| Literature DB >> 17580729 |
Abstract
The sirolimus-eluting coronary stent received CE Mark approval in Europe in April 2002. In the US, FDA approval followed in April 2003. Since the preliminary results from the First-in-Man feasibility study were presented, several randomized, controlled trials have documented the profound antiproliferative effects of sirolimus, a macrolide antibiotic and potent cytostatic inhibitor of smooth muscle cell proliferation. Subsequently, the body of clinical evidence was increased by the second wave of evidence from trials in more complex lesions (such as in-stent restenosis, small vessels, chronic total occlusions) and "high-risk" patients such as those with diabetes. More recently we have had the opportunity to compare the two commercially available drug-eluting stents following the presentation of data from six head-to-head trials. As a result of numerous single and multi-center, national and international studies in which the safety and efficacy of sirolimus-eluting coronary stents have been subjected to close scrutiny, the global interventional cardiology community now has a wealth of evidence in support of the use of this technology resulting in dramatically improved patient outcomes after percutaneous intervention.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17580729 PMCID: PMC1994032 DOI: 10.2147/vhrm.2007.3.2.191
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vasc Health Risk Manag ISSN: 1176-6344
Figure 1Sirolimus-eluting coronary stent is the most studied of all drug-eluting stents, with data generated from randomized controlled trials and registries. AMI, acute myocardial infarction; CTO, chronic total occlusions; DM, diabetes mellitus; ISR, in-stent restenosis; MVD, multi vessel disease.
Comparative trials: sirolimus-eluting stents and paclitaxel-eluting stents
| Author | Trial | Indication | Patients (N) | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kastrati et al 2005a | ISAR-DESIRE (RCT) | In-stent restenosis | 300s | Angiographic restenosis |
| SES: 14.3% PES: 21.7% PTCA: 44.6% | ||||
| Target vessel revascularization | ||||
| SES: 8.0% PES: 19.0% PTCA: 33.0% | ||||
| Dibra et al 2005 | ISAR-DIABTES (RCT) | Diabetes | 250 | In-segment restenosis |
| SES: 6.9% PES: 16.5% | ||||
| Target lesion revascularisation | ||||
| SES: 6.4% PES: 12.0% | ||||
| Mehilli et al 2006 | ISAR-SMART 3 (RCT) | Small coronary arteries | 360 | Angiographic restenosis |
| SES: 11.4% PES: 19.0% | ||||
| Target lesion revascularization | ||||
| SES: 6.6% PES: 14.7% | ||||
| Windecker et al 2005 | SIRTAX (RCT) | All comer | 1.012 | MACE |
| SES: 6.2% PES: 9.8% | ||||
| Target lesion revascularisation | ||||
| SES: 4.8% PES: 8.3% | ||||
| Morice et al 2006 | REALITY (RCT) | De novo lesions | 1386 | In-lesion restenosis |
| SES: 9.6% PES: 11.1% | ||||
| Pan et al 2007 | CORPAL | Bifurcation lesions | 205 | Target lesion revascularization |
| SES: 4% PES: 13% | ||||
| Lee et al 2006 | PROSIT (RCT) | AMI | 231 | MACE rates @ 9 months |
| SES: 6.9% PES: 14.8% | ||||
| Park et al 2006 | Long Lesions II | Lesion length ≥25 mm | 500 | In-segment restenosis |
| SES: 3.0% PES: 10.3% | ||||
| MACE rates @ 9 months | ||||
| SES: 3.0% PES: 7.8% | ||||
| Goy et al 2005 | TAXI (RCT) | All comer | 202 | MACE rates @ 7 months |
| SES: 6% PES: 4% | ||||
| Target lesion revascularization | ||||
| SES: 3% PES: 1% | ||||
| Kaiser et al 2005 | BASKET (RCT) | All comer | 826 | Target vessel revascularisation |
| SES: 1.5% PES: 2.6% | ||||
| Target lesion revascularization | ||||
| SES: 0.8% PES: 0.7% |
Abbreviations: RCT, randomized controlled trial; PES, paclitaxel-eluting stents; SES, sirolimus-eluting stents.
Figure 2In higher risk cohorts, differences in late loss are more strongly associated with risk of target lesion revascularization.
Figure 3In higher risk cohorts, differences in late loss are more strongly associated with risk of restenosis.
Abbreviations: TLR, target lesion revascularization.
Rate of late-stent thrombosis: sirolimus-eluting, paclitaxel-eluting, drug-eluting, and bare metal stents
| Author | Trial | Patients (N) | Length of follow-up | Thrombosis rates by stent type (SES/PES/DES/BMS) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pooled analysis | SES: 337 | 1080 days | SES: 0% | ||
| BMS: 0.4% | BMS: 238 | ||||
| Meta-analysis | DES: 2602 | — | DES: 0.58% | SES: 0.11% | |
| BMS: 2428 | BMS: 0.54% | PES: 0.29% | |||
| Single center, all comers | SES: 1545 | 18 months | DES: 0.8% | ||
| PES: 366 | |||||
| Pooled analysis | SES: 758 | 2 years | SES: 0.4% | ||
| BMS: 752 | BMS: 0.5% | ||||
| Meta-analysis | SES: 1515 | 13.5 months | SES: 0.07% | ||
| BMS: 1448 | BMS: 0.48% | ||||
| SIRIUS trial | SES: 533 | 361–720 days | SES: 0.9% | ||
| BMS: 525 | BMS: 1.5% | ||||
| e-CYPHER registry | SES: 15157 | 12 months | SES: 0.19% | ||
| lakovou 2005 | Prospective observational cohort study | SES: 1062 | 9 months | SES: 0.8% | |
| PES: 1167 | PES: 1.7% | ||||
Abbreviations: BMS, bare metal stents; DES, drug-eluting stents; PES, paclitaxel-eluting stents; SES, sirolimus-eluting stents.