FAST III: Angiography-Based Physiology vs Pressure-Wire Guidance

06/18/2026
Key Takeaways
- vFFR-guided and FFR-guided strategies had the same reported 1-year primary-endpoint rate, and the authors concluded noninferiority.
- FAST III was an international, open-label, randomized noninferiority trial at 37 European sites in patients with intermediate coronary-artery lesions and chronic or acute coronary syndromes.
- Serious adverse events were similar in the two groups.
FAST III was an international, open-label, randomized noninferiority trial conducted at 37 European sites. Patients had intermediate coronary-artery lesions with 30% to 80% diameter stenosis and chronic or acute coronary syndromes. Participants were randomized 1:1 to vFFR-guided or pressure-wire FFR-guided revascularization, and vFFR was derived from three-dimensional quantitative coronary angiography without a pressure wire or hyperemic agent. The primary endpoint was assessed in 1116 patients in the vFFR group and 1095 in the FFR group, with a mean age of 67 years, 24.3% women, 18.7% acute coronary syndrome, and 26.6% diabetes mellitus.
The prespecified primary endpoint was a 1-year composite of death from any cause, any myocardial infarction, or any revascularization. The noninferiority margin was 3.0 percentage points, defining the main statistical framework before results were assessed. At 1 year, 80 patients in the vFFR group and 79 in the FFR group had a primary-endpoint event, for a risk difference of -0.02 percentage points. The 95% confidence interval ranged from -2.25 to 2.21, and P=0.004 for noninferiority.
Serious adverse events were similar in the two groups.
