BACKGROUND: Drug-eluting stents have been shown to be very effective in the treatment of coronary artery disease. In this independent, single-centre registry we assess the safety and efficacy of the sirolimus-eluting stent versus bare-metal balloon expandable stent for symptomatic infrapopliteal obstructions. METHODS AND RESULTS: A total of 60 consecutive patients with infrapopliteal arterial obstructions were treated by stent implantation into the tibial and peroneal arteries and the data was entered into a prospective registry. All patients were treated with balloon-expandable coronary stents with a stent length of 33 mm and a nominal diameter of 3.5 mm. Enrolment was limited to patients treatable with a single stent. 30 patients (56.7% male, mean age 71.4 years, 83.3% diabetics) received a sirolimus-eluting balloon-expandable stent. 30 patients (63.3% male, mean age 73.0 years, 76.6% diabetics) were treated with uncoated bare-metal stents. At follow-up, the cumulative rates of Major Adverse Events were 10.0% vs. 46.6%. The rates of major amputation, bypass surgery or Target Lesion Revascularisation (TLR) were all zero for the sirolimus group compared with 10.0%, 0% and 23.3% in the bare metal stent group. There were 7 deaths (sirolimus =3, bare metal =7). Angiographic follow-up comparing sirolimus vs. bare metal revealed stent occlusion 0% vs. 17.4%, restenosis >50% of 0% vs. 39.1% (p 0.0007) and mean degree of in-stent restenosis of 1.8+/-4.8% vs. 53+/-40.9% (p <0.0001) respectively. CONCLUSION: In this registry sirolimus-eluting stents were shown to be safe and effective in the treatment of focal infrapopliteal obstructions.
BACKGROUND: Drug-eluting stents have been shown to be very effective in the treatment of coronary artery disease. In this independent, single-centre registry we assess the safety and efficacy of the sirolimus-eluting stent versus bare-metal balloon expandable stent for symptomatic infrapopliteal obstructions. METHODS AND RESULTS: A total of 60 consecutive patients with infrapopliteal arterial obstructions were treated by stent implantation into the tibial and peroneal arteries and the data was entered into a prospective registry. All patients were treated with balloon-expandable coronary stents with a stent length of 33 mm and a nominal diameter of 3.5 mm. Enrolment was limited to patients treatable with a single stent. 30 patients (56.7% male, mean age 71.4 years, 83.3% diabetics) received a sirolimus-eluting balloon-expandable stent. 30 patients (63.3% male, mean age 73.0 years, 76.6% diabetics) were treated with uncoated bare-metal stents. At follow-up, the cumulative rates of Major Adverse Events were 10.0% vs. 46.6%. The rates of major amputation, bypass surgery or Target Lesion Revascularisation (TLR) were all zero for the sirolimus group compared with 10.0%, 0% and 23.3% in the bare metal stent group. There were 7 deaths (sirolimus =3, bare metal =7). Angiographic follow-up comparing sirolimus vs. bare metal revealed stent occlusion 0% vs. 17.4%, restenosis >50% of 0% vs. 39.1% (p 0.0007) and mean degree of in-stent restenosis of 1.8+/-4.8% vs. 53+/-40.9% (p <0.0001) respectively. CONCLUSION: In this registry sirolimus-eluting stents were shown to be safe and effective in the treatment of focal infrapopliteal obstructions.
Authors: Louise C D Konijn; Thijs Wakkie; Marlon I Spreen; Pim A de Jong; Lukas C van Dijk; Jan J Wever; Hugo T C Veger; Randolph G Statius van Eps; Willem P Th M Mali; Hendrik van Overhagen Journal: Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol Date: 2020-07-28 Impact factor: 2.740
Authors: Marc Bosiers; Patrick Peeters; Olivier D'Archambeau; Jeroen Hendriks; Ernst Pilger; Christoph Düber; Thomas Zeller; Andreas Gussmann; Paul N M Lohle; Erich Minar; Dierk Scheinert; Klaus Hausegger; Karl-Ludwig Schulte; Jürgen Verbist; Koen Deloose; J Lammer Journal: Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol Date: 2008-12-18 Impact factor: 2.740
Authors: Noemi Pavo; Eslam Samaha; Inna Sabdyusheva; Rembert Pogge von Strandmann; Stefanie Stahnke; Christian A Plass; Katrin Zlabinger; Dominika Lukovic; Zoltan Jambrik; Imre J Pavo; Jutta Bergler-Klein; William A Gray; Gerald Maurer; Mariann Gyöngyösi Journal: J Mater Sci Mater Med Date: 2016-07-07 Impact factor: 3.896