Literature DB >> 19171853

Randomized comparison of everolimus-eluting and paclitaxel-eluting stents: two-year clinical follow-up from the Clinical Evaluation of the Xience V Everolimus Eluting Coronary Stent System in the Treatment of Patients with de novo Native Coronary Artery Lesions (SPIRIT) III trial.

Gregg W Stone1, Mark Midei, William Newman, Mark Sanz, James B Hermiller, Jerome Williams, Naim Farhat, Ronald Caputo, Nicholas Xenopoulos, Robert Applegate, Paul Gordon, Roseann M White, Krishnankutty Sudhir, Donald E Cutlip, John L Petersen.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In the prospective randomized Clinical Evaluation of the Xience V Everolimus Eluting Coronary Stent System in the Treatment of Patients with de novo Native Coronary Artery Lesions (SPIRIT) III trial, an everolimus-eluting stent (EES) compared with a widely used paclitaxel-eluting stent (PES) resulted in a statistically significant reduction in angiographic in-segment late loss at 8 months and noninferior rates of target vessel failure (cardiac death, myocardial infarction, or target vessel revascularization) at 1 year. The safety and efficacy of EES after 1 year have not been reported. METHODS AND
RESULTS: A total of 1002 patients with up to 2 de novo native coronary artery lesions (reference vessel diameter, 2.5 to 3.75 mm; lesion length < or =28 mm) were randomized 2:1 to EES versus PES. Antiplatelet therapy consisted of aspirin indefinitely and a thienopyridine for > or =6 months. Between 1 and 2 years, patients treated with EES compared with PES tended to have fewer episodes of protocol-defined stent thrombosis (0.2% versus 1.0%; P=0.10) and myocardial infarctions (0.5% versus 1.7%; P=0.12), with similar rates of cardiac death (0.3% versus 0.3%; P=1.0) and target vessel revascularization (2.9% versus 3.0%; P=1.0). As a result, at the completion of the 2-year follow-up, treatment with EES compared with PES resulted in a significant 32% reduction in target vessel failure (10.7% versus 15.4%; hazard ratio, 0.68; 95% confidence interval, 0.48 to 0.98; P=0.04) and a 45% reduction in major adverse cardiac events (cardiac death, myocardial infarction, or target lesion revascularization; 7.3% versus 12.8%; hazard ratio, 0.55; 95% confidence interval, 0.36 to 0.83; P=0.004). Among the 360 patients who discontinued clopidogrel or ticlopidine after 6 months, stent thrombosis subsequently developed in 0.4% of EES patients versus 2.6% of PES patients (P=0.10).
CONCLUSIONS: Patients treated with EES rather than PES experienced significantly improved event-free survival at a 2-year follow-up in the SPIRIT III trial, with continued divergence of the hazard curves for target vessel failure and major adverse cardiac events between 1 and 2 years evident. The encouraging trends toward fewer stent thrombosis episodes after 6 months in EES-treated patients who discontinued a thienopyridine and after 1 year in all patients treated with EES rather than PES deserve further study.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19171853     DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.108.803528

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circulation        ISSN: 0009-7322            Impact factor:   29.690


  45 in total

1.  Best way to revascularize patients with main stem and three vessel lesions: patients should undergo PCI!

Authors:  Volker Schächinger; Christian Herdeg; Bruno Scheller
Journal:  Clin Res Cardiol       Date:  2010-07-08       Impact factor: 5.460

2.  Comparison of plaque prolapse in consecutive patients treated with Xience V and Taxus Liberte stents.

Authors:  Zhu Jun Shen; Salvatore Brugaletta; Hector M Garcia-Garcia; Jurgen Ligthart; Josep Gomez-Lara; Roberto Diletti; Giovanna Sarno; Karen Witberg; Patrick W Serruys
Journal:  Int J Cardiovasc Imaging       Date:  2010-12-21       Impact factor: 2.357

3.  One-year clinical outcomes of BioMatrix™-Biolimus A9™ eluting stent: the e-BioMatrix multicenter post marketing surveillance registry in India.

Authors:  Ashwin B Mehta; Praveen Chandra; Jamshed Dalal; Prabhakar Shetty; Devang Desai; K Chocklingam; Jayesh Prajapati; Pramod Kumar; Vilas Magarkar; Apurva Vasawada; B K Goyal; Viveka Kumar; V Suryaprakash Rao; Ramesh Babu; Pritesh Parikh; Upendra Kaul; Aruna Patil; Tushar Mhetre; Hrishikesh Rangnekar
Journal:  Indian Heart J       Date:  2013-09-23

Review 4.  Recent developments in drug-eluting stents.

Authors:  Yue Li; Ravinay Bhindi; Levon M Khachigian
Journal:  J Mol Med (Berl)       Date:  2011-01-29       Impact factor: 4.599

Review 5.  New drug-eluting stent concepts.

Authors:  Rainer Wessely
Journal:  Nat Rev Cardiol       Date:  2010-03-02       Impact factor: 32.419

6.  Successful treatment of in-stent restenosis of a covered stent graft with a paclitaxel-eluting stent.

Authors:  Khalid Bin Thani; William E Bennett; Amir Ravandi; Sotirios Tsimikas
Journal:  J Cardiol Cases       Date:  2011-05-04

7.  Experience with BioMatrix BES and other DES in all-comers setting: a retrospective overview.

Authors:  B K Goyal; B C Kalmath; Ramesh Kawar; Anil Sharma; Bhushan Khemnar; Hrishikesh Rangnekar
Journal:  Indian Heart J       Date:  2013-11-05

8.  Outcomes of Patients Treated with the Everolimus- versus the Paclitaxel-Eluting Stents in a Consecutive Cohort of Patients at a Tertiary Medical Center.

Authors:  Nicolas W Shammas; Gail A Shammas; Elie Nader; Michael Jerin; Luay Mrad; Nicholas Ehrecke; Waheeb J Shammas; Cara M Voelliger; Alexander Hafez; Ryan Kelly; Emily Reynolds
Journal:  Int J Angiol       Date:  2013-09

Review 9.  Small coronary vessel angioplasty: outcomes and technical considerations.

Authors:  Sudhir Rathore
Journal:  Vasc Health Risk Manag       Date:  2010-10-21

Review 10.  Update on the everolimus-eluting coronary stent system: results and implications from the SPIRIT clinical trial program.

Authors:  R Michael Kirchner; J Dawn Abbott
Journal:  Vasc Health Risk Manag       Date:  2009-12-29
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