BACKGROUND: We evaluated the clinical and angiographic outcomes of patients presenting with restenosis after sirolimus-eluting stent (SES) implantation treated with repeated percutaneous intervention. METHODS AND RESULTS: A total of 24 consecutive patients have undergone repeated percutaneous intervention to treat post-SES restenosis (27 lesions). The restenosis was located within the stent in 93% of lesions. From the 27 lesions, 1 (4%) was re-treated with a bare stent, 3 (11%) were treated with balloon dilatation, and the remaining 23 lesions (85%) were treated with repeated drug-eluting stent implantation (SES in 12 lesions [44%], paclitaxel-eluting stents in 11 lesions [41%]). The event-free survival rate was 70.8% after a median follow-up of 279 days from the post-SES treatment. The overall recurrent restenosis rate was 42.9%. The risk of recurrent restenosis was increased for patients with hypercholesterolemia, previous angioplasty, failed brachytherapy, post-SES restenosis needing early (<6 months) treatment, and post-SES restenosis treated with balloon dilatation. The recurrent restenosis rate of originally de novo lesions re-treated with drug-eluting stents was 18.2%. CONCLUSIONS: Even though de novo lesions treated with SES at baseline and re-treated with drug-eluting stents had reasonably better outcomes than other lesion types and strategies, our study shows that the treatment of post-SES restenosis is currently suboptimal and warrants further investigation.
BACKGROUND: We evaluated the clinical and angiographic outcomes of patients presenting with restenosis after sirolimus-eluting stent (SES) implantation treated with repeated percutaneous intervention. METHODS AND RESULTS: A total of 24 consecutive patients have undergone repeated percutaneous intervention to treat post-SESrestenosis (27 lesions). The restenosis was located within the stent in 93% of lesions. From the 27 lesions, 1 (4%) was re-treated with a bare stent, 3 (11%) were treated with balloon dilatation, and the remaining 23 lesions (85%) were treated with repeated drug-eluting stent implantation (SES in 12 lesions [44%], paclitaxel-eluting stents in 11 lesions [41%]). The event-free survival rate was 70.8% after a median follow-up of 279 days from the post-SES treatment. The overall recurrent restenosis rate was 42.9%. The risk of recurrent restenosis was increased for patients with hypercholesterolemia, previous angioplasty, failed brachytherapy, post-SESrestenosis needing early (<6 months) treatment, and post-SESrestenosis treated with balloon dilatation. The recurrent restenosis rate of originally de novo lesions re-treated with drug-eluting stents was 18.2%. CONCLUSIONS: Even though de novo lesions treated with SES at baseline and re-treated with drug-eluting stents had reasonably better outcomes than other lesion types and strategies, our study shows that the treatment of post-SESrestenosis is currently suboptimal and warrants further investigation.
Authors: Richard P Konstance; Eric L Eisenstein; Kevin J Anstrom; Linda K Shaw; Robert M Califf; Robert A Harrington; David B Matchar; Kevin A Schulman; David F Kong Journal: J Med Syst Date: 2008-04 Impact factor: 4.460
Authors: Negar Faramarzi; Mojtaba Salarifar; Seyed Ebrahim Kassaian; Ali Mohammad Haji Zeinali; Mohammad Alidoosti; Hamidreza Pourhoseini; Ebrahim Nematipour; Mohammad Reza Mousavi; Hamidreza Goodarzynejad Journal: J Tehran Heart Cent Date: 2013-01-08