Literature DB >> 15365732

[When are drug-eluting stents effective? A critical analysis of the presently available data].

S Silber1.   

Abstract

The use of drugeluting stents (DES) has tackled the "Achilles' heel" of percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI) like no innovation before: the restenosis following initially successful PCI of de novo stenoses. Today, with DES, the pivotal clinical parameter TVF (target vessel failure) is in the upper single- digit range for "standard" lesions and 16% for long lesions. Numerous studies have assessed the effects of various antiproliferative and antiinflammatory substances, like Sirolimus, Tacrolimus, Everolimus, ABT-578, Biolimus, Paclitaxel, QP2 as well as of other drugs, like Dexamethasone, 17-beta-Estradiol, Batimastat, Actinomycin-D, Methotrexat, Angiopeptin, Tyrosinkinase inhibitors, Vincristin, Mitomycin, Cyclosporin, and also the C-myc antisense technology (Resten-NG, AVI-4126). At the time of this analysis, four DES are CE-certified and commercially available in Europe: The Cypher stent, releasing Sirolimus from a polymer (Cordis, J&J), the Taxus stent, releasing Paclitaxel from a polymer (Boston-Scientific), the V-Flex stent, releasing Paclitaxel without a polymer (Cook) and the Dexamet stent, releasing Dexamethasone from a PC coating (Abbott). Since more DES will be CE-certified soon, an increasing challenge vexes interventional cardiologists and health care providers: Which DES should be chosen for routine patient care?A prerequisite for assessing the efficacy of DES are randomized, controlled trials. Registries, even with strong monitoring, are limited by the known restrictions, comparing data to historical controls. At the time of this analysis, only three drugs had proven their efficacy in 13 randomized studies in 5669 patients: Paclitaxel, Sirolimus and Everolimus, with 3815 patients in Paclitaxel studies, 1748 patients in Sirolimus studies and 106 patients in Everolimus studies. For further analysis, it makes sense to divide the primary endpoints into non-clinical and clinical endpoints. Non-clinical primary endpoints are usually angiographic parameters, like the percentage of DS (diameter stenosis, ASPECT, ELUTES), the instent LLL (late lumen loss, RAVEL, FUTURE-II), the in-stent MLD (minimal lumen diameter, E-SIRIUS, C-SIRIUS) or, like in TAXUS-II, the IVUS-determined percentage of volume obstruction. Clinical primary endpoints were either MACE (major adverse cardiac events, TAXUS-I, FUTUREI), TVF (target vessel failure, DELIVER-I, SIRIUS) or TVR (target vessel revascularization, TAXUS-IV und TAXUS-VI). As ASPECT, ELUTES and DELIVER-I have shown, even a statistically significant effect on an angiographic primary endpoint does not necessarily translate into a significant clinical effect, which is completely absent in some such cases. Since it is not the goal of PCI to improve angiographic parameters but rather to improve patients' outcome, the choice of DES for routine treatment should be based on the results of randomized controlled studies with a clinical primary endpoint at an appropriate time interval. At the present time, these criteria have been met by only the Cypher and the Taxus stents.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15365732     DOI: 10.1007/s00392-004-0143-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Z Kardiol        ISSN: 0300-5860


  67 in total

1.  Mechanism of late in-stent restenosis after implantation of a paclitaxel derivate-eluting polymer stent system in humans.

Authors:  Renu Virmani; Francesco Liistro; Goran Stankovic; Carlo Di Mario; Matteo Montorfano; Andrew Farb; Frank D Kolodgie; Antonio Colombo
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2002-11-19       Impact factor: 29.690

Review 2.  Taxol-based eluting stents from theory to human validation: clinical and intravascular ultrasound observations.

Authors:  Shinjo Sonoda; Yasuhiro Honda; Toru Kataoka; Heidi N Bonneau; Krishnankutty Sudhir; Paul G Yock; Gary S Mintz; Peter J Fitzgerald
Journal:  J Invasive Cardiol       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 2.022

3.  Non-polymer-based paclitaxel-coated coronary stents for the treatment of patients with de novo coronary lesions: angiographic follow-up of the DELIVER clinical trial.

Authors:  Alexandra J Lansky; Ricardo A Costa; Gary S Mintz; Yoshihiro Tsuchiya; Mark Midei; David A Cox; Charles O'Shaughnessy; Robert A Applegate; Louis A Cannon; Michael Mooney; Anthony Farah; Mark A Tannenbaum; Steven Yakubov; Dean J Kereiakes; S Chiu Wong; Barry Kaplan; Ecaterina Cristea; Gregg W Stone; Martin B Leon; William D Knopf; William W O'Neill
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2004-04-12       Impact factor: 29.690

4.  Coronary stenting versus balloon angioplasty in small vessels: a meta-analysis from 11 randomized studies.

Authors:  Raúl Moreno; Cristina Fernández; Fernando Alfonso; Rosana Hernández; Maria J Pérez-Vizcayno; Javier Escaned; Manel Sabaté; Camino Bañuelos; Dominick J Angiolillo; Luis Azcona; Carlos Macaya
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2004-06-02       Impact factor: 24.094

5.  Estrogen-eluting, phosphorylcholine-coated stent implantation is associated with reduced neointimal formation but no delay in vascular repair in a porcine coronary model.

Authors:  Gishel New; Jeffrey W Moses; Gary S Roubin; Martin B Leon; Antonio Colombo; Sriram S Iyer; Fermin O Tio; Roxana Mehran; Nicholas Kipshidze
Journal:  Catheter Cardiovasc Interv       Date:  2002-10       Impact factor: 2.692

6.  Six- and twelve-month results from first human experience using everolimus-eluting stents with bioabsorbable polymer.

Authors:  Eberhard Grube; Shinjo Sonoda; Fumiaki Ikeno; Yasuhiro Honda; Saibal Kar; Charles Chan; Ulrich Gerckens; Alexandra J Lansky; Peter J Fitzgerald
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2004-05-03       Impact factor: 29.690

7.  Treatment of multivessel coronary artery disease with sirolimus-eluting stent implantation: immediate and mid-term results.

Authors:  Dejan Orlic; Erminio Bonizzoni; Goran Stankovic; Flavio Airoldi; Alaide Chieffo; Nicola Corvaja; Giuseppe Sangiorgi; Massimo Ferraro; Carlo Briguori; Matteo Montorfano; Mauro Carlino; Antonio Colombo
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2004-04-07       Impact factor: 24.094

8.  Inhibition of restenosis with a paclitaxel-eluting, polymer-free coronary stent: the European evaLUation of pacliTaxel Eluting Stent (ELUTES) trial.

Authors:  Anthony Gershlick; Ivan De Scheerder; Bernard Chevalier; Amanda Stephens-Lloyd; Edoardo Camenzind; Christian Vrints; Nicolaus Reifart; Luc Missault; Jean-Jacques Goy; Jeffrey A Brinker; Albert E Raizner; Philip Urban; Alan W Heldman
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2004-01-26       Impact factor: 29.690

9.  First human experience with the 17-beta-estradiol-eluting stent: the Estrogen And Stents To Eliminate Restenosis (EASTER) trial.

Authors:  Alexandre Abizaid; Mariano Albertal; Marco A Costa; Andrea S Abizaid; Rodolfo Staico; Fausto Feres; Luiz A Mattos; Amanda G M R Sousa; Jeffrey Moses; Nicholas Kipshidize; Gary S Roubin; Roxana Mehran; Gishel New; Martin B Leon; J Eduardo Sousa
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2004-03-17       Impact factor: 24.094

10.  A multicentre European registry of intraluminal coronary beta brachytherapy.

Authors:  P Urban; P Serruys; D Baumgart; A Colombo; S Silber; E Eeckhout; A Gershlick; K Wegscheider; L Verhees; R Bonan
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2003-04       Impact factor: 29.983

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  4 in total

1.  [Drug-coated stents. Where do we stand in 2004?].

Authors:  B Scheller
Journal:  Z Kardiol       Date:  2004-09

2.  [Legal requirements for the coating of coronary stents with medications by cardiologists outside clinical investigations. Information of the Federal Institute for Medications and Medical Products and the central position of the various regions for health preservation in using medications and medical products (ZLG)].

Authors:  Dirk von Mallek; I Tolle; K Stephan; R Edelhäuser; B Heinz
Journal:  Clin Res Cardiol       Date:  2006-06-02       Impact factor: 5.460

3.  Transient sirolimus serum levels after implantation of a sirolimus eluting stent in an infant.

Authors:  Frank-Thomas Riede; Peter Schneider; Ingo Dähnert
Journal:  Clin Res Cardiol       Date:  2007-04-26       Impact factor: 5.460

4.  Development and validation of a semi-automated assay for the highly sensitive quantification of Biolimus A9 in human whole blood using high-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry.

Authors:  Claudia Clavijo; Tobin Strom; Vanessa Moll; Ronald Betts; Yan Ling Zhang; Uwe Christians; Jamie Bendrick-Peart
Journal:  J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci       Date:  2009-08-21       Impact factor: 3.205

  4 in total

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