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  5. Evaluation of the Second Generation of a Bioresorbable Everolimus Drug-Eluting Vascular Scaffold for Treatment of De Novo Coronary Artery Stenosis

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Article
English
2010

Evaluation of the Second Generation of a Bioresorbable Everolimus Drug-Eluting Vascular Scaffold for Treatment of De Novo Coronary Artery Stenosis

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English
2010
Circulation
Vol 122 (22)
DOI: 10.1161/circulationaha.110.970772

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Patrick W. Serruys
Patrick W. Serruys

Imperial College London

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Patrick W. Serruys
Yoshinobu Onuma
John A. Ormiston
+16 more

Abstract

Background— The first generation of the bioresorbable everolimus drug-eluting vascular scaffold showed signs of shrinkage at 6 months, which largely contributed to late luminal loss. Nevertheless, late luminal loss was less than that observed with bare metal stents. To maintain the mechanical integrity of the device up to 6 months, the scaffold design and manufacturing process of its polymer were modified. Methods and Results— Quantitative coronary angiography, intravascular ultrasound with analysis of radiofrequency backscattering, and as an optional assessment, optical coherence tomography (OCT) were performed at baseline and at a 6-month follow-up. Forty-five patients successfully received a single bioresorbable everolimus drug-eluting vascular scaffold. One patient had postprocedural release of myocardial enzyme without Q-wave occurrence; 1 patient with OCT-diagnosed disruption of the scaffold caused by excessive postdilatation was treated 1 month later with a metallic drug-eluting stent. At follow-up, 3 patients declined recatheterization, 42 patients had quantitative coronary angiography, 37 had quantitative intravascular ultrasound, and 25 had OCT. Quantitative coronary angiography disclosed 1 edge restenosis (1 of 42; in-segment binary restenosis, 2.4%). At variance with the ultrasonic changes seen with the first generation of bioresorbable everolimus drug-eluting vascular scaffold at 6 months, the backscattering of the polymeric struts did not decrease over time, the scaffold area was reduced by only 2.0% with intravascular ultrasound, and no change was noted with OCT. On an intention-to-treat basis, the late lumen loss amounted to 0.19±0.18 mm with a limited relative decrease in minimal luminal area of 5.4% on intravascular ultrasound. OCT showed at follow-up that 96.8% of the struts were covered and that malapposition of at least 1 strut, initially observed in 12 scaffolds, was detected at follow-up in only 3 scaffolds. Mean neointimal growth measured by OCT between and on top of the polymeric struts equaled 1.25 mm 2 , or 16.6% of the scaffold area. Conclusion— Modified manufacturing process of the polymer and geometric changes in the polymeric platform have substantially improved the medium-term performance of this new generation of drug-eluting scaffold to become comparable to those of current drug eluting stents. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT00856856.

How to cite this publication

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 T. Meredith, Cécile Dorange, Susan Veldhof, Karine Miquel‐Hébert, Richard Rapoza, Héctor M. García‐García (2010). Evaluation of the Second Generation of a Bioresorbable Everolimus Drug-Eluting Vascular Scaffold for Treatment of De Novo Coronary Artery Stenosis. Circulation, 122(22), pp. 2301-2312, DOI: 10.1161/circulationaha.110.970772.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2010

Authors

19

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

English

Journal

Circulation

DOI

10.1161/circulationaha.110.970772

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