Literature DB >> 30997130

Mechanical performance and healing patterns of the novel sirolimus-eluting bioresorbable Fantom scaffold: 6-month and 9-month follow-up by optical coherence tomography in the FANTOM II study.

Jo Krogsgaard Simonsen1, Emil Nielsen Holck1, Didier Carrié2, Norbert Frey3, Matthias Lutz3, Joachim Weber-Albers4, Dariusz Dudek5, Bernard Chevalier6, Joost Daemen7, Jouke Dijkstra8, Camilla Fox Maule1, Omeed Neghabat1, Jens Flensted Lassen9, Jeffrey Anderson10, Evald Høj Christiansen1, Alexandre Abizaid11, Niels Ramsing Holm1.   

Abstract

Objectives: We aimed to evaluate the mechanical properties and healing patterns 6 and 9 months after implantation of the sirolimus-eluting Fantom bioresorbable scaffold (BRS). Background: The Fantom BRS (Reva Medical, San Diego, USA) has differentiating properties including radiopacity, strut thickness of 125 µm, high expansion capacity and has demonstrated favourable mid-term clinical and angiographic outcomes. Methods and results: FANTOM II was a prospective, single arm study with implantation of the Fantom BRS in 240 patients with stable angina pectoris. Guidance by optical coherence tomography (OCT) was encouraged and was repeated at 6-month (cohort A) or 9-month follow-up (cohort B). Matched baseline and follow-up OCT recordings were available in 152 patients. In-scaffold mean lumen area in cohort A was 6.8±1.7 mm2 and 5.7±1.4 mm2 at baseline and follow-up (p<0.0001) and was 7.2±1.6 mm2 and 5.6±1.4 mm2 in cohort B (p<0.0001). Mean scaffold area remained stable from 7.1±1.5 mm2 at baseline to 7.2±1.4 mm2 at 6 months (p=0.12), and from 7.4±1.5 mm2 to 7.3±1.4 mm2 at 9 months. Strut malapposition was median 0.8 (IQR 0.0;3.5)% and 1.8 (IQR 0.3;6.0)% at baseline and was 0.0 (IQR 0.0;0.0)% in both groups at 6-month and 9-month follow-up. Strut tissue coverage was 98.1 (IQR 95.9;99.4)% at 6 months and 98.9 (IQR 98.3;100.0)% at 9 months. Conclusions: The novel Fantom BRS had favourable healing patterns at 6-month and 9-month follow-up as malapposition was effectively resolved and strut coverage was almost complete. The scaffold remained stable through follow-up with no signs of systematic late recoil.

Entities:  

Keywords:  bioresorbable scaffold; coronary artery; optical coherence tomography

Year:  2019        PMID: 30997130      PMCID: PMC6443130          DOI: 10.1136/openhrt-2018-000941

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Open Heart        ISSN: 2053-3624


Bioresorbable scaffolds (BRS) theoretically reduce the long-term risks associated with permanent drug-eluting stents (DES). However, first generation BRS had several mechanical limitations and have shown inferior clinical outcome compared to the latest generation DES. The novel Fantom BRS has demonstrated excellent mid-term clinical and angiographic outcome. The Fantom BRS was designed to reduce limitations associated with first-generation BRS by applying a unique radiopaque backbone polymer that allows for reduced strut thickness and crossing profile while improving expansion capacity. Matched meticulous optical coherence tomography analysis revealed favourable mechanical performance and healing patterns of the scaffold after 6 and 9 months. Longer term clinical follow-up in the FANTOM II study is ongoing and healing patterns are evaluated after 24 and 48 months. Studies in more complex lesion subsets are in progress and a randomised clinical outcome trial comparing the Fantom BRS with best in class permanent DES is in preparation.

Introduction

Fully bioresorbable scaffolds (BRS) are aimed at reducing the long-term risk associated with permanent stent implants. Clinical trials of the first clinically available BRS have indicated increased rates of early and late scaffold failure compared with newer generation permanent drug-eluting stents (DES).1–3 BRS failures have been explained by suboptimal implantation results4 5 but factors related to design and properties of the first BRS, Absorb (Abbott, USA) may have contributed negatively even in cases with optimal implantation results. Absorb BRS had thicker struts, a more dense footprint, a larger crossing profile compared with latest generation permanent DES.6 Acute recoil was larger due to the lower radial strength and the limited expansion capacity increased the risk of fractures if expanded beyond narrow limits.6 7 Next generation BRS were designed to address these issues for improving clinical feasibility and safety. The novel sirolimus-eluting Fantom BRS (REVA Medical, San Diego, USA) has a desaminotyrosine (DAT) based backbone polymer to improve strength and elasticity that allows for reduced strut thickness and larger expansion beyond the nominal diameter compared with Absorb BRS. The polymer of the Fantom BRS contains covalently bound iodine making the scaffold radiopaque, thus allowing for direct verification of implantation results which may further improve feasibility and safety. The FANTOM II study aimed to investigate safety and performance of the Fantom BRS in a multicentre setting. The mid-term clinical and angiographic follow-up was reported previously and indicated an excellent safety profile.8 Here, we report the mechanical performance and healing patterns of the Fantom BRS after 6 and 9 months assessed by baseline adjusted, fully matched optical coherence tomography (OCT).

Methods

Study population

The FANTOM II study was a prospective single-arm, multicentre study assessing clinical and angiographic outcomes after implantation of the Fantom BRS in patients ≥18 years with de novo lesions and evidence of myocardial ischemia (stable or unstable angina, postinfarct angina or silent ischemia). Stenosis severity had to be ≥50% and <100% in native coronary vessels with Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction (TIMI) flow ≥2, a reference diameter between 2.5 and 3.5 mm, and a lesion length ≤20 mm by visual assessment. Major exclusion criteria were clinical symptoms concordant with acute myocardial infarction (AMI), left main stenosis ≥50%, ejection fraction <40%, need for more than one Fantom BRS to cover the lesion, a side branch diameter >1.5 mm, moderate to severe calcification and significant stenosis ≥50% proximal or distal to the target lesion. The study was approved by local or national medical ethics committees and health authorities as required. All patients provided written informed consent before enrolment. Clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT02539966.

OCT study population

Patients were eligible for the OCT substudy population if final post-PCI OCT scan and a 6-month or 9-month follow-up OCT scan were available in analysable quality.

Study device

The Fantom BRS is a sirolimus eluting scaffold with a desaminotyrosine (DAT) based backbone polymer. Iodine is covalently bound in the polymer to make it radiopaque. Strut thickness is 125 µm and the in-phase sinusoidal rings are linked by three connectors. Sirolimus is incorporated into a polymeric matrix and added to the abluminal side of struts with more than 60% of the sirolimus released within 30 days. Fantom maintains structural integrity and almost full radial strength for 3–4 months followed by gradual degradation with >60% molecular weight loss within 12 months and complete bioabsorption within 3–4 years. Deliverability is facilitated by a 1.3 mm crossing profile and uninterrupted device inflation was allowed. The specified postdilatation threshold was 0.5 mm above nominal scaffold diameter but the expansion capacity was by in vitro testing shown to exceed 1.0 mm above the nominal size (vendor information). The Fantom BRS was available in 2.5 mm and 3.0 mm versions during the study.

Study procedure

The treatment protocol has been published8 and was as follows (shortened): (1) predilatation of the lesion with a balloon sized 1:1 to the reference size of the vessel, (2) optional intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) or OCT imaging was recommended for measurement of reference size and lesion length, (3) selection of scaffold size according to invasive measurements or else by visual estimate, (4) implantation of the Fantom BRS to nominal pressure, (5) postdilatation with a non-compliant balloon with final size not exceeding nominal size +0.5 mm, (6) optional evaluation of implantation result by IVUS or OCT, (7) documentation of final result by angiography and IVUS or OCT (optional). Data describing if and how IVUS or OCT scans were used for guiding the implantation were not collected. Bail-out stenting in case of major dissection or occlusive complications at baseline was to be performed by implantation of a permanent DES.

Clinical endpoints

Endpoints reported for the OCT substudy population includes major adverse cardiac events (MACE) at 6 and 9 months; a composite of cardiac death, myocardial infarction and clinically driven target lesion revascularisation; the individual components of MACE, all-cause mortality, target vessel revascularisation and scaffold thrombosis. Endpoints were derived from the main study population and by same definitions.8

OCT imaging analysis

All OCT recordings of sufficient quality were analysed. Corresponding baseline and follow-up recordings were matched on frame level to accommodate for cardiac motion artefact and unanalysable scaffold segments (see online supplementary file 1). Analysis was performed with a sample rate of 0.5 or 0.6 mm to accommodate for differences in pullback speed. The highly back scattering Fantom BRS required an adaptable analysis method implying a fixed strut thickness of 125 µm (figure 1). A box was fitted to each strut in analysed frames allowing for construction of abluminal scaffold contours and detection of possible malapposition as distance between the abluminal side of the artificial strut box and the lumen contour. OCT endpoints were mean lumen area, minimal lumen area, mean scaffold area, minimal scaffold area, mean neointimal hyperplasia area, mean neointimal thickness, mean extra-stent lumen area, strut malapposition, strut tissue coverage, scaffold fracture, discontinued struts and in-scaffold thrombus. Strut tissue coverage was analysed on strut level and defined as identifiable tissue fully covering the luminal strut surface. Malapposed struts were analysed on strut level and defined as struts separated from the luminal vessel surface detected as a clear separation of the fitted box and the lumen contour abluminal to the strut. Analysis for fractured struts at baseline and discontinued struts at follow-up was performed at patient level by 3D OCT detection. Strut fracture and discontinuity were defined as overlapping struts in non-overlapping segments, single ended strut protrusion of struts into lumen or any abrupt strut discontinuity. Thrombus was analysed on patient level and defined as any degree of thrombus-material on or attached to a strut observed in at least two consecutive frames. Derived endpoints at follow-up were lumen area late loss (baseline minimal in-scaffold lumen area – follow-up minimal in-scaffold lumen area) and mean lumen enlargement (follow-up mean in-scaffold lumen area – baseline mean in-scaffold lumen area). OCT analysis was performed by the Interventional Coronary Imaging Core Laboratory (Aarhus University Hospital, Skejby, Denmark) using the QCU-CMS software (Leiden University Medical Center, The Netherlands) and QangioOCT RE (Medis medical imaging, The Netherlands).
Figure 1

OCT appearance and analysis of the Fantom scaffold. (1) OCT image acquisitions showing the unique appearance of the Fantom BRS by OCT scan at 6 months. The Fantom BRS was easily distinguished at baseline (A,C) with a highly backscattering luminal surface. Due to high attenuation, the abluminal strut surface was not identifiable and analysis was performed by applying a customised box delineating the strut with a fixed thickness (Type-R) (C,D,F). At the time of follow-up, the Fantom BRS remained clearly discernible despite tissue coverage and progressing strut degradation (B,D). Owing to the unique appearance of the Fantom BRS by OCT, direct 3D OCT rendering was feasible yielding a well-defined scaffold reconstruction without the need for strut segmentation (E). Panel F shows follow-up analysis with lumen contour (red line), strut box delineation (white boxes), luminal and abluminal scaffold contours (pink and green lines). BRS, bioresorbable scaffolds; OCT, optical coherence tomography.

OCT appearance and analysis of the Fantom scaffold. (1) OCT image acquisitions showing the unique appearance of the Fantom BRS by OCT scan at 6 months. The Fantom BRS was easily distinguished at baseline (A,C) with a highly backscattering luminal surface. Due to high attenuation, the abluminal strut surface was not identifiable and analysis was performed by applying a customised box delineating the strut with a fixed thickness (Type-R) (C,D,F). At the time of follow-up, the Fantom BRS remained clearly discernible despite tissue coverage and progressing strut degradation (B,D). Owing to the unique appearance of the Fantom BRS by OCT, direct 3D OCT rendering was feasible yielding a well-defined scaffold reconstruction without the need for strut segmentation (E). Panel F shows follow-up analysis with lumen contour (red line), strut box delineation (white boxes), luminal and abluminal scaffold contours (pink and green lines). BRS, bioresorbable scaffolds; OCT, optical coherence tomography.

Statistical analysis

Categorical variables are reported as mean percentages with SD. Continuous variables with a normal distribution are reported as mean with SD and mean differences with 95% CI. Data were analysed on patient level equalling lesion level equalling single study stent level as all study patients only had one stent implanted and in one lesion. Strut and frame level data were analysed in two steps: first on per patient level by simple average and in a second step per patient with an over all mean of all observations. Plots of individual patient’s patient level data are provided for main OCT endpoint measures. Continuous variables not following normal distribution are reported as medians with interquartiles. Testing of matched baseline and follow-up results on patient level was performed with simple paired t-test for normal distributed data and non-parametric Wilcoxon signed rank test for data not following a normal distribution.

Results

Patient population

A total of 240 patients were enrolled in the FANTOM II study. The first 117 patients were enrolled in cohort A with OCT acquisition performed in 89 patients at baseline and in 81 patients at follow-up. The last 123 patients were enrolled in cohort B with OCT performed in 98 patients at baseline and in 94 patients at follow-up (online supplementary figure 2). Matched analysis of corresponding baseline and follow-up OCT recordings was possible for 73 patients in cohort A and 79 patients in cohort B (matched population, figure 2). Mean follow-up time of the matched cohort was 194 (15) days in cohort A and 287 (38) days in cohort B. Patient characteristics are presented in table 1 and baseline procedural outcomes are presented in table 2.
Figure 2

Flowchart of the matched patient population in the FANTOM II Study with a total of 240 patients enrolled at baseline. Frame level matched analysis of baseline and follow-up recordings were available in 73 patients in cohort A and 79 patients in cohort B. n=patients. OCT, optical coherence tomography.

Table 1

Baseline patient characteristics

Baseline dataCohort A (n=73)Cohort B (n=79)
Age (years)62.7±9.062.2±10.6
Male gender52 (71.2%)64 (81.0%)
Smoking history39 (53.4%)51 (64.6%)
 Current smoker (within the past 2 weeks)15 (20.5%)16 (20.3%)
Diabetes12 (16.4%)22 (27.9%)
Hypertension53 (72.6%)54 (68.4%)
Hypercholesterolemia50 (68.5%)55 (69.6%)
Family history of CAD27 (37.0%)28 (35.4%)
Prior MI20 (27.4%)21 (26.6%)
Prior PCI28 (38.4%)39 (49.4%)

Patient characteristics for the 73 patients in cohort A and the 79 patients in cohort B included in the matched OCT analysis. Values are n(%) or mean±SD.

CAD, coronary artery disease; MI, myocardial infarction; OCT, optical coherence tomography; PCI, percutaneous coronary intervention.

Table 2

Baseline lesion and procedural outcomes

Baseline QCACohort A(n=72*)Cohort B(n=79)
Target vessel
 Left Anterior Decending artery (LAD)37 (51.4%)41 (51.9%)
 Circumflex artery (Cx)22 (30.6%)20 (25.3%)
 Right Coronary Artery (RCA)13 (18.1%)18 (22.8%)
ACC/AHA lesion classification
 Type A21 (29.2%)9 (11.4%)
 Type B126 (36.1%)44 (55.7%)
 Type B225 (34.7%)22 (28.8%)
 Type C0 (0.0%)4 (5.1%)
Reference vessel diameter (mm)2.67±0.342.74±0.34
Lesion length (mm)10.8±3.512.2±4.3
Procedural data n= 73 n= 79
Preprocedure antiplatelets
 Aspirin73 (100.0%)79 (100.0%)
 Ticagrelor or clopidogrel72 (98.6%)79 (100.0%)
 Other antithrombotic agent1 (1.4%)0 (0.0%)
Nominal scaffold diameter (mm)2.88±0.212.89±0.21
Nominal scaffold length (mm)18.1±0.7019.0±2.20
Predilatation73 (100.0%)79 (100.0%)
Postdilatation62 (84.9%)70 (88.6%)
Maximal postdilatation pressure (atm)17±417±5
Maximal postdilatation balloon diameter (mm)3.15±0.363.26±0.34
Antiplatelets at follow-up
 Aspirin73 (100.0%)78 (98.7%)
 Ticagrelor or clopidogrel73 (100.0%)79 (100.0%)

Baseline procedural outcome for patients included in the matched analysis. Values are n (%) or mean±SD.

*One preprocedure image was not available for analysis.

QCA, quantitative coronary arteriography.

Flowchart of the matched patient population in the FANTOM II Study with a total of 240 patients enrolled at baseline. Frame level matched analysis of baseline and follow-up recordings were available in 73 patients in cohort A and 79 patients in cohort B. n=patients. OCT, optical coherence tomography. Baseline patient characteristics Patient characteristics for the 73 patients in cohort A and the 79 patients in cohort B included in the matched OCT analysis. Values are n(%) or mean±SD. CAD, coronary artery disease; MI, myocardial infarction; OCT, optical coherence tomography; PCI, percutaneous coronary intervention. Baseline lesion and procedural outcomes Baseline procedural outcome for patients included in the matched analysis. Values are n (%) or mean±SD. *One preprocedure image was not available for analysis. QCA, quantitative coronary arteriography.

Clinical outcomes

Clinical events for patients with matched OCT analysis: at 6-month follow-up in cohort A, one patient underwent non-clinically driven target lesion revascularization (TLR). Cohort B: Four patients in the matched OCT cohort who underwent TLR and OCT from all these procedures were included in the matched analysis. In patients excluded from the matched OCT cohort due to missing follow-up OCT one death, one myocardial infarction and three TLR were reported. Flowchart for patients not included in the matched analysis is shown in online supplementary file 1.

OCT imaging results

Qualitative assessment of OCT signature

The Fantom BRS was easily distinguished in both baseline and 6-month and 9-month follow-up OCT recordings exhibiting a highly backscattering luminal surface and an abluminal strut border not discernible due to high attenuation. Visibility of the Fantom BRS in 3D OCT reconstructions by proprietary online tools without the need for strut detection and segmentation was confirmed (figure 1).

Quantitative OCT analysis

Matched analysis of OCT recordings in cohort A (73 patients) had a total strut count of 40 929 and in cohort B (79 patients) the strut count was 46 649. Results are presented in table 3. Data analysis revealed a small decrease in mean lumen area from 6.8 (1.7) mm2 to 5.7 (1.4) mm2 in cohort A (p<0.0001) and from 7.2 (1.6) mm2 to 5.6 (1.4) mm2 in cohort B (p<0.0001). A similar decrease in minimal lumen area was observed in cohort A from 5.3 (1.4) mm2 to 4.3 (1.3) mm2 and in cohort B from 5.7 (1.4) mm2 to 4.1 (1.3) mm2. There was no evidence of scaffold area reduction from post-PCI (percutaneous coronary intervention) to 6-month or 9-month follow-up as mean scaffold area remained stable from 7.1 (1.5) mm2 to 7.2 (1.4) mm2 (p=0.12) in cohort A and from 7.4 (1.5) mm2 to 7.3 (1.4) mm2 in cohort B (p=0.13). Minimal scaffold area was unchanged in cohort A from 5.9 (1.3) mm2 to 6.0 (1.3) mm2 (p=0.08) and in cohort B from 6.1 (1.4) mm2 to 6.1 (1.3) mm2 (p=0.40). Strut level malapposition counts were median 0.8 (0.0;3.5)% at baseline in cohorts A and 1.8 (0.3;6.0)% in cohort B. In both cohort A and cohort B, malapposition was almost resolved at follow-up with a median of 0.0 (0.0;0.0)% (figure 3). Tissue coverage of struts was complete for 98.1 (95.9;99.4)% of struts at 6-month follow-up and 98.9 (98.3;100.0)% at 9 months (figure 3). Strut fracture at baseline was found in seven patients, three in scaffolds exposed to excessive expansion and four had subtle discontinuity of a single ring or connector without obvious explanation. Strut discontinuity at follow-up was seen in four patients at 6 months including two cases with fracture at baseline. At 9 months, strut discontinuity was seen in 16 patients of whom five were persisting discontinuities and 11 were acquired. Importantly, all but one case with fracture or late discontinuity had fully apposed struts in the affected segments at follow-up and none had clinical events. Results of unmatched analysis are presented in online supplementary table 1.
Table 3

Matched OCT results

Matched OCT resultsBaselineFollow-upDifferenceP value
Mean lumen area (mm2)
 6 months6.8 (1.7)5.7 (1.4)1.1 (−1.3;−0.9)<0.0001
 9 months7.2 (1.6)5.6 (1.4)1.6 (−1.7;−1.4)<0.0001
Minimal lumen area (mm2)
 6 months5.3 (1.4)4.3 (1.3)1.0 (−1.3;−0.7)<0.0001
 9 months5.7 (1.4)4.1 (1.3)1.6 (−1.9;−1.4)<0.0001
Mean scaffold area (mm2)
 6 months7.1 (1.5)7.2 (1.4)0.1 (−0.02;0.24)0.12
 9 months7.4 (1.5)7.3 (1.4)−0.1 (−0.19;0.02)0.12
 9 months7.4 (1.5)7.3 (1.4)−0.1 (−0.19;0.02)0.13
Minimal scaffold area (mm2)
 6 months5.9 (1.3)6.0 (1.3)0.1 (−0.02;0.25)0.08
 9 months6.1 (1.4)6.1 (1.3)−0.1 (−0.24;0.10)0.40
Mean extra scaffold lumen area (mm2)*
 6 months0.05 (0.02;0.13)0.00 (0.00;0.02)0.04 (−0.11;−0.02)<0.0001
 9 months0.09 (0.04;0.19)0.00 (0.00;0.02)0.08 (-1.16;−0.03)<0.0001
Mean neointimal area (mm2)*
 6 months1.2 (1.0;1.4)
 9 months1.4 (1.1;1.7)
Mean neointimal thickness (mm)*
 6 months0.057 (0.040;0.077)
 9 months0.072 (0.056;0.101)
Total analysed struts (N)
 6 months20 69620 233
 9 months23 77522 875
Mean strut count per analysis N (SD)
 6 months283 (56)277 (57)
 9 months301 (62)290 (62)
Malapposed struts (%)†
 6 months0.8 (0.0;3.5)0.0 (0.0;0.0)−0.7 (−3.5;0)<0.0001
 9 months1.8 (0.3;6.0)0.0 (0.0;0.0)−1.5 (−5.1;−0.3)<0.0001
Covered struts (%)†
 6 months98.1 (95.9;99.4)
 9 months98.9 (98.3;100.0)
 Discontinued struts N (%)‡2 (2.7)4 (5.5)2.7 (−2.4;7.9)0.16
 6 months5 (6.3)16 (20.3)13.9 (2.9;24.9)0.01
 9 months5 (6.3)16 (20.3)13.9 (2.9;24.9)0.01
Thrombus N (%)‡
 6 months48 (65.8)2 (2.7)
 9 months43 (54.4)2 (2.5)

Matched data from the 73 patients in Cohort A and 79 patients in Cohort B. Results are mean (SD).

*Median (interquartile).

†Analysed on strut level, reported as median (IQR).

‡Analysed on patient level.

OCT, optical coherence tomography.

Figure 3

Healing patterns assessed by OCT. Matched OCT analysis of baseline (A1,B1) and follow-up (A2) recordings revealed a slight decrease in mean luminal area after 6 and 9 months as illustrated by the interconnected mean baseline and follow-up values (A3,A4) while no evidence of scaffold area reduction was observed (B2,B3). An excellent healing response to acute malapposition (C1) with almost completely resolved malapposition at the time of follow-up (C2) even in the few cases of major malapposition at baseline (C3,C4). Mean extra-scaffold lumen area at baseline (D1) had also diminished at the time of follow-up (D2) even in the few cases of major extra-scaffold lumen area at baseline (D3,D4). A balanced neointimal response was observed with a thin layer of tissue covering the struts (E1,E2) in the majority of cases agreeing with the high level of strut coverage seen in this study (E3,E4). OCT, optical coherence tomography.

Healing patterns assessed by OCT. Matched OCT analysis of baseline (A1,B1) and follow-up (A2) recordings revealed a slight decrease in mean luminal area after 6 and 9 months as illustrated by the interconnected mean baseline and follow-up values (A3,A4) while no evidence of scaffold area reduction was observed (B2,B3). An excellent healing response to acute malapposition (C1) with almost completely resolved malapposition at the time of follow-up (C2) even in the few cases of major malapposition at baseline (C3,C4). Mean extra-scaffold lumen area at baseline (D1) had also diminished at the time of follow-up (D2) even in the few cases of major extra-scaffold lumen area at baseline (D3,D4). A balanced neointimal response was observed with a thin layer of tissue covering the struts (E1,E2) in the majority of cases agreeing with the high level of strut coverage seen in this study (E3,E4). OCT, optical coherence tomography. Matched OCT results Matched data from the 73 patients in Cohort A and 79 patients in Cohort B. Results are mean (SD). *Median (interquartile). †Analysed on strut level, reported as median (IQR). ‡Analysed on patient level. OCT, optical coherence tomography.

Discussion

The favourable main 6-month and 9-month OCT results confirm the previously reported clinical and angiographic data. The OCT results indicated that the intended performance and healing patterns of the novel Fantom BRS achieved: (1) a small but expected decrease in mean and minimal lumen area; (2) stable minimal scaffold area at follow-up; (3) acute malapposition was effectively resolved; (4) no tendency to late vessel wall detachment, formation of evaginations or aneurysms and (5) strut coverage was almost complete at the 6-month and 9-month follow-up. Introduction of the Absorb BRS was a milestone in treatment of obstructive coronary artery disease. The positive initial safety reports,9 the restoration of the vasomotor function,10 the late lumen enlargement11 and the full resorption documented after 5 years12 were encouraging for the technology. However, recent reports on early luminal scaffold dismantling,4 increased rates of scaffold thrombosis1 2 and a late increase in target lesion failures in comparison with permanent DES2 3 indicates that limitations of first generation BRS affect outcomes negatively. Factors related to the BRS design potentially contributing to scaffold failure include the bulky struts,13 14 the increased scaffold footprint,15 the limited expansion capacity,6 7 limited radial strength,6 16 degradation and embolisation of struts in the lumen due to persisting malapposition or late wall detachment of the scaffold17 and the poor guidance by angiography.18 In comparison to the Absorb BRS, the Fantom BRS was designed with thinner struts to facilitate healing and reduce flow disturbance. At the same time, the Fantom polymer allowed for maintaining radial strength, increased expansion capacity and was radiopaque to improve detection of under expansion and scaffold position thereby reducing the risk of geographical miss and aiding serial implantation of scaffolds. In the FANTOM II study, we documented that malapposition was effectively resolved and coverage was almost complete at 6 and 9 months. Even in cases with substantial acute malapposition due to underestimation of the reference size by the treating physician, malapposition was effectively reduced. Still, the healing response was balanced as indicated by the very few cases with a more pronounced reduction in minimal lumen area at follow-up. Adverse healing response with development of evaginations and aneurysms was a concern with first generation DES19 20 and similar healing patterns was reported in cases with Absorb BRS.21 With the Fantom BRS, we found a substantial reduction in extra stent lumen indicating a favourable healing response with only two of 152 cases having isolated bulging vessel and no cases had generalised patterns of evaginations. Despite the reduced strut thickness and substantial reduction in molecular weight at 6 and 9 months, the Fantom BRS maintained stable mean and minimal scaffold area at follow-up and with no late vessel wall detachment. If this important resistance to late recoil continues at longer-term follow-up, it may indicate an additional differentiating property of the Fantom BRS. The Fantom BRS platform allows for expansion beyond the nominal size by at least 0.7 mm and safe in vitro expansion up to 1.0 mm has been reported by the vendor. By highly sensitive 3D OCT analysis, we identified a total of 7/152 scaffolds with fracture at baseline. Three were caused by excessive expansion in attempts to correct malapposition due to severe underestimation of the true vessel size, and four had no evident explanation but was isolated to a single strut or ring discontinuity. None of the patients with fracture at baseline had clinical events. Similar findings related to overexpansion were reported in ABSORB cohort B which by a less sensitive method revealed acute disruption during baseline procedure in 2 out of 51 patients (3.9%) possibly related to over expansion of the scaffold.4 These findings emphasise that despite increased inflation thresholds, meticulous sizing is a prerequisite also with the next generation BRS. The late acquired strut discontinuity seen in 2.7% of cases after 6 months compared with 12% in Absorb BRS4 could indicate better structural integrity of Fantom BRS at this time point. Some discontinuity at follow-up is expected due to resorption and should only be seen as problematic if causing lumen reduction or protrusion of struts into the lumen. Thrombus elements on struts were found in some patients during implantation but not at follow-up. This finding did not translate to any clinical scaffold thrombosis and, based on the non-comparative material it was not possible to determine if the level was higher than with regular permanent DES. Still, with the present level of evidence, it is encouraged to adhere to the mandatory preloading with aspirin and clopidogrel or ticagrelor and to maintain dual anti platelet therapy for 12 months after implantation. The FANTOM II study findings indicate that the differentiating design features between the Fantom BRS and the Absorb BRS may prove of importance in addressing safety concerns raised with first generation BRS. Longer term follow-up, studies in more complex lesion subsets and adequately powered randomised trials are necessary to evaluate if improved structural properties and healing patterns of the Fantom BRS translates in to clinical outcomes allowing for routine clinical use.

Limitations

The FANTOM II study selection criteria only allowed enrolment of patients with rather simple lesions limiting the assessment of safety and efficacy after implantation in complex lesions. Despite the favourable results, the single arm design did not allow for a direct comparison of results to established treatments. As with other imaging follow-up studies, there could be a bias towards the healthy survivors as not all patients were evaluated by OCT at baseline and follow-up. By matching the recordings, 27 patients with analysable baseline OCT but no available follow-up OCT were excluded from analysis. Still, unmatched OCT results were remarkably close to the matched OCT results and the consequences of matching may be considered minimal and outweighed by the advantages (online supplementary table 1).

Conclusion

Treatment of coronary stenosis by implantation of the Fantom BRS resulted in favourable 6-month and 9-month healing patterns as assessed by OCT. Scaffold area remained stable, the healing response caused a limited lumen reduction, malapposition was effectively resolved and strut coverage was almost complete at the 6-month and 9-month time points.
  21 in total

1.  Intracoronary stenting and angiographic results: strut thickness effect on restenosis outcome (ISAR-STEREO-2) trial.

Authors:  Jürgen Pache; Adnan Kastrati; Julinda Mehilli; Helmut Schühlen; Franz Dotzer; Jörg Hausleiter; Martin Fleckenstein; Franz Josef Neumann; Ulrich Sattelberger; Claus Schmitt; Martina Müller; Josef Dirschinger; Albert Schömig
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2003-04-16       Impact factor: 24.094

2.  Evaluation of the second generation of a bioresorbable everolimus drug-eluting vascular scaffold for treatment of de novo coronary artery stenosis: six-month clinical and imaging outcomes.

Authors:  Patrick W Serruys; Yoshinobu Onuma; John A Ormiston; Bernard de Bruyne; Evelyn Regar; Dariusz Dudek; Leif Thuesen; Pieter C Smits; Bernard Chevalier; Dougal McClean; Jacques Koolen; Stephan Windecker; Robert Whitbourn; Ian Meredith; Cécile Dorange; Susan Veldhof; Karine Miquel-Hebert; Richard Rapoza; Hector M García-García
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2010-11-15       Impact factor: 29.690

3.  Pathology of drug-eluting stents in humans: delayed healing and late thrombotic risk.

Authors:  Michael Joner; Aloke V Finn; Andrew Farb; Erik K Mont; Frank D Kolodgie; Elena Ladich; Robert Kutys; Kristi Skorija; Herman K Gold; Renu Virmani
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2006-05-05       Impact factor: 24.094

4.  Long-term invasive follow-up of the everolimus-eluting bioresorbable vascular scaffold: five-year results of multiple invasive imaging modalities.

Authors:  Cihan Simsek; Antonios Karanasos; Michael Magro; Hector M Garcia-Garcia; Yoshinobu Onuma; Evelyn Regar; Eric Boersma; Patrick W Serruys; Robert J van Geuns
Journal:  EuroIntervention       Date:  2016-01-22       Impact factor: 6.534

5.  An independent bench comparison of two bioresorbable drug-eluting coronary scaffolds (Absorb and DESolve) with a durable metallic drug-eluting stent (ML8/Xpedition).

Authors:  John A Ormiston; Bruce Webber; Ben Ubod; Olivier Darremont; Mark W I Webster
Journal:  EuroIntervention       Date:  2015-05       Impact factor: 6.534

6.  Incidence and imaging outcomes of acute scaffold disruption and late structural discontinuity after implantation of the absorb Everolimus-Eluting fully bioresorbable vascular scaffold: optical coherence tomography assessment in the ABSORB cohort B Trial (A Clinical Evaluation of the Bioabsorbable Everolimus Eluting Coronary Stent System in the Treatment of Patients With De Novo Native Coronary Artery Lesions).

Authors:  Yoshinobu Onuma; Patrick W Serruys; Takashi Muramatsu; Shimpei Nakatani; Robert-Jan van Geuns; Bernard de Bruyne; Dariusz Dudek; Evald Christiansen; Pieter C Smits; Bernard Chevalier; Dougal McClean; Jacques Koolen; Stephan Windecker; Robert Whitbourn; Ian Meredith; Hector M Garcia-Garcia; Susan Veldhof; Richard Rapoza; John A Ormiston
Journal:  JACC Cardiovasc Interv       Date:  2014-12       Impact factor: 11.195

7.  Bioabsorbable vascular scaffold overexpansion: insights from in vitro post-expansion experiments.

Authors:  Nicolas Foin; Renick Lee; Alessio Mattesini; Gianluca Caiazzo; Enrico Fabris; Ismail Dogu Kilic; Jing Ni Chan; Yingying Huang; Subbu S Venkatraman; Carlo Di Mario; Philip Wong; Holger Nef
Journal:  EuroIntervention       Date:  2016-03       Impact factor: 6.534

8.  Localized hypersensitivity and late coronary thrombosis secondary to a sirolimus-eluting stent: should we be cautious?

Authors:  Renu Virmani; Giulio Guagliumi; Andrew Farb; Giuseppe Musumeci; Niccolo Grieco; Teresio Motta; Laurian Mihalcsik; Maurizio Tespili; Orazio Valsecchi; Frank D Kolodgie
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2004-01-26       Impact factor: 29.690

9.  Coronary evaginations and peri-scaffold aneurysms following implantation of bioresorbable scaffolds: incidence, outcome, and optical coherence tomography analysis of possible mechanisms.

Authors:  Tommaso Gori; Thomas Jansen; Melissa Weissner; Nicolas Foin; Philip Wenzel; Eberhard Schulz; Stephane Cook; Thomas Münzel
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2015-11-04       Impact factor: 29.983

10.  Effect of the endothelial shear stress patterns on neointimal proliferation following drug-eluting bioresorbable vascular scaffold implantation: an optical coherence tomography study.

Authors:  Christos V Bourantas; Michail I Papafaklis; Anna Kotsia; Vasim Farooq; Takashi Muramatsu; Josep Gomez-Lara; Yao-Jun Zhang; Javaid Iqbal; Fanis G Kalatzis; Katerina K Naka; Dimitrios I Fotiadis; Cecile Dorange; Jin Wang; Richard Rapoza; Hector M Garcia-Garcia; Yoshinobu Onuma; Lampros K Michalis; Patrick W Serruys
Journal:  JACC Cardiovasc Interv       Date:  2014-02-13       Impact factor: 11.195

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  2 in total

1.  Bioresorbable magnesium scaffold in the treatment of simple coronary bifurcation lesions: The BIFSORB pilot II study.

Authors:  Trine Ø Barkholt; Omeed Neghabat; Emil N Holck; Lene N Andreasen; Evald H Christiansen; Niels R Holm
Journal:  Catheter Cardiovasc Interv       Date:  2021-12-30       Impact factor: 2.585

Review 2.  Bioresorbable Scaffolds: Contemporary Status and Future Directions.

Authors:  Xiang Peng; Wenbo Qu; Ying Jia; Yani Wang; Bo Yu; Jinwei Tian
Journal:  Front Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2020-11-30
  2 in total

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