“…In this patient population, however, in which a low‐FFR value may have previously been rationalized away as an indirect sign of high flow and a healthy microcirculation, the (comparatively) unfavorable major adverse cardiac event (MACE) outcomes reported by Lee et al potentially imply an altogether different prognosis. The finding that, at 2‐year follow‐up, deferred angiographically insignificant stenosis with low FFR showed significantly higher event rates than those with high FFR (3.3% versus 1.2%; hazard ratio: 3.371; 95% confidence interval, 1.346–8.442; P =0.009) is very interesting, not least because it appears at odds with the oculostenotic reflex, the physiological mechanisms outlined above, and previous studies …”