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Get Free AccessThe MeRes-1 trial sought to study the safety and effectiveness of a novel sirolimus-eluting bioresorbable vascular scaffold (MeRes100 BRS) in treating de novo native coronary artery lesions by clinical evaluation and using multiple imaging modalities.The MeRes-1 first-in-human trial was a single-arm, prospective, multicentre study, which enrolled 108 patients with de novo coronary artery lesions (116 scaffolds were deployed to treat 116 lesions in 108 patients). At six months, quantitative coronary angiography revealed in-scaffold late lumen loss of 0.15±0.23 mm with 0% binary restenosis. Optical coherence tomography demonstrated minimum scaffold area (6.86±1.73 mm2) and percentage neointimal strut coverage (99.30%). Quantitative intravascular ultrasound analysis confirmed a 0.14±0.16 mm2 neointimal hyperplasia area. At one year, major adverse cardiac events, a composite of cardiac death, any myocardial infarction and ischaemia-driven target lesion revascularisation, occurred in only one patient (0.93%) and there was no scaffold thrombosis reported. At one year, computed tomography angiography demonstrated that all scaffolds were patent and in-scaffold mean percentage area stenosis was 11.33±26.57%.The MeRes-1 trial demonstrated the safety and effectiveness of MeRes100 BRS. The favourable clinical outcomes and effective vascular responses have provided the basis for further studies in a larger patient population. The MeRes-1 trial is registered at the Clinical Trials Registry-India.
Ashok Seth, Yoshinobu Onuma, Ricardo A. Costa, Praveen Chandra, Vinay K. Bahl, Cholenahally Nanjappa Manjunath, Ajaykumar Umakant Mahajan, Viveka Kumar, Pravin K. Goel, Gurpreet Singh Wander, Mathew Samuel Kalarickal, Upendra Kaul, V K Ajit Kumar, Pratap Chandra Rath, Vijay Trehan, Gunasekaran Sengottuvelu, Sundeep Mishra, Alexandre Abizaid, Patrick W. Serruys (2017). First-in-human evaluation of a novel poly-L-lactide based sirolimus-eluting bioresorbable vascular scaffold for the treatment of de novo native coronary artery lesions: MeRes-1 trial. EuroIntervention, 13(4), pp. 415-423, DOI: 10.4244/eij-d-17-00306.
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Type
Article
Year
2017
Authors
19
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
EuroIntervention
DOI
10.4244/eij-d-17-00306
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