Case Report
Use of the Impella 2.5 Device With Multi-Vessel Stenting in Severe Peripheral Artery and Left Main Disease

Introduction
CABG is the class IA recommended treatment option for patients with three-vessel coronary artery disease or severe involvement of the left main coronary artery. Percutaneous trans-catheter coronary angioplasty (PTCA) and stenting to the left main coronary artery or to multiple vessels are options in patients who are poor candidates for CABG. However, these conditions are associated with high mortality and morbidity, especially during the procedure, which is considered high-risk PCI. These patients can develop fatal arrhythmias, hemodynamic instability or cardiogenic shock due to ischemia in viable myocardium, caused by balloon dilatation and catheter manipulations. Reducing left ventricular workload and minimizing myocardial oxygen demand are some of the strategies identified to minimize these complications. High-risk PCI assisted with left ventricular assist devices has shown better outcome with less hemodynamic instability both during and after the procedure by increasing cardiac output and coronary perfusion. The intra-aortic balloon pump is the most commonly used support device, but its use is limited in patients with low ejection fraction and aortic valvular abnormality, and is associated with many complications. A multitude of such devices have been used in recent years in high-risk coronary angioplasty without great success.1
Case report






Discussion
Interruption of blood flow due to balloon dilatation and stent implantation during PTCA and stenting to left main or multiple vessels could be detrimental to a significant area of the myocardium. At the same time, ischemia resulting from interventional maneuvers may not be short and/or uneventful. Therefore, it is the operators’ responsibility to prevent the consequences of longer ischemic times that could result in electromechanical dissociation or ventricular fibrillation that may not reverse after restoring circulation in the vessel.2 Maintaining coronary blood flow, as well as systemic perfusion, with a ventricular assist device is very important to prevent the additional risk of distal embolization, and prolonged ischemia and necrosis, due to low flow or no reflow. The Impella 2.5 catheter is a ventricular assist device with a catheter-mounted micro axial rotary blood pump and a pigtail catheter. It has very low adverse events.1,5,7 The catheter is inserted percutaneously to the left ventricular outflow tract. It sucks in blood from the left ventricle and pumps out blood to the aortic root. It can maintain a cardiac output of 2.5 liters per minute, sufficient enough to maintain good coronary and peripheral perfusion. The Impella 2.5 device was cleared by the U.S Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in June 2008 for partial circulatory support for up to six hours in the United States.2 Some European countries have greater experience with this device and have shown good outcomes when it is used in high-risk PCI procedures. Short- and long-term safety has been reported by studies performed in Europe.3,4 According to some European studies, the Impella can be left safely in place for up to 5 days.5 The Impella 2.5 device can be used both for prophylactic support in patients undergoing high-risk PCI, as a rescue device for acute irreversible left ventricular failure, and in cardiogenic shock. Our own clinical experience of 149 cases supported with the Impella (15 of which have been for patients requiring emergent support) has yielded very positive outcomes for our patients. The major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular event (MACCE) rates at 30 days for the first 59 patients was an incredibly low 3.3%, and the in-hospital complication rate was only 3%. We have submitted these data for publication; results will be soon forthcoming. The Impella 2.5 has replaced an IABP for these patients at Detroit Medical Center due to its ease of use, low risk profile, consistent circulatory support throughout the PCI, including maintaining diastolic pressure during left main inflations and enabling minimally invasive revascularization in the cath lab for patients with complex coronary artery disease and at high surgical risk. The PROTECT II data will provide important new data about treating high-risk patients. The Impella appears to yield great promise for changing current guidelines for hemodynamic support in these types of patients. The patient described was symptomatic with significant vascular disease and was a high-risk surgical candidate due to multiple medical problems, as well as high risk for PTCA due to multiple vessel involvement. However, revascularization was successfully completed without any complications with the help of the Impella 2.5 device. We believe that this initial experience may be helpful for challenging cases of end-stage patients needing myocardial revascularization. The authors can be contacted via Dr. Tamam Mohamad at tmohamad@dmc.org This article received double-blind peer review from members of the Cath Lab Digest editorial board. Disclosure: Dr. Mohamad, Dr. Alani and Dr. Munir report no conflict of interest regarding the content herein. Dr. Schreiber reports that he is a member of Abiomed's Impella Advisory Board.References
- Marella PC, Lassetter JE, Heuser RR. The Impella ventricular assist device: use in patients at high risk for coronary interventions: successful multivessel percutaneous coronary intervention in a 62-year-old high-risk patient. Cardiovasc Revasc Med 2011;12(1):69.e9-e12.
- Arieti M, Pesarini G, Ribichini F. Percutaneous Impella Recover circulatory support in high-risk coronary angioplasty. Cardiovasc Revasc Med 2008;9(4):269–274.
- Henriques JP, Remmelink M, Baan J Jr, et al. Safety and feasibility of elective high-risk percutaneous coronary intervention procedures with left ventricular support of the Impella Recover LP 2.5. Am J Cardiol 2006;97(7):990-992.
- Burzotta F, Paloscia L, Trani C, et al. Feasibility and long-term safety of elective Impella-assisted high-risk percutaneous coronary intervention: a pilot two-centre study. J Cardiovasc Med (Hagerstown) 2008;9(10):1004-1010.
- Sjauw KD, Konorza T, Erbel R, et al. Supported high-risk percutaneous coronary intervention with the Impella 2.5 device the Europella registry. J Am Coll Cardiol 2009;54(25):2430-2434.
- Catena E, Milazzo F, Merli M, et al. Echocardiographic evaluation of patients receiving a new left ventricular assist device: the Impella recover 100. Eur J Echocardiogr 2004;5(6):430-437.
- Maini B. Experiences with Impella in STEMI: The USPELLA study. Paper presented at: TCT Session III: Optimizing Primary PCI for STEMI in the Cath Lab. Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics; October 21-25, 2010; Washington, D.C.