BACKGROUND: Endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) and cytokines seem to play a pivotal role in arterial healing after stent implantation. Using optical coherence tomography (OCT) as a high-resolution imaging technique, we aimed to assess the influence of circulating EPCs and levels of Il-1 cytokines on stent coverage and in-stent proliferation. METHODS:Eighty-nine patients were randomly treated with either Xience V drug-eluting stent (DES; n = 48) or bare-metal stent (BMS) postdilated with the SeQuent Please drug-eluting balloon (DEB; n = 41). EPC populations (CD34+/CD133+ and CD34+/CD133+/KDR+ EPC) and cytokines (Il-1ra, Il-18, and Il-1α) were measured before percutaneous coronary intervention using flow cytometry or immunoassay. Vessel remodeling was analyzed using coronary angiography and OCT at 6-month follow-up. RESULTS:Indexed neointimal volume and maximal proliferation thickness correlated inversely with EPC levels in the entire study population (r = -0.220; P=.04 and r = -0.253; P=.02) and the BMS + DEB subgroup (r = -0.344; P=.03 and r = -0.374; P=.02). Late lumen loss (LLL) was associated with the proatherogenic Il-18 concentration in the main population (r = 0.342; P=.01) and the BMS + DEB group (r = 0.471; P=.01). In the DES subgroup, associations with proliferation and LLL were lacking. Associations for stent strut coverage were not observed. CONCLUSIONS: A high EPC count seems to be a favorable individual patient factor, since it was associated with less instent proliferation. Contrarily, high Il-18 levels lead to more LLL, which emphasizes its proatherogenic properties.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND: Endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) and cytokines seem to play a pivotal role in arterial healing after stent implantation. Using optical coherence tomography (OCT) as a high-resolution imaging technique, we aimed to assess the influence of circulating EPCs and levels of Il-1 cytokines on stent coverage and in-stent proliferation. METHODS: Eighty-nine patients were randomly treated with either Xience V drug-eluting stent (DES; n = 48) or bare-metal stent (BMS) postdilated with the SeQuent Please drug-eluting balloon (DEB; n = 41). EPC populations (CD34+/CD133+ and CD34+/CD133+/KDR+ EPC) and cytokines (Il-1ra, Il-18, and Il-1α) were measured before percutaneous coronary intervention using flow cytometry or immunoassay. Vessel remodeling was analyzed using coronary angiography and OCT at 6-month follow-up. RESULTS: Indexed neointimal volume and maximal proliferation thickness correlated inversely with EPC levels in the entire study population (r = -0.220; P=.04 and r = -0.253; P=.02) and the BMS + DEB subgroup (r = -0.344; P=.03 and r = -0.374; P=.02). Late lumen loss (LLL) was associated with the proatherogenic Il-18 concentration in the main population (r = 0.342; P=.01) and the BMS + DEB group (r = 0.471; P=.01). In the DES subgroup, associations with proliferation and LLL were lacking. Associations for stent strut coverage were not observed. CONCLUSIONS: A high EPC count seems to be a favorable individual patient factor, since it was associated with less instent proliferation. Contrarily, high Il-18 levels lead to more LLL, which emphasizes its proatherogenic properties.
Authors: Robert Brett McQueen; Marc D Breton; Joyce Craig; Hayden Holmes; Melanie D Whittington; Markus A Ott; Jonathan D Campbell Journal: J Diabetes Sci Technol Date: 2018-04-21
Authors: Sylvia Otto; Kristina Nitsche; Christian Jung; Aleh Kryvanos; Andrey Zhylka; Kerstin Heitkamp; Juan-Luis Gutiérrez-Chico; Björn Goebel; P Christian Schulze; Hans R Figulla; Tudor C Poerner Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord Date: 2017-04-26 Impact factor: 2.298