dobromir Slavov; Francesca Brun; Bruno Pinamonti; Ernesto Salcedo; William H. Sauer; Stylianos A. Pyxaras; Brian Anderson; Bernd Simon; Julius Bogomolovas; Siegfried Labeit; Henk Granzier; Luisa Mestroni

Background— Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) is an inherited genetic myocardial disease characterized by fibrofatty replacement of the myocardium and a predisposition to cardiac arrhythmias and sudden death. We evaluated the cardiomyopathy gene titin (TTN) as a candidate ARVC gene because of its proximity to an ARVC locus at position 2q32 and the connection of the titin protein to the transitional junction at intercalated disks. Methods and Results— All 312 titin exons known to be expressed in human cardiac titin and the complete 3′ untranslated region were sequenced in 38 ARVC families. Eight unique TTN variants were detected in 7 families, including a prominent Thr2896Ile mutation that showed complete segregation with the ARVC phenotype in 1 large family. The Thr2896IIe mutation maps within a highly conserved immunoglobulin-like fold (Ig10 domain) located in the spring region of titin. Native gel electrophoresis, nuclear magnetic resonance, intrinsic fluorescence, and proteolysis assays of wild-type and mutant Ig10 domains revealed that the Thr2896IIe exchange reduces the structural stability and increases the propensity for degradation of the Ig10 domain. The phenotype of TTN variant carriers was characterized by a history of sudden death (5 of 7 families), progressive myocardial dysfunction causing death or heart transplantation (8 of 14 cases), frequent conduction disease (11 of 14), and incomplete penetrance (86%). Conclusions— Our data provide evidence that titin mutations can cause ARVC, a finding that further expands the origin of the disease beyond desmosomal proteins. Structural impairment of the titin spring is a likely cause of ARVC and constitutes a novel mechanism underlying myocardial remodeling and sudden cardiac death.Background Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) is an inherited genetic myocardial disease characterized by fibrofatty replacement of the myocardium and a predisposition to cardiac arrhythmias and sudden death. We evaluated the cardiomyopathy gene titin (TTN) as a candidate ARVC gene because of its proximity to an ARVC locus at position 2q32 and the connection of the titin protein to the transitional junction at intercalated disks.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2011

Prevalence and prognostic significance of left ventricular reverse remodeling in dilated cardiomyopathy receiving tailored medical treatment.

Marco Merlo; Stylianos A. Pyxaras; Bruno Pinamonti; Andrea Di Lenarda; Gianfranco Sinagra

OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence and prognostic role of left ventricular reverse remodeling (LVRR) in idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (IDCM). BACKGROUND Tailored medical therapy can lead to LVRR in IDCM. The prevalence and prognostic impact of LVRR remain unclear. METHODS We consecutively enrolled 361 IDCM patients. LVRR was defined as a left ventricular ejection fraction increase of ≥10 U or a left ventricular ejection fraction of ≥50% and a decrease in indexed left ventricular end-diastolic diameter of ≥10% or indexed left ventricular end-diastolic diameter of ≥33 mm/m(2) at 24 months (range 9 to 36 months). Follow-up echocardiographic data were available for 242 patients (67%), 34 (9%) died/underwent heart transplantation (HTx) before re-evaluation, and 85 (24%) did not have a complete re-evaluation. After re-evaluation, the surviving patients were followed for 110 ± 53 months; there were 55 deaths (23%) and 32 HTx (13%). RESULTS LVRR was found in 89 of 242 patients (37%). Baseline predictors of LVRR were higher systolic blood pressure (p = 0.047) and the absence of left bundle branch block (p = 0.009). When added to a prognostic baseline model including male sex, heart failure duration, New York Heart Association functional classes III to IV, LVEF, significant mitral regurgitation, and beta-blockers, LVRR, New York Heart Association functional classes III to IV, and significant mitral regurgitation after 24 months emerged as independent predictors of death/HTx and heart failure death/HTx. The model including follow-up variables showed additional prognostic power with respect to baseline model (for death/HTx, area under the curve: 0.80 vs. 0.70, respectively, p = 0.004). Furthermore, only LVRR was significantly associated with sudden death/major ventricular arrhythmia in the long-term. CONCLUSIONS LVRR characterized approximately one-third of IDCM patients surviving 2 years while receiving optimal medical therapy and allowed a more accurate long-term prognostic stratification of the disease.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2013

VERIFY (VERification of Instantaneous Wave-Free Ratio and Fractional Flow Reserve for the Assessment of Coronary Artery Stenosis Severity in EverydaY Practice): a multicenter study in consecutive patients.

Colin Berry; M Marcel van 't Veer; Nils Witt; Petr Kala; Otakar Boček; Stylianos A. Pyxaras; John McClure; William F. Fearon; Emanuele Barbato; Pim A.L. Tonino; Bernard De Bruyne; Nico H.J. Pijls; Keith G. Oldroyd

OBJECTIVES This study sought to compare fractional flow reserve (FFR) with the instantaneous wave-free ratio (iFR) in patients with coronary artery disease and also to determine whether the iFR is independent of hyperemia. BACKGROUND FFR is a validated index of coronary stenosis severity. FFR-guided percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) improves clinical outcomes compared to angiographic guidance alone. iFR has been proposed as a new index of stenosis severity that can be measured without adenosine. METHODS We conducted a prospective, multicenter, international study of 206 consecutive patients referred for PCI and a retrospective analysis of 500 archived pressure recordings. Aortic and distal coronary pressures were measured in duplicate in patients under resting conditions and during intravenous adenosine infusion at 140 μg/kg/min. RESULTS Compared to the FFR cut-off value of ≤0.80, the diagnostic accuracy of the iFR value of ≤0.80 was 60% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 53% to 67%) for all vessels studied and 51% (95% CI: 43% to 59%) for those patients with FFR in the range of 0.60 to 0.90. iFR was significantly influenced by the induction of hyperemia: mean ± SD iFR at rest was 0.82 ± 0.16 versus 0.64 ± 0.18 with hyperemia (p < 0.001). Receiver operating characteristics confirmed that the diagnostic accuracy of iFR was similar to resting Pd/Pa and trans-stenotic pressure gradient and significantly inferior to hyperemic iFR. Analysis of our retrospectively acquired dataset showed similar results. CONCLUSIONS iFR correlates weakly with FFR and is not independent of hyperemia. iFR cannot be recommended for clinical decision making in patients with coronary artery disease.


European Heart Journal | 2014

Evolving concepts of angiogram: fractional flow reserve discordances in 4000 coronary stenoses

Gabor G. Toth; Michalis Hamilos; Stylianos A. Pyxaras; Fabio Mangiacapra; Olivier Nelis; Frederic De Vroey; Luigi Di Serafino; Olivier Muller; Carlos Van Mieghem; Eric Wyffels; Guy R. Heyndrickx; Jozef Bartunek; Marc Vanderheyden; Emanuele Barbato; William Wijns; Bernard De Bruyne

AIMS The present analysis addresses the potential clinical and physiologic significance of discordance in severity of coronary artery disease between the angiogram and fractional flow reserve (FFR) in a large and unselected patient population. METHODS AND RESULTS Between September 1999 and December 2011, FFR and percent diameter stenosis (DS) as assessed by quantitative coronary angiography were obtained in 2986 patients (n = 4086 coronary stenoses), in whom at least one stenosis was of intermediate angiographic severity. Fractional flow reserve correlated slightly but significantly with DS [-0.38 (95% CI: -0.41; -0.36); P < 0.001]. The sensitivity, specificity, and diagnostic accuracy of a ≥ 50% DS for predicting FFR ≤ 0.80 were 61% (95% CI: 59; 63), 67% (95% CI: 65; 69), and 0.64 (95% CI: 0.56; 0.72), respectively. In different anatomical settings, sensitivity and specificity showed marked variations between 35 to 74% and 58 to 76%, respectively, resulting in a discordance in 35% of all cases for these thresholds. For an angiographic threshold of 70% DS, the diagnostic performance by the Youdens index decreased from 0.28 to 0.11 for the overall population. CONCLUSION The data confirm that one-third of a large patient population shows discordance between angiogram ≥ 50%DS and FFR ≤ 0.8 thresholds of stenosis severity. Left main stenoses are often underestimated by the classical 50% DS cut-off compared with FFR. This discordance offers physiologic insights for future trials. It is hypothesized that the discordance between angiography and FFR is related to technical limitations, such as imprecise luminal border detection by angiography, as well as to physiologic factors, such as variable minimal microvascular resistance.


Eurointervention | 2015

Contemporary practice and technical aspects in coronary intervention with bioresorbable scaffolds: a European perspective

Corrado Tamburino; Azeem Latib; Robert-Jan van Geuns; Manel Sabaté; Julinda Mehilli; Tommaso Gori; Stephan Achenbach; Manuel Pan Alvarez; Holger Nef; Maciej Lesiak; Carlo Di Mario; Antonio Colombo; Christoph Naber; Giuseppe Caramanno; Piera Capranzano; Salvatore Brugaletta; Salvatore Geraci; Aleksander Araszkiewicz; Alessio Mattesini; Stylianos A. Pyxaras; Lukasz Rzeszutko; Rafalo Depukat; Roberto Diletti; Els Boone; Davide Capodanno; Dariusz Dudek

AIMS Next to patient characteristics, the lack of a standardised approach for bioresorbable vascular scaffold (BVS) implantation is perceived as a potential explanation for the heterogeneous results reported so far. To provide some guidance, we sought to find a consensus on the best practices for BVS implantation and management across a broad array of patient and lesion scenarios. METHODS AND RESULTS Fourteen European centres with a high volume of BVS procedures combined their efforts in an informal collaboration. To get the most objective snapshot of different practices among the participating centres, a survey with 45 multiple choice questions was prepared and conducted. The results of the survey represented a basis for the technical advice provided in the document, whereas areas of controversy are highlighted. CONCLUSIONS Consensus criteria for patient and lesion selection, BVS implantation and optimisation, use of intravascular imaging guidance, approach to multiple patient and lesion scenarios, and management of complications, were identified.


Circulation | 2013

Fractional Flow Reserve–Guided Versus Angiography-Guided Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery

Gabor G. Toth; Bernard De Bruyne; Filip Casselman; Frederic De Vroey; Stylianos A. Pyxaras; Luigi Di Serafino; Frank Van Praet; Carlos Van Mieghem; Bernard Stockman; William Wijns; Ivan Degrieck; Emanuele Barbato

Background— Fractional flow reserve (FFR) is well established for patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention, yet little is known about candidates for coronary artery bypass graft surgery. Methods and Results— From 2006 to 2010, we retrospectively included in this registry 627 consecutive patients treated by coronary artery bypass graft surgery having at least 1 angiographically intermediate stenosis. In 429 patients, coronary artery bypass graft surgery was based solely on angiography (angiography-guided group). In 198 patients, at least 1 intermediate stenosis was grafted with an FFR ⩽0.80 or deferred with an FFR >0.80 (FFR-guided group). The end point was major adverse cardiovascular events at 3 years, defined as the composite of overall death, myocardial infarction, and target vessel revascularization. The rate of angiographic multivessel disease was similar in the angiography-guided and FFR-guided groups (404 [94.2%] versus 186 [93.9%]; P=0.722). In the FFR-guided group, this was significantly downgraded after FFR measurements to 86.4% (P<0.001 versus before FFR) and was associated with a smaller number of anastomoses (3 [2–3] versus 3 [2–4]; P<0.001) and rate of on-pump surgery (49% versus 69%; P<0.001). At 3 years, major adverse cardiovascular events were not different between the angiography-guided and FFR-guided groups (12% versus 11%; hazard ratio, 1.030; 95% confidence interval, 0.627–1.692; P=0.908). However, the FFR-guided group compared with the angiography-guided group presented a significantly lower rate of angina (Canadian Cardiovascular Society class II–IV, 31% versus 47%; P<0.001). Conclusions— FFR-guided coronary artery bypass graft surgery was associated with a lower number of graft anastomoses and a lower rate of on-pump surgery compared with angiography-guided coronary artery bypass graft surgery. This did not result in a higher event rate during up to 36 months of follow-up and was associated with a lower rate of angina.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2013

Does the instantaneous wave-free ratio approximate the fractional flow reserve?

Nils P. Johnson; Richard L. Kirkeeide; Kaleab N. Asrress; William F. Fearon; Timothy Lockie; Koen M. Marques; Stylianos A. Pyxaras; M. Cristina Rolandi; M Marcel van 't Veer; Bernard De Bruyne; Jan J. Piek; Nico H.J. Pijls; Simon Redwood; Maria Siebes; Jos A. E. Spaan; K. Lance Gould

OBJECTIVES This study sought to examine the clinical performance of and theoretical basis for the instantaneous wave-free ratio (iFR) approximation to the fractional flow reserve (FFR). BACKGROUND Recent work has proposed iFR as a vasodilation-free alternative to FFR for making mechanical revascularization decisions. Its fundamental basis is the assumption that diastolic resting myocardial resistance equals mean hyperemic resistance. METHODS Pressure-only and combined pressure-flow clinical data from several centers were studied both empirically and by using pressure-flow physiology. A Monte Carlo simulation was performed by repeatedly selecting random parameters as if drawing from a cohort of hypothetical patients, using the reported ranges of these physiologic variables. RESULTS We aggregated observations of 1,129 patients, including 120 with combined pressure-flow data. Separately, we performed 1,000 Monte Carlo simulations. Clinical data showed that iFR was +0.09 higher than FFR on average, with ±0.17 limits of agreement. Diastolic resting resistance was 2.5 ± 1.0 times higher than mean hyperemic resistance in patients. Without invoking wave mechanics, classic pressure-flow physiology explained clinical observations well, with a coefficient of determination of >0.9. Nearly identical scatter of iFR versus FFR was seen between simulation and patient observations, thereby supporting our model. CONCLUSIONS iFR provides both a biased estimate of FFR, on average, and an uncertain estimate of FFR in individual cases. Diastolic resting myocardial resistance does not equal mean hyperemic resistance, thereby contravening the most basic condition on which iFR depends. Fundamental relationships of coronary pressure and flow explain the iFR approximation without invoking wave mechanics.


Circulation-cardiovascular Interventions | 2014

Revascularization decisions in patients with stable angina and intermediate lesions: Results of the international survey on interventional strategy

Gabor G. Toth; Balint Toth; Nils P. Johnson; Frederic De Vroey; Luigi Di Serafino; Stylianos A. Pyxaras; Dan Rusinaru; Giuseppe Di Gioia; Mariano Pellicano; Emanuele Barbato; Carlos Van Mieghem; Guy R. Heyndrickx; Bernard De Bruyne; William Wijns

Background—Fractional flow reserve (FFR) measurement of intermediate coronary stenoses is recommended by guidelines when demonstration of ischemia by noninvasive testing is unavailable. The study aims to evaluate the penetration of this recommendation into current thinking about revascularization strategies for stable coronary artery disease. Methods and Results—International Survey on Interventional Strategy was conducted via a web-based platform. First, participants’ experiences in interventional cardiology were queried. Second, 5 complete angiograms were provided, presenting only focal intermediate stenoses. FFR and quantitative coronary angiography values were known; however, remained undisclosed. Determination of stenosis significance was asked for each lesion. In cases of uncertainty, the most appropriate adjunctive invasive diagnostic method among quantitative coronary angiography, intravascular ultrasound, optical coherence tomography, or FFR needed to be selected. International Survey on Interventional Strategy was taken by 495 participants who provided 4421 lesion evaluations. In 3158 (71%) decisions, participants relied solely on angiographic appearance that was discordant in 47% with the known FFR, using 0.80 as cutoff value. The use of FFR and imaging modalities was requested in 21% and 8%, respectively. Comparing 4 groups of participants according to the experience in FFR, angiogram-based decisions were less frequent with increasing experience (77% versus 72% versus 69% versus 67%, respectively; P<0.001). As a result, requests for FFR were more frequent (14% versus 19% versus 24% versus 28%, respectively; P<0.001) and rates of discordant decisions decreased (51% versus 49% versus 47% versus 43%, respectively; P<0.022). Conclusions—The findings confirm that, even when all potential external constraints are virtually eliminated, visual estimation continues to dominate the treatment decisions for intermediate stenoses, indicative of a worrisome disconnect between recommendations and current practice.


Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2012

Periprocedural variations of platelet reactivity during elective percutaneous coronary intervention

Fabio Mangiacapra; J. Bartunek; Nathalie Bijnens; Aaron Peace; Karen Dierickx; E. Bailleul; L. Di Serafino; Stylianos A. Pyxaras; A. Fraeyman; Peter Meeus; Mcm Marcel Rutten; B. De Bruyne; William Wijns; F.N. van de Vosse; Emanuele Barbato

Summary.  Background: Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) modulates platelet reactivity (PR). Objectives: To assess: (i) the impact of coronary interventions on periprocedural variations (Δ) of PR; (ii) whether ΔPR correlates with periprocedural myocardial infarction (PMI); and (iii) the mechanisms of these variations in vitro. Methods and results: We enrolled 65 patients on aspirin (80–100 mg day−1) and clopidogrel (600 mg, 12 h before PCI): 15 with coronary angiography (CA group), 40 with PCI (PCI group), and 10 with rotational atherectomy plus PCI (RA group). PR was assessed by ADP, high‐sensitivity ADP and thrombin receptor activator peptide 6 tests prior to, immediately after and 24 h after the procedure. E‐selectin and ICAM‐1 were assessed prior to and immediately after the procedure. In vitro, PR was measured during pulsatile blood flow at baseline, after balloon inflation and after stent implantation in six porcine carotid arteries and five plastic tubes. PR declined in the CA group, but significantly increased in the PCI and RA groups immediately postprocedure, and decreased to baseline at 24 h. ΔPR increased across the three groups (P < 0.0001). In the PCI group, ΔPR was directly related to total inflation time (r = 0.435, P = 0.005) and total stent length (r = 0.586, P < 0.001). The change in E‐selectin significantly and inversely correlated with ΔPR (P < 0.001). No correlation was found with sICAM‐1. PR increased significantly more in patients with PMI than in patients without PMI (P = 0.013). In vitro, platelet activation was observed in the presence of carotid arteries but not in the presence of plastic tubes. Conclusions: Despite dual antiplatelet therapy, PCI affected platelet function proportionally to procedural complexity and the extent of vascular damage.


Eurointervention | 2016

Early and midterm outcomes of bioresorbable vascular scaffolds for ostial coronary lesions: Insights from the GHOST-EU registry

Tommaso Gori; Jens Wiebe; Davide Capodanno; Azeem Latib; Maciej Lesiak; Stylianos A. Pyxaras; Julinda Mehilli; Giuseppe Caramanno; Carlo Di Mario; Salvatore Brugaletta; Julia Weber; Piera Capranzano; Manel Sabaté; Alessio Mattesini; Salvatore Geraci; Christoph Naber; Aleksander Araszkiewicz; Antonio Colombo; Corrado Tamburino; Holger Nef; Thomas Münzel

AIMS We aimed to investigate the outcomes of bioresorbable vascular scaffolds (BVS) in coronary ostial lesions. Ostial lesions represent a challenging angiographic subset, with higher event rates compared with non-ostial lesions. BVS might be associated with advantages over the long term, but their safety in this setting remains to be explored. METHODS AND RESULTS Procedural and 12-month follow-up data from consecutive patients treated with BVS for lesions located at the ostium of the right (RCA), left anterior (LAD) or circumflex (LCX) coronary in 11 European centres were collected. The primary device-oriented endpoint was defined as a combination of cardiovascular death, target vessel myocardial infarction or target lesion revascularisation. The database included a total of 1,549 lesions in 1,304 patients with a mean age of 62±11years. There were 90 ostial lesions (5.8%) in 84 patients (6.4%) located at the ostial RCA (14; 16%), LCX (29; 32%), or LAD (47; 52%). Patients presenting with ostial lesions did not differ from the remaining cohort except for a higher incidence of prior revascularisation. Predilation was performed in 97% of the lesions (vs. 96% in non-ostial, p=0.618), post-dilation in 43% (versus 58% in the non-ostial group, p=0.008). At quantitative coronary angiography, treatment of ostial lesions was associated with higher residual stenosis (30% [23-41] vs. 26% [20-37], p=0.035), but no difference in minimum lumen diameter existed (p=0.447). Follow-up data were available at 385 [362-465] days. The 12-month Kaplan-Meier estimated rates of scaffold thrombosis were 4.9% and 2.0% (ostial and non-ostial lesion groups, respectively, log-rank p=0.005). The device-oriented composite endpoint occurred, respectively, in 12.6% and 4.6% at 12 months (log-rank p=0.001). Treatment of ostial lesions was an independent predictor of this endpoint (p=0.0025, HR 2.65 [1.41-4.97]). CONCLUSIONS In combination with a suboptimal implantation technique, treatment of coronary ostial lesions was an independent predictor of clinical events in a cohort of patients treated with BVS.

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Emanuele Barbato

University of Naples Federico II

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William Wijns

Catholic University of Leuven

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Luigi Di Serafino

University of Naples Federico II

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Fabio Mangiacapra

Sapienza University of Rome

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