Literature DB >> 9468205

Final results of the Balloon vs Optimal Atherectomy Trial (BOAT)

D S Baim1, D E Cutlip, S K Sharma, K K Ho, R Fortuna, T L Schreiber, R L Feldman, J Shani, C Senerchia, Y Zhang, A J Lansky, J J Popma, R E Kuntz.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Previous directional coronary atherectomy (DCA) trials have shown no significant reduction in angiographic restenosis, more in-hospital complications, and higher 1-year mortality than conventional balloon angioplasty (percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty [PTCA]). DCA, however, has subsequently evolved toward a more "optimal" technique (larger devices, more extensive tissue removal, and routine postdilation to obtain diameter stenosis <20%). METHODS AND
RESULTS: The Balloon vs Optimal Atherectomy Trial (BOAT) was conducted to evaluate whether optimal DCA provides short- and long-term benefits compared with balloon angioplasty. One thousand patients with single de novo, native vessel lesions were randomized to either DCA or PTCA at 37 participating centers. Lesion success was obtained in 99% versus 97% (P=.02) of patients to a final residual diameter stenosis of 15% versus 28% (P<.0001) for DCA and PTCA, respectively, the latter including stents in 9.3% of the patients. There was no increase in major complications (death, Q-wave myocardial infarction, or emergent coronary artery bypass graft surgery [2.8% versus 3.3%]), although creatine kinase-MB >3X normal was more common with DCA (16% versus 6%; P<.0001). Angiographic restudy (in 79.6% of eligible patients at 7.2+/-2.6 [median, 6.9] months) showed a significant reduction in the prespecified primary end point of angiographic restenosis by DCA (31.4% versus 39.8%; P=.016). Clinical follow-up to 1 year showed nonsignificant 13% to 17% reductions in the DCA arm of the study for mortality rate (0.6% versus 1.6%; P=.14), target-vessel revascularization (17.1% versus 19.7%; P=.33), target-site revascularization (15.3% versus 18.3%; P=.23), and target-vessel failure (death, Q-wave myocardial infarction, or target-vessel revascularization, 21.1% versus 24.8%; P=.17).
CONCLUSIONS: Optimal DCA provides significantly higher short-term success, lower residual stenosis, and lower angiographic restenosis than conventional PTCA, despite failing to reach statistical significance for reducing late clinical events compared with PTCA with stent backup.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9468205     DOI: 10.1161/01.cir.97.4.322

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


  8 in total

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Authors:  N S Kleiman
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2.  Preintervention lesion remodelling affects operative mechanisms of balloon optimised directional coronary atherectomy procedures: a volumetric study with three dimensional intravascular ultrasound.

Authors:  C von Birgelen; G S Mintz; E A de Vrey; P W Serruys; T Kimura; M Nobuyoshi; J J Popma; M B Leon; R Erbel; P J de Feyter
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4.  Directional atherectomy facilitates the interventional procedure and leads to a low rate of recurrent stenosis in left anterior descending and left circumflex artery ostium stenoses: subgroup analysis of the FLEXI-CUT study.

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5.  Impact of directional coronary atherectomy followed by drug-coated balloon strategy to avoid the complex stenting for bifurcation lesions.

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6.  Circulating soluble lectin-like oxidized low-density lipoprotein receptor-1 levels predict percutaneous coronary intervention-related periprocedural myocardial infarction in stable patients undergoing elective native single-vessel PCI.

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Review 7.  Post-Myocardial Infarction Ventricular Remodeling Biomarkers-The Key Link between Pathophysiology and Clinic.

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Journal:  Biomolecules       Date:  2020-11-23

8.  Impact of Angiographic Residual Stenosis on Clinical Outcomes After New-Generation Drug-Eluting Stents Implantation: Insights From a Pooled Analysis of the RESET and NEXT Trials.

Authors:  Hiroki Watanabe; Takeshi Morimoto; Hiroki Shiomi; Masahiro Natsuaki; Kazuya Kawai; Ken Kozuma; Keiichi Igarashi; Kazushige Kadota; Kengo Tanabe; Yoshihiro Morino; Kiyoshi Hibi; Takashi Akasaka; Mitsuru Abe; Satoru Suwa; Toshiya Muramatsu; Masakazu Kobayashi; Kazuoki Dai; Koichi Nakao; Yasuhiro Tarutani; Kenshi Fujii; Takeshi Kimura
Journal:  J Am Heart Assoc       Date:  2018-06-30       Impact factor: 5.501

  8 in total

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