Literature DB >> 10483950

Acute and nine-month clinical outcomes after "suboptimal" coronary stenting: results from the STent Anti-thrombotic Regimen Study (STARS) registry.

D E Cutlip1, M B Leon, K K Ho, P C Gordon, A Giambartolomei, D J Diver, D M Lasorda, D O Williams, M M Fitzpatrick, A Desjardin, J J Popma, R E Kuntz, D S Baim.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: This registry collected the 30-day and 9-month clinical outcomes of patients whose coronary stent implantation was suboptimal, and compared them with the cohort of patients with "optimal" stenting in the randomized portion of the STent Anti-thrombotic Regimen Study (STARS) trial.
BACKGROUND: Although "optimal" stenting combined with an aspirin and ticlopidine regimen carries a low (0.5%) incidence of subacute stent thrombosis, only limited data are available for patients in whom stents are deployed suboptimally.
METHODS: In the STARS, 312 (15.9%) of 1,965 patients enrolled were excluded from participation in the randomized trial based on a perceived "suboptimal" result of coronary stenting. Of these, 265 patients met prespecified criteria for suboptimal stenting, and were followed in a parallel registry, which was compared with the randomized STARS optimal stenting cohort. The primary end point was a 30-day composite of death, emergent target lesion revascularization, angiographic thrombosis of the target vessel without revascularization and nonfatal myocardial infarction (MI) unrelated to direct procedural complications.
RESULTS: Registry patients had a similar frequency of the primary end point compared with the overall randomized cohort (3.0% vs. 2.2%), with this end point correlating to use of multiple stents, smaller final lumen diameter and absence of ticlopidine from the poststent regimen. Overall 30-day mortality (1.1% vs. 0.06%, p = 0.009) and periprocedural non-Q wave MI (8.7% vs. 4.2%, p = 0.003) were more frequent in registry patients, and appeared to be related to acute procedural complications. Clinical restenosis was significantly higher for registry patients (26.8% vs. 16.0%, p = 0.001), relating to greater prevalence of independent predictors such as smaller final lumen diameter and multiple stent use.
CONCLUSIONS: In the STARS registry, the inability to perform optimal stenting correlated with smaller final lumen diameter and longer stent length. With ticlopidine-containing regimens, the acute clinical results of "suboptimal" stent deployment are clinically acceptable, although they are not quite as good as those of optimal stenting using similar drug therapy.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10483950     DOI: 10.1016/s0735-1097(99)00271-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol        ISSN: 0735-1097            Impact factor:   24.094


  8 in total

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  8 in total

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