| Literature DB >> 19436654 |
Clarissa Cola1, Salvatore Brugaletta, Victoria Martín Yuste, Bieito Campos, Dominick J Angiolillo, Manel Sabaté.
Abstract
Coronary stent thrombosis is a serious problem in the drug-eluting stent era. Despite aggressive antiplatelet therapy during and after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), the incidence of sub-acute stent thrombosis remains approximately 0.5%-2%, which may represent a catastrophic clinical situation. Both procedural factors and discontinuation of antiplatelet therapy are normally associated with this event. We report on simultaneous stent thromboses of two drug-eluting stents implanted in two different vessels, which resulted in a life-threatening clinical condition. Possible contributing factors that led to synergistic thrombotic effects are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: antiplatelet therapy; diabetes mellitus; drug-eluting stent; platelet function; stent thrombosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19436654 PMCID: PMC2672443 DOI: 10.2147/vhrm.s4248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vasc Health Risk Manag ISSN: 1176-6344
Figure 1Angiographic images of stent thrombosis on RCA (A) and LAD (B).
Figure 2Panel A: successful passage of the wire, while the balloon is inserted over another wire at the place where it stopped. Panel B and C: Final angiographic result on RCA (B) and LAD (C).
Factors implicated in pathophysiology of in-stent thrombosis
| Stent malapposition and/or underexpansion |
| Stent length, multiple stent |
| Persistent coronary blood flow |
| Positive remodelling |
| Dissections |
| Residual stenosis |
| Late stent malapposition due to thrombus |
| Low-ejection fraction |
| Diabetes mellitus |
| Advanced age |
| Renal failure |
| Variability to wound healing |
| Antiplatelet therapy discontinuation |
| Acute coronary syndromes |
| Bifurcations |
| In-stent restenosis lesions |
| Discontinuation of antiplatelet therapy |
| Hyporesponsiveness |
| Design of stent (open-cell vs closed-cell) |
| Strut thickness |
| Polymer type |
| Drug of drug-eluting stents (lipophility) |
Adapted from Luscher TF, Steffel J, Eberli FR, et al. Drug-eluting stent and coronary thrombosis: biological mechanisms and clinical implications. Circulation. 2007;115:1051–1058.
Insulin resistance and hyperglycemia effects on brinolysis, coagulation, and platelet function
| ↑ PAI-1 | ↑ FVII, vWF, FVIII | ↓ Insulin-induced regulation |
| ↑ PAI-1, altered balance PAI-1/tPA | ↑ TF, altered expressions FVII, FXII | Hyperreactivity, ↑ TX sensitivity/production |
Figure 3Pathways of platelet activation and mechanism of action of antiplatelet agents.
Abbreviations: ASA, acetylsalycilic acid; NSAIDs, nonsteroidal anti-inflameates inhibitors; PAF, platelet-activating factor; TXA2, thromboaxane-A2.
Tests used to evaluate antiplatelet effect of ASA
| Measurement of serum TXB2 or urinary d-TXB2 levels by radioimmunoassay or ELISA | TXA2 has a short half-life in serum and is rapidly converted into a stable matebolite, TXB2 | |
| For study of the natural hemostasis; usually performed with a disposable template device; the test is based on the time necessary for bleeding to stop following incisions in the skin of the forearm | Nonspecific and insensitive, poorly reproducible and invasive; influenced by depth, location, direction of incisions, skin thickness, and skills of the technician performing the test; rarely used to assess platelet function | |
| Using antibodies, measurement of common platelet activation markers such as:
– Granule membrane markers (p-selectin, CD63, CD40L, etc) – Activation-dependent changes in GP IIb/IIIa complex conformation (PAC-1, etc) | Very powerful technique; uses whole blood, but requires expensive equipment/reagent and manipulation by experienced technician | |
| Analysis of the clot’s physical property (strength) form formation to lysis, as an agonist is added (classically arachidonic acid or adenosine diphosphate) | Uses whole blood; easy and rapid to use; controversy as to correlation with classic aggregometry | |
| Analysis of light transmission as an agonist (classically arachidonic acid or adenosine diphosphate) is added to platelet rich plasma to provoke platelet aggregation | Assay well estabilished in the literature; time and labor consuming, requiring manipulation of sample by an experienced technician; removal of other blood elements forbids study of their influence on platelet aggregation | |
| Analysis of electrical impedance between two electodes immersed in whole blood in the presence of a platelet aggregation agonist (classically arachidonic acid or adenosine diphosphate) | Used to study the influence of whole blood constituents on platelet aggregation; time consuming, requiring manipulation by experienced technicians | |
| Assessment of platelet aggregation under high shear: whole blood is aspirated through a small aperture cut in a membrane coated with type 1 collagen and either epinephrine or adenosine diphosphate; the time necessary for the formation of a hemostatic plug to occlude the aperture is recorded | Intend to imitate plug formation after injury to a small vessel wall under normal flow conditions; easy and rapid to use; controversy as to correlation with classic aggregometry; very expensive | |
| The test cartridge contains a preparation of human brinogen-coated beads and a platelet agonist; as blood is inserted into cartridge, platelet agglutinate and form aggregated, which increases light transmittance | Specically developed for the detection of platelet dysfunction in whole blood due to ASA ingestion; easy and rapid to use; controversy as to correlation with classic aggregometry; very expensive |
Studies performed in diabetic patients treated with DES
| 160 DM patients: 80 BMS
| |
| Primary end point: LLL at 9 month | |
| In-segment LLLwas reduced from 0.470.5 mm for BMS to 0.060.4 mm for SES( | |
| TLR and MACE: 31.3% and 36% in BMS versus 7.3% and 11.3% in SES; both | |
| ST occurred in 2 BMS patients | |
| No ST in SES group | |
| 250 DM patients: 150 SES
| |
| Noninferiority of the PES vs SES: | |
| Primary end point: difference in LLL of no more than 0.16 mm, at 6–8 months follow-up. | |
| SES associated with a decrease in the extent of LLL in insulin-treated (p = 0.02) and noninsulin-treated (p = 0.03) patients. | |
| 60 DM patients, 120 lesions: 60 SES,
| |
| 200 DM patients : 98 SES
| |
| Primary end point: in segment LLL. Secondary: MACE rate at 30 days and 8 and 12 months. LLL in SES was 0.18 mm; 0.74 mm in BMS. In-segment restenosis: 8.8% SES and 42.1% BMS (p < 0.0001). TLR: 5.3% in SES and in 21.1% in BMS (p = 0.002) MACE rate 14.7% in SES versus 35.8% in BMS. | |
| 150 DM patients: 75(109 lesions) SES
| |
| Primary end point: LLL Secondary: MACE and TVR at 30 days, 9 and 12 months. LLL decreased from 0.96 +/− 0.61 mm for BMS to 0.14 +/− 0.33 for SES (p <0.001), and in-segment binary restenosis was 38.8% versus 3.6%, respectively (p <0.001). 12 months MACEs 22.1% versus 40% (p = 0.023), TLR 5.9% versus 30% (p <0.001), and TVF 14.7% versus 34.3% (p = 0.008). |
Academic research consortium de nitions of stent thrombosis
Angiographic conrmation based on Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction (TIMI) flow and 1 of the following within 48 hours:
New acute onset of ischemic symptoms at rest New ischemic electrocardiographic changes suggestive of acute ischemia Typical increase and decrease in cardiac biomarkers as evidence of an acute myocardial infarction (MI) Pathologic conrmation of recent ST at autopsy or by tissue examination after thrombectomy | |
Any unexplained death within the first 30 days MI related to acute ischemia in the territory of the implanted stent without angiographic conrmation of ST and in the absence of any other obvious cause at any time after index procedure | |
| Any unexplained death after intracoronary stenting from 30 days after index percutaneous coronary intervention until the end of trial follow-up |
ST classification according to time of presentation
| Acute | <24 hr |
| Subacute | >24 hr <30 days |
| Late | >30 days <12 months |
| Very late | >12 months |