St. Jude Medical Inc. is touting the benefits of fractional flow reserve (FFR) as a guide to stenting in patients with stable coronary artery disease following the recent release of the full results of its FAME II trial. But some clinicians are questioning the extent to which the study’s findings should impact clinical practice. The study is potentially significant not only for the use of FFR devices, but also for the use of stents in patients who have coronary disease but are not suffering an acute event. (See Also see "Fractional Flow Reserve Makes Inroads In Interventional Cardiology" - Medtech Insight, 27 January, 2012..)
FAME II was halted early in January based on a finding by a data monitoring board that patients found with fractional flow reserve measurements to have ischemic coronary lesions were...
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