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NSafety and efficacy of limus-eluting stents and balloon angioplasty for sirolimus-eluting in-stent restenosis

NSafety and efficacy of limus-eluting stents and balloon angioplasty for sirolimus-eluting in-stent restenosis
NSafety and efficacy of limus-eluting stents and balloon angioplasty for sirolimus-eluting in-stent restenosis
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to compare the safety and efficacy of everolimus-eluting stent (EES), sirolimus-eluting stent (SES), and plain old balloon angioplasty (POBA) for the treatment of SES in-stent restenosis (S-ISR).

BACKGROUND: The optimal treatment for drug-eluting in-stent restenosis remains controversial.

METHODS: The study cohort comprised 310 consecutive patients (444 lesions) who presented with S-ISR to our institution and underwent treatment with EES (43 patients), SES (102), or POBA (165). The analyzed clinical parameters were the 1-year rates of death, Q-wave myocardial infarction (MI), target lesion revascularization (TLR), target vessel revascularization (TVR), definite stent thrombosis (ST) and major adverse cardiac event (MACE) defined as the composite of death, MI, or TLR at 1-year.

RESULTS: The three groups were well matched for the conventional risk factors for coronary artery disease except for smoking. The 1-year analyzed clinical parameters were similar in the three groups: MACE (EES=14%, SES=18%, POBA=20%; p=0.65), death (EES=2.3%, SES=6.2%, POBA=6.1%; p=0.61), MI (EES=4.8%, SES=2.1%, POBA=2.5%; p=0.69), TLR (EES=11.9%, SES=12.1%, POBA=24%; p=0.78), and TVR (EES=11.9%, SES=24.8%, POBA=22.2%; p=0.23). There were no cases of definite ST. MACE-free rate was significantly lower in patients with recurrent in-stent restenosis (log-rank p=0.006). Presentation with acute MI, number of treated lesions and a previous history of MI were found to be independent predictors of MACE.

CONCLUSIONS: In patients presenting with S-ISR, treatment with implantation of an EES, SES, or POBA is associated with similar clinical outcomes. Patients presenting with recurrent ISR may have a poorer clinical outcome.
1553-8389
84-89
Ota, Hideaki
14f81e1f-4ac6-451e-9d72-13b48099298a
Mahmoudi, Michael
f6a55246-399e-4f81-944e-a4b169786e8a
Kitabata, Hironori
c51d9af7-f094-43de-b8f5-54d959e1637e
Torguson, Rebecca
2fc1ca2f-5f09-47bc-8749-4297680de611
Chen, Fang
c1c61717-ce9b-43d8-9604-d09a72f8a510
Satler, Lowell F.
ca752a0b-53b4-4107-a30b-a7b42167112a
Suddath, William O.
0768302d-bb8c-4522-8986-7364b4d41ad2
Pichard, Augusto D.
d2f75f00-aca0-4897-8758-08d0b2e57beb
Waksman, Ron
23d6bf65-0556-4930-8fad-224a559b34e0
Ota, Hideaki
14f81e1f-4ac6-451e-9d72-13b48099298a
Mahmoudi, Michael
f6a55246-399e-4f81-944e-a4b169786e8a
Kitabata, Hironori
c51d9af7-f094-43de-b8f5-54d959e1637e
Torguson, Rebecca
2fc1ca2f-5f09-47bc-8749-4297680de611
Chen, Fang
c1c61717-ce9b-43d8-9604-d09a72f8a510
Satler, Lowell F.
ca752a0b-53b4-4107-a30b-a7b42167112a
Suddath, William O.
0768302d-bb8c-4522-8986-7364b4d41ad2
Pichard, Augusto D.
d2f75f00-aca0-4897-8758-08d0b2e57beb
Waksman, Ron
23d6bf65-0556-4930-8fad-224a559b34e0

Ota, Hideaki, Mahmoudi, Michael, Kitabata, Hironori, Torguson, Rebecca, Chen, Fang, Satler, Lowell F., Suddath, William O., Pichard, Augusto D. and Waksman, Ron (2015) NSafety and efficacy of limus-eluting stents and balloon angioplasty for sirolimus-eluting in-stent restenosis. Cardiovascular Revascularization Medicine, 16 (2), 84-89. (doi:10.1016/j.carrev.2015.01.004). (PMID:25870152)

Record type: Article

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to compare the safety and efficacy of everolimus-eluting stent (EES), sirolimus-eluting stent (SES), and plain old balloon angioplasty (POBA) for the treatment of SES in-stent restenosis (S-ISR).

BACKGROUND: The optimal treatment for drug-eluting in-stent restenosis remains controversial.

METHODS: The study cohort comprised 310 consecutive patients (444 lesions) who presented with S-ISR to our institution and underwent treatment with EES (43 patients), SES (102), or POBA (165). The analyzed clinical parameters were the 1-year rates of death, Q-wave myocardial infarction (MI), target lesion revascularization (TLR), target vessel revascularization (TVR), definite stent thrombosis (ST) and major adverse cardiac event (MACE) defined as the composite of death, MI, or TLR at 1-year.

RESULTS: The three groups were well matched for the conventional risk factors for coronary artery disease except for smoking. The 1-year analyzed clinical parameters were similar in the three groups: MACE (EES=14%, SES=18%, POBA=20%; p=0.65), death (EES=2.3%, SES=6.2%, POBA=6.1%; p=0.61), MI (EES=4.8%, SES=2.1%, POBA=2.5%; p=0.69), TLR (EES=11.9%, SES=12.1%, POBA=24%; p=0.78), and TVR (EES=11.9%, SES=24.8%, POBA=22.2%; p=0.23). There were no cases of definite ST. MACE-free rate was significantly lower in patients with recurrent in-stent restenosis (log-rank p=0.006). Presentation with acute MI, number of treated lesions and a previous history of MI were found to be independent predictors of MACE.

CONCLUSIONS: In patients presenting with S-ISR, treatment with implantation of an EES, SES, or POBA is associated with similar clinical outcomes. Patients presenting with recurrent ISR may have a poorer clinical outcome.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 23 January 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 January 2015
Published date: March 2015
Organisations: Human Development & Health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 394540
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/394540
ISSN: 1553-8389
PURE UUID: d30a9d10-d34f-42cd-ad30-b88655a161ce
ORCID for Michael Mahmoudi: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1293-8461

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Date deposited: 25 May 2016 13:12
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:54

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Contributors

Author: Hideaki Ota
Author: Hironori Kitabata
Author: Rebecca Torguson
Author: Fang Chen
Author: Lowell F. Satler
Author: William O. Suddath
Author: Augusto D. Pichard
Author: Ron Waksman

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