Literature DB >> 15945104

Technique of left main stenting is dependent on lesion location and distal branch protection.

Frances Wood1, Elizabeth Bazemore, Joel E Schneider, R Lee Jobe, Tift Mann.   

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to review our experience with left main stenting and evaluate initial results with drug-eluting stents (DESs). Drug-eluting stents delivered with contemporary techniques could change the traditional surgical approach to patients with significant left main disease. One hundred sixty-one patients underwent left main stenting (100 bare metal, 61 drug-eluting) after being excluded from surgery. In group A, disease was confined to the ostium or main stem; in group B, disease involved the bifurcation. Patients were classified as either unprotected (U) or protected (P) depending on the presence of a patent bypass graft. Study endpoints were any major adverse cardiac event (MACE). In-hospital MACE was 6% with no deaths; 74% of patients in group A underwent direct stenting, whereas 89% of the patients in group B had predilatation performed prior to stent implantation. A total of 98% of patients in BU had kissing balloon inflations after stent deployment; provisional side-branch stenting was required in one patient. V-stenting was performed in 13% of patients in group BU. The 1-year mortality in the bare metal stent group was 9% with the majority of deaths in group BU. There was one noncardiac death in the DES group at 6 months and five patients (8.2%) underwent target vessel revascularization for restenosis. Event-free survival at 6 months in group BU treated with DESs was 87%. Significant left main disease presents a spectrum of angiographic abnormalities and different interventional techniques are required depending on lesion location and distal protection. Although in-hospital complications with left main stenting were low in this single-center study, follow-up events were common in patients treated with bare metal stents. A randomized multicenter trial will be required to determine whether drug-eluting stents will improve survival in patients with left main disease.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15945104     DOI: 10.1002/ccd.20426

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Catheter Cardiovasc Interv        ISSN: 1522-1946            Impact factor:   2.692


  3 in total

1.  Drug-eluting versus bare-metal stents in unprotected left main coronary artery stenosis a meta-analysis.

Authors:  Sanjay B Pandya; Young-Hak Kim; Sheridan N Meyers; Charles J Davidson; James D Flaherty; Duk-Woo Park; Anuj Mediratta; Karen Pieper; Eric Reyes; Robert O Bonow; Seung-Jung Park; Nirat Beohar
Journal:  JACC Cardiovasc Interv       Date:  2010-06       Impact factor: 11.195

2.  Stenting of unprotected left main stem stenosis: Results from a German single-centre registry.

Authors:  Klaus Hertting; Tobias Härle; Korff Krause; Jacobus Reimers; Sigrid Boczor; Karl-Heinz Kuck
Journal:  Exp Clin Cardiol       Date:  2008

3.  Rotational Atherectomy and Stent Implantation for Calcified Left Main Lesions.

Authors:  Bryan G Schwartz; Guy S Mayeda; Christina Economides; Robert A Kloner; David M Shavelle; Steven Burstein
Journal:  Cardiol Res       Date:  2011-09-20
  3 in total

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