View clinical trials related to Coronary Stenosis.
Filter by:We aimed to evaluate feasibility and the 6-month angiographic and OCT results of FFR - guided use of paclitaxel-eluting balloons (Sequent Please™, B Braun) with provisional bare metal stenting for elective PCI of de novo coronary lesions.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether Fractional flow reserve (FFR, (coronary pressure wire-based index for assessing the ischemic potential of a coronary lesion)-guided percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in patients with multivessel coronary artery disease (CAD) will result in similar outcomes to coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG).
The German-Austrian ABSORB Register shall provide an analysis of acute and long-term safety as well as therapy outcomes of the ABSORB (trade mark) bioresorbable vascular scaffold system in patients suffering from coronary artery disease.
The NIREUS study aims to demonstrate angiographic non-inferiority for the BioNIR Ridaforolimus Eluting Coronary Stent System (hereafter referred to as BioNIR) in comparison to the Resolute zotarolimus-eluting stent (hereafter referred to as Resolute). The trial hypothesis is that the BioNIR is non-inferior to the Resolute for the primary endpoint of angiographic in-stent late loss at 6 months.
The BioNIR study aims to show that the BioNIR ridaforolimus eluting stent is non-inferior to the Resolute zotarolimus-eluting stent for the primary clinical endpoint of target lesion failure (TLF) at 12 months; that it is non-inferior to the Resolute for the secondary endpoint of angiographic in-stent late loss at 13 months; and that it is more cost-effective.
Register of treatment of unprotected left main coronary artery stenosis in Andalucia (RETRATO).
BIOSOLVE-II is a prospective, international, multicenter, First in Man study. The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and clinical performance of the drug eluting absorbable metal scaffold (DREAMS 2nd Generation).
To evaluate the safety and efficacy of the Absorb BVS System compared to the XIENCE V Everolimus Eluting Coronary Stent System (EECSS) in the treatment of subjects with ischemic heart disease caused by up to two de novo native coronary artery lesions in separate epicardial vessels.
The registry aims to evaluate the safety, performance and efficacy of the Everolimus-eluting bioresorbable vascular scaffold (BVS) system following rotational atherectomy in patients with complex de novo native coronary artery lesions in all-day clinical practice.
A randomised open-label pilot study to assess the safety and efficacy of treatment with a drug eluting balloon alone in coronary de novo lesions). Elective patients requiring PCI to coronary de novo lesions in vessels 2.5 mm - 4.0 mm.