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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02173379
Other study ID # 10-392 C
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date July 2014
Est. completion date April 6, 2022

Study information

Verified date October 2023
Source Abbott Medical Devices
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

ABSORB IV is a prospective, randomized (1:1, Absorb BVS to XIENCE), single-blind, multi-center study, registering approximately 2610 subjects from approximately 140 sites in the United States and outside the United States. ABSORB IV is a continuation of ABSORB III (NCT01751906) trial which are maintained under one protocol because both trial designs are related. The data from ABSORB III and ABSORB IV will be pooled to support the ABSORB IV primary endpoint. Both the trials will evaluate the safety and effectiveness of Absorb BVS. The ABSORB IV Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) is designed to continue to evaluate the safety and effectiveness as well as the potential short and long-term benefits of Abbott Vascular Absorb™ Bioresorbable Vascular Scaffold (BVS) System, and the Absorb GT1™ BVS System (once commercially available), as compared to the commercially approved, control stent XIENCE.


Description:

ABSORB IV: A. Primary Objective: - To evaluate 30-day clinical outcomes of the Absorb BVS compared to XIENCE in the treatment of subjects with ischemic heart disease caused by up to three de novo native coronary artery lesions in a maximum of two epicardial vessels, with a maximum of two lesions per epicardial vessel. - To evaluate long-term clinical outcomes of Absorb BVS compared to XIENCE in the treatment of subjects with ischemic heart disease caused by up to three denovo native coronary artery lesions in a maximum of two epicardial vessels, with a maximum of two lesions per epicardial vessel. B. Secondary Objectives: - To evaluate 1-year clinical outcomes of the Absorb BVS compared to XIENCE in the treatment of subjects with ischemic heart disease caused by up to three de novo native coronary artery lesions in a maximum of two epicardial vessels, with a maximum of two lesions per epicardial vessel. - To evaluate the incidence of angina occurring within 1 year, with treatment of Absorb BVS compared to XIENCE. The enrollment of the 2610 subjects in ABSORB IV will start after enrollment completion of the 2000 primary analysis subjects in ABSORB III. All registered subjects will have clinical follow-up at 30, 90, 180, 270 days and 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 years. Note: All registered subjects in ABSORB IV will be followed up to 5 years via telephone contact/office visit if it is necessary as determined by the Sponsor. In addition, all 2610 subjects in ABSORB IV will complete patient-reported outcome (PRO) self-administered questionnaires at baseline, 30 days,180 days, 1 year, 3 years and 5 years.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 2604
Est. completion date April 6, 2022
Est. primary completion date April 6, 2022
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility General Inclusion Criteria: 1. Subject must be at least 18 years of age. 2. Subject or a legally authorized representative must provide written Informed Consent prior to any study related procedure, per site requirements. 3. Subject must have evidence of myocardial ischemia (e.g., silent ischemia, stable or unstable angina, non-ST-segment elevation MI (NSTEMI), OR recent ST-segment elevation MI (STEMI). Patients with stable coronary syndromes can be enrolled any time after symptom onset if eligibility criteria are otherwise met. Patients with acute coronary syndrome can be enrolled under the following conditions: 1. Unstable angina or NSTEMI within 2 weeks of the index procedure. 2. STEMI > 72 hours = 2 weeks prior to the index procedure. Note: Subjects with Unstable angina (UA) or NSTEMI or STEMI occurring > 2 weeks of the index procedure can be included in the trial but should be categorized based on their current angina class. 4. Subjects must be suitable for PCI. Subjects with stable angina or silent ischemia and < 70% diameter stenosis must have objective signs of ischemia as determined by one of the following: abnormal stress echocardiogram, nuclear scan, electrocardiogram (ECG), positron emission tomography (PET), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and/or fractional flow reserve (FFR). (Note: subject with silent ischemia must have a prior history of typical angina, angina-equivalent symptoms, or atypical angina within the past year to be included in the trial.) 5. Subject must be an acceptable candidate for coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery. 6. Female subject of childbearing potential who does not plan pregnancy for up to 1 year following the index procedure. For a female subject of childbearing potential a pregnancy test must be performed with negative results known within 7 days prior to the index procedure per site standard. 7. Female subject is not breast-feeding at the time of the screening visit and will not be breast-feeding for at least 1 year following the index procedure. 8. Subject agrees to not participate in any other investigational or invasive clinical study for a period of 5 years following the index procedure. Angiographic Inclusion Criteria: Treatment of up to three de novo lesions in a maximum of two epicardial vessels, with a maximum of two lesions per epicardial vessel. If only a single lesion is to be treated, it must be a target lesion. Up to one non-target lesion can be treated. Non-target lesion treatment can occur only in a non-target vessel. If there are two target lesions within the same epicardial vessel, the two target lesions must be at least 15 mm apart per visual estimation; otherwise this is considered as a single target lesion for lesion (and stent) length determination and must be treated with a single study device. 1. Target lesion(s) must be located in a native coronary artery with a visually estimated or quantitatively assessed %DS of =50% and < 100%, with a thrombolysis in myocardial infarction (TIMI) flow of = 1, and one of the following: stenosis = 70%, an abnormal functional test (e.g., fractional flow reserve =0.80 AND/OR a positive stress test), or presentation with an acute coronary syndrome (unstable angina or NSTEMI within 2 weeks of index procedure, or STEMI >72 hours but = 2 weeks prior to the index procedure). 1. Target lesion(s) must be located in a native coronary artery with reference vessel diameter (RVD) by visual estimation of = 2.50 mm and = 3.75 mm. 2. Target lesion(s) must be located in a native coronary artery with length by visual estimation of = 24 mm. Note: Subjects with Unstable angina (UA) or NSTEMI or STEMI occurring > 2 weeks of the index procedure can be included in the trial but should be categorized based on their current angina class. Note: To exclude enrollment of excessively small vessels, if the operator believes that based on visual angiographic assessments, the distal reference vessel diameter is = 2.75 mm such that the plan is to implant a 2.5 mm device (stent or scaffold) in a target lesion, it is strongly recommended that either on-line QCA or intravascular imaging (ultrasound or optical coherence tomography) is used and demonstrates that the measured distal RVD for this target lesion is = 2.50 mm (by at least one of these imaging modalities). This measurement may be performed before or after pre-dilatation, but before randomization. If the distal RVD measures <2.5 mm, that lesion IS NOT ELIGIBLE for randomization. Such a lesion may be treated as a non-target lesion. General Exclusion Criteria: 1. Any surgery requiring general anesthesia or discontinuation of aspirin and/or a P2Y12 receptor inhibitor is planned within 12 months after the procedure. 2. Subject has known hypersensitivity or contraindication to device material and its degradants (everolimus, poly (L-lactide), poly (DL-lactide), lactide, lactic acid) and cobalt, chromium, nickel, platinum, tungsten, acrylic and fluoro polymers that cannot be adequately pre-medicated. Subject has a known contrast sensitivity that cannot be adequately pre-medicated. 3. Subject has known allergic reaction, hypersensitivity or contraindication to any of the following: aspirin; or clopidogrel and prasugrel and ticagrelor; or heparin and bivalirudin, and therefore cannot be adequately treated with study medications. 4. Subject had an acute STEMI (appropriate clinical syndrome with =1 mm of ST-segment elevation in =2 contiguous leads) within 72 hours of the index procedure. 5. Subject has a cardiac arrhythmia identified at the time of screening for which at least one of the following criteria is met: 1. Subject requires coumadin or any other agent for chronic oral anticoagulation. 2. Subject is likely to become hemodynamically unstable due to their arrhythmia. 3. Subject has poor survival prognosis due to their arrhythmia. 6. Subject has a left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) < 30% assessed by any quantitative method, including but not limited to echocardiography, MRI, multiple-gated acquisition (MUGA) scan, contrast left ventriculography, PET scan, etc. LVEF may be obtained within 6 months prior to the procedure for subjects with stable CAD. For subjects presenting with acute coronary syndrome (ACS), LVEF must be assessed within 1 week of the index procedure and after ACS presentation, which may include contrast left ventriculography during the index procedure but prior to randomization in order to confirm the subject's eligibility. 7. Subject has undergone prior PCI within the target vessel during the last 12 months. Prior PCI within the non-target vessel or any peripheral intervention is acceptable if performed anytime >30 days before the index procedure, or between a minimum of 24 hours and 30 days before the index procedure if successful and uncomplicated. 8. Subject requires future staged PCI of any lesion other than a target lesion identified at the time of index procedure; or subject requires future peripheral vascular interventions < 30 days after the index procedure. 9. Subject has received any solid organ transplants or is on a waiting list for any solid organ transplants. 10. At the time of screening, the subject has a malignancy that is not in remission. 11. Subject is receiving immunosuppressant therapy or has known immunosuppressive or severe autoimmune disease that requires chronic immunosuppressive therapy (e.g., human immunodeficiency virus, systemic lupus erythematosus, etc.). Note: corticosteroids are not included as immunosuppressant therapy. 12. Subject has previously received or is scheduled to receive radiotherapy to a coronary artery (vascular brachytherapy), or the chest/mediastinum. 13. Subject is receiving or will require chronic anticoagulation therapy (e.g., coumadin, dabigatran, apixaban, rivaroxaban, edoxaban or any other related agent for any reason). 14. Subject has a platelet count < 100,000 cells/mm3 or > 700,000 cells/mm3. 15. Subject has a documented or suspected hepatic disorder as defined as cirrhosis or Child-Pugh = Class B. 16. Subject has renal insufficiency as defined as an estimated glomerular filtration rate (GFR) < 30 ml/min/1.73m2 or dialysis at the time of screening. 17. Subject is high risk of bleeding for any reason; has a history of bleeding diathesis or coagulopathy; has had a significant gastrointestinal or significant urinary bleed within the past six months. 18. Subject has had a cerebrovascular accident or transient ischemic neurological attack (TIA) within the past six months, or any prior intracranial bleed, or any permanent neurologic defect, or any known intracranial pathology (e.g. aneurysm, arteriovenous malformation, etc.). 19. Subject has extensive peripheral vascular disease that precludes safe 6 French sheath insertion. Note: femoral arterial disease does not exclude the patient if radial access may be used. 20. Subject has a life expectancy <5 years for any non-cardiac or cardiac cause. 21. Subject is in the opinion of the Investigator or designee, unable to comply with the requirements of the study protocol or is unsuitable for the study for any reason. This includes completion of Patient Reported Outcome instruments. 22. Subject is currently participating in another clinical trial that has not yet completed its primary endpoint. 23. Subject is part of a vulnerable population who, in the judgment of the investigator, is unable to give Informed Consent for reasons of incapacity, immaturity, adverse personal circumstances or lack of autonomy. This may include: Individuals with a mental disability, persons in nursing homes, children, impoverished persons, persons in emergency situations, homeless persons, nomads, refugees, and those incapable of giving informed consent. Vulnerable populations also may include members of a group with a hierarchical structure such as university students, subordinate hospital and laboratory personnel, employees of the Sponsor, members of the armed forces, and persons kept in detention. Angiographic Exclusion Criteria: All exclusion criteria apply to the target lesion(s) or target vessel(s). 1. Unsuccessful pre-dilatation, defined as the presence of one or more of the following (note: successful pre-dilatation of at least one target lesion is required prior to randomization): 1. Residual %diameter stenosis (DS) after pre-dilatation is = 40% (per visual estimation). Note: achieving a %DS = 20% prior to randomization is strongly recommended. 2. TIMI flow grade <3 (per visual estimation). 3. Any angiographic complication (e.g. distal embolization, side branch closure). 4. Any dissection NHLBI grade D-F. 5. Any chest pain lasting > 5 minutes. 6. Any ST-segment depression or elevation lasting > 5 minutes. 2. Lesion is located in left main or there is a =30% diameter stenosis in the left main (unless the left main lesion is a protected left main (i.e. a patent bypass graft to the LAD and/or LCX arteries is present), and there is no intention to treat the protected left main lesion). 3. Aorto-ostial right coronary artery (RCA) lesion (within 3 mm of the ostium). 4. Lesion located within 3 mm of the origin of the left anterior descending artery (LAD) or left circumflex artery (LCX). 5. Lesion involving a bifurcation with a: 1. side branch = 2 mm in diameter, or 2. side branch with either an ostial or non-ostial lesion with diameter stenosis >50%, or 3. side branch requiring dilatation 6. Anatomy proximal to or within the lesion that may impair delivery of the Absorb BVS or XIENCE stent: 1. Extreme angulation (= 90°) proximal to or within the target lesion. 2. Excessive tortuosity (= two 45° angles) proximal to or within the target lesion. 3. Moderate or heavy calcification proximal to or within the target lesion. If intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) used, subject must be excluded if calcium arc in the vessel prior to the lesion or within the lesion is = 180°. 7. Lesion or vessel involves a myocardial bridge. 8. Vessel has been previously treated with a stent and the target lesion is within 5 mm proximal or distal to a previously stented lesion. 9. Target lesion located within an arterial or saphenous vein graft or distal to any arterial or saphenous vein graft.

Study Design


Intervention

Device:
Absorb BVS
Scaffold diameters: 2.5, 3.0 and 3.5 mm Scaffold lengths: 8, 12, 18, and 28 mm. Both the 8 mm and 12 mm lengths will be available for the 2.5/3.0 mm diameter Absorb BVS. Only the 12 mm length will be available for the 3.5 mm diameter. Once Absorb GT1™ BVS System is commercially available, it can also be used in the ABSORB IV trial. Scaffold diameters: 2.5, 3.0 and 3.5 mm of and scaffold lengths: 8, 12, 18, 23, and 28 mm. The commercially approved CE marked device will be used in geographies where it is commercially available. The commercially approved CE marked 23mm Absorb BVS device will not be used in this study. Bioabsorbable drug eluting stent implantation for improving coronary luminal diameter in patients, including those with diabetes mellitus, with ischemic heart disease due to de novo native coronary artery lesions (length = 24 mm) with a reference vessel diameter of = 2.5 mm and = 3.75 mm.
XIENCE
Commercially approved XIENCE Family Stent System, inclusive of XIENCE V, XIENCE PRIME, XIENCE Xpedition, XIENCE Alpine, XIENCE Pro (OUS only), and XIENCE ProX (OUS only). Stent diameters: 2.5, 2.75, 3.0, 3.25, 3.5 and 4.0 mm. The 3.25 mm is only available for XIENCE Xpedition Stent lengths: 8, 12, 15, 18, 23, and 28 mm For geographies where these devices are commercially available, the investigational sties may use only their locally approved devices To improve coronary luminal diameter in patients, including those with diabetes mellitus, with ischemic heart disease due to de novo native coronary artery lesions (length = 24 mm) with a reference vessel diameter of = 2.5 mm and = 3.75 mm.

Locations

Country Name City State
Australia The Prince Charles Hospital Brisbane Queensland
Australia St Vincent's Hospital Melbourne Fitzroy Victoria
Australia Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital Herston Queensland
Australia Liverpool Hospital Liverpool New South Wales
Australia Fiona Stanley Hospital Murdoch Western Australia
Australia Royal Perth Hospital Perth Western Australia
Canada Hopital du Sacre-Coeur de Montreal Montreal Quebec
Canada Montreal Heart Institute Montreal Quebec
Canada CHUM-Hotel Dieu Montréal Quebec
Canada St. Michael's Hospital Toronto Ontario
Germany Segeberger Kliniken GmbH - Herzzentrum Bad Segeberg Schleswig-Holstein
Germany Immanuel Klinikum Bernau Herzzentrum Brandenburg Bernau Berlin
Germany Universitatsklinikum Bonn Bonn North Rhine-Westphalia
Germany Elisabeth-Krankenhaus Essen North Rhine-Westphalia
Germany Universitatsklinikum Freiburg Freiburg Baden-Württemberg
Germany University Giessen Giessen Hesse
Germany Kliniken Oberallgau gGmbH Immenstadt Bavaria
Germany Klinikum Kempten, Klinikverbund Kempten-Oberallgaeu gGmbH Kempten-Allgau Bavaria
Germany Johannes Gutenberg-Universitaet Mainz Rhineland-Palatinate
Germany Klinikum Oldenburg Oldenburg Lower Saxony
Germany Universitätsklinikum Ulm Ulm Baden-Württemberg
Singapore National Heart Centre, Singapore, Pte, Ltd. Singapore
United States Northwest Texas Healthcare System Amarillo Texas
United States Anmed Health Medical Center Anderson South Carolina
United States St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Ann Arbor Michigan
United States Emory University Hospital Atlanta Georgia
United States Emory University Hospital Midtown Atlanta Georgia
United States Seton Medical Center Austin Texas
United States MedStar Union Memorial Hospital Baltimore Maryland
United States Eastern Maine Medical Center Bangor Maine
United States University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham Alabama
United States Boston Medical Center Boston Massachusetts
United States Montefiore Medical Center Bronx New York
United States Cooper University Hospital Camden New Jersey
United States Our Lady of Lourdes Medical Center Camden New Jersey
United States Holy Spirit Hospital Camp Hill Pennsylvania
United States Aultman Hospital Canton Ohio
United States Chandler Regional Medical Center Chandler Arizona
United States Carolinas Medical Center Charlotte North Carolina
United States Carolinas Medical Center-Northeast Charlotte North Carolina
United States Carolinas Medical Center-Pineville Charlotte North Carolina
United States Novant Health Heart & Vascular Institute/Presbyterian Hospital Charlotte North Carolina
United States Northwestern Memorial Hospital Chicago Illinois
United States The Christ Hospital Cincinnati Ohio
United States Morton Plant Hospital Clearwater Florida
United States Cleveland Clinic Cleveland Ohio
United States Boone Hospital Center/ Missouri Cardiovascular Specialists, LLP Columbia Missouri
United States Providence Hospital Columbia South Carolina
United States Ohio State University Medical Center Columbus Ohio
United States John Muir Health Concord Concord California
United States Baylor Heart and Vascular Hospital Dallas Texas
United States Geisinger Medical Center Danville Pennsylvania
United States Harper University Hospital Detroit Michigan
United States St John Hospital & Medical Center Detroit Michigan
United States Doylestown Hospital Doylestown Pennsylvania
United States Elkhart General Hospital Elkhart Indiana
United States Englewood Hospital and Medical Center Englewood New Jersey
United States Providence Reg Med Ctr Everett Everett Washington
United States NewYork-Presbyterian/Queens Flushing New York
United States Holy Cross Hospital Fort Lauderdale Florida
United States Washington Hospital Fremont California
United States Mercy Gilbert Medical Center Gilbert Arizona
United States Pinnacle Health Hospitals Harrisburg Pennsylvania
United States Houston Methodist Hospital Houston Texas
United States Franciscan St Francis Health Indianapolis Indiana
United States Baptist Medical Center Jacksonville Jacksonville Florida
United States UF Health Jacksonville Jacksonville Florida
United States Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center Kingsport Tennessee
United States Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla La Jolla California
United States Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center Lebanon New Hampshire
United States Baptist Health Lexington Lexington Kentucky
United States University Of Kentucky Hospital Lexington Kentucky
United States Nebraska Heart Institute Heart Hosp. Lincoln Nebraska
United States Arkansas Heart Hospital Little Rock Arkansas
United States Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Los Angeles California
United States Jewish Hospital Louisville Kentucky
United States Medical Center of the Rockies Loveland Colorado
United States St. Patrick Hospital Missoula Montana
United States Forbes Hospital Monroeville Pennsylvania
United States Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville Tennessee
United States Yale-New Haven Hospital New Haven Connecticut
United States Ochsner Clinic Foundation New Orleans Louisiana
United States Columbia University Medical Center New York New York
United States Mount Sinai Medical Center New York New York
United States NYP Weill Cornell Medical Center New York New York
United States Medstar Health Research Institute/ Medstar Washington Hospital Center Northwest Washington
United States Advocate Christ Medical Center Oak Lawn Illinois
United States Integris Baptist Medical Center, Inc. Oklahoma City Oklahoma
United States CHI Health Bergan Mercy Omaha Nebraska
United States Northern Michigan Hospital Petoskey Michigan
United States Penn Presbyterian Medical Center Philadelphia Pennsylvania
United States Allegheny General Hospital Pittsburgh Pennsylvania
United States Upmc Presbyterian Pittsburgh Pennsylvania
United States Providence St. Vincent Medical Center Portland Oregon
United States Rhode Island Hospital Providence Rhode Island
United States The Miriam Hospital Providence Rhode Island
United States Rex Hospital, Inc. Raleigh North Carolina
United States WakeMed Raleigh North Carolina
United States St. Joseph Medical Center Reading Pennsylvania
United States Carilion Roanoke Memorial Hospital Roanoke Virginia
United States Rochester General Hospital Rochester New York
United States William Beaumont Hospital Royal Oak Michigan
United States Univ Of California Davis Med Ctr Sacramento California
United States Barnes Jewish Hospital Saint Louis Missouri
United States Sharp Memorial Hospital San Diego California
United States Scottsdale Healthcare Scottsdale Arizona
United States Mercy Hospital Springfield Springfield Missouri
United States St. John's Hospital Springfield Illinois
United States Stanford Hospital and Clinics Stanford California
United States Stony Brook University Medical Center Stony Brook New York
United States St. Joseph's Hospital Health Center Syracuse New York
United States Tallahassee Memorial Hospital Tallahassee Florida
United States Tampa General Hospital Tampa Florida
United States Mercy St. Vincent Medical Center Toledo Ohio
United States Little Company Of Mary Hospital Torrance California
United States North Mississippi Medical Center Tupelo Mississippi
United States East Texas Medical Center Tyler Texas
United States Winchester Medical Center Winchester Virginia
United States Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center Winston-Salem North Carolina
United States Genesis Hospital Zanesville Ohio

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Abbott Medical Devices

Countries where clinical trial is conducted

United States,  Australia,  Canada,  Germany,  Singapore, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Number of Participants With Target Lesion Failure (TLF) Target lesion failure (TLF) composite of Cardiac Death, Myocardial Infarction attributable to Target Vessel (TV-MI), or Ischemia-Driven Target Lesion Revascularization (ID-TLR)) 30 days
Secondary TLF at 1-year, Non-inferiority Against the Control One-sided p-value by using Farrington-Manning non-inferiority test will be used with non-inferiority margin of 4.8%, to be compared with a one-sided significance level of 0.025. 1 year
Secondary Angina at 1-year, Non-inferiority Against the Control Angina is defined as any angina or angina equivalent symptoms determined by the physician and/or research coordinator after interview of the patient, and as adjudicated by a clinical events committee (CEC).
This analysis will exclude angina or angina equivalent symptoms that occurred following the index procedure through hospital discharge or 7 days, whichever occurs first.
1 year
Secondary Percentage of Target Lesion With Acute Success- Device Success (Lesion Level Analysis) Successful delivery and deployment of the study scaffold/stent at the intended target lesion and successful withdrawal of the delivery system with attainment of final in-scaffold/stent residual stenosis of less than 30% by quantitative coronary angiography (QCA) (by visual estimation if QCA unavailable). When bailout scaffold/stent is used, the success or failure of the bailout scaffold/stent delivery and deployment is not one of the criteria for device success. In-hospital (= 7days)
Secondary Number of Participants With Acute Success- Procedural Success (Subject Level Analysis) Achievement of final in-scaffold/stent residual stenosis of less than 30% by QCA (by visual estimation if QCA unavailable) with successful delivery and deployment of at least one study scaffold/stent at the intended target lesion and successful withdrawal of the delivery system for all target lesions without the occurrence of cardiac death, target vessel MI or repeat TLR during the hospital stay (maximum of 7 days). In-hospital (= 7days)
Secondary Number of Death (Cardiac, Vascular, Non-cardiovascular) Cardiac death: Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
In-hospital (= 7 days post index procedure)
Secondary Number of Death (Cardiac, Vascular, Non-cardiovascular) Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
30 days
Secondary Number of Death (Cardiac, Vascular, Non-cardiovascular) Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
90 days
Secondary Number of Death (Cardiac, Vascular, Non-cardiovascular) Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
180 days
Secondary Number of Death (Cardiac, Vascular, Non-cardiovascular) Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
270 days
Secondary Number of Death (Cardiac, Vascular, Non-cardiovascular) Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
1 year
Secondary Number of Death (Cardiac, Vascular, Non-cardiovascular) Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
2 years
Secondary Number of Death (Cardiac, Vascular, Non-cardiovascular) Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
3 years
Secondary Number of Death (Cardiac, Vascular, Non-cardiovascular) Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
4 years
Secondary Number of Death (Cardiac, Vascular, Non-cardiovascular) Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment. Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
For the All-Cause Mortality data, the denominator excludes participants who are lost-to-follow-up or withdrawn (by subject or physician) through a given timepoint without any DMR event (all death, MI and revascularization, respectively). If these participants were included in the denominator in each arm, that would equate to assuming that these participants are alive, potentially underestimating the death rate by inflating the denominator.
5 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Myocardial Infarction (MI) Attributable to target vessel (TV-MI)
Not attributable to target vessel (NTV-MI)
In-hospital (= 7 days post index procedure)
Secondary Number of Participants With Myocardial Infarction (MI) Attributable to target vessel (TV-MI)
Not attributable to target vessel (NTV-MI)
30 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Myocardial Infarction (MI) Attributable to target vessel (TV-MI)
Not attributable to target vessel (NTV-MI)
90 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Myocardial Infarction (MI) Attributable to target vessel (TV-MI)
Not attributable to target vessel (NTV-MI)
180 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Myocardial Infarction (MI) Attributable to target vessel (TV-MI)
Not attributable to target vessel (NTV-MI)
270 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Myocardial Infarction (MI) Attributable to target vessel (TV-MI)
Not attributable to target vessel (NTV-MI)
1 year
Secondary Number of Participants With Myocardial Infarction (MI) Attributable to target vessel (TV-MI)
Not attributable to target vessel (NTV-MI)
2 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Myocardial Infarction (MI) Attributable to target vessel (TV-MI)
Not attributable to target vessel (NTV-MI)
3 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Myocardial Infarction (MI) Attributable to target vessel (TV-MI)
Not attributable to target vessel (NTV-MI)
4 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Myocardial Infarction (MI) Attributable to target vessel (TV-MI)
Not attributable to target vessel (NTV-MI)
5 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI) Myocardial infarction attributed to target vessel myocardial infarction (TV-MI) In-hospital (= 7 days post index procedure)
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI) Myocardial infarction attributed to target vessel myocardial infarction (TV-MI) 30 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI) Myocardial infarction attributed to target vessel myocardial infarction (TV-MI) 90 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI) Myocardial infarction attributed to target vessel myocardial infarction (TV-MI) 180 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI) Myocardial infarction attributed to target vessel myocardial infarction (TV-MI) 270 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI) Myocardial infarction attributed to target vessel myocardial infarction (TV-MI) 1 year
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI) Myocardial infarction attributed to target vessel myocardial infarction (TV-MI) 2 year
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI) Myocardial infarction attributed to target vessel myocardial infarction (TV-MI) 3 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI) Myocardial infarction attributed to target vessel myocardial infarction (TV-MI) 4 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI) Myocardial infarction attributed to target vessel myocardial infarction (TV-MI) 5 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Lesion Revascularization (TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography. In-hospital (= 7 days post index procedure)
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Lesion Revascularization (TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography. 30 days
Secondary Number of Participants withTarget Lesion Revascularization (TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography. 90 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Lesion Revascularization (TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography. 180 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Lesion Revascularization (TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography. 270 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Lesion Revascularization (TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography. 1 year
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Lesion Revascularization (TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography. 2 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Lesion Revascularization (TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography. 3 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Lesion Revascularization (TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography. 4 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Lesion Revascularization (TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography. 5 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Ischemia Driven TLR (ID-TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography In-hospital (= 7 days post index procedure)
Secondary Number of Participants With Ischemia Driven TLR (ID-TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography 30 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Ischemia Driven TLR (ID-TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography 90 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Ischemia Driven TLR (ID-TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography 180 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Ischemia Driven TLR (ID-TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography 270 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Ischemia Driven TLR (ID-TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography 1 year
Secondary Number of Participants With Ischemia Driven TLR (ID-TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography 2 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Ischemia Driven TLR (ID-TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography 3 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Ischemia Driven TLR (ID-TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography 4 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Ischemia Driven TLR (ID-TLR) TLR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention of the target lesion or bypass surgery of the target vessel performed for restenosis or other complication of the target lesion. All TLR should be classified prospectively as ischemia driven or not ischemia driven by the investigator prior to repeat angiography 5 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Revascularization (TVR) TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
In-hospital (= 7 days post index procedure)
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Revascularization (TVR) TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
30 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Revascularization (TVR) TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
90 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Revascularization (TVR) TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself. classified as: Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
-TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
180 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Revascularization (TVR) TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
270 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Revascularization (TVR) TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
1 year
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Revascularization (TVR) TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
2 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Revascularization (TVR) TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
3 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Revascularization (TVR) TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
4 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Vessel Revascularization (TVR) TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
5 years
Secondary Number of Participants With ID-TVR Excluding TLR TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
In-hospital (= 7 days post index procedure)
Secondary Number of Participants With ID-TVR Excluding TLR TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
30 days
Secondary Number of Participants With ID-TVR Excluding TLR TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
90 days
Secondary Number of Participants With ID-TVR Excluding TLR TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
180 days
Secondary Number of Participants With ID-TVR Excluding TLR TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
270 days
Secondary Number of Participants With ID-TVR Excluding TLR TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
1 year
Secondary Number of Participants With ID-TVR Excluding TLR TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
2 years
Secondary Number of Participants With ID-TVR Excluding TLR TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
3 years
Secondary Number of Participants With ID-TVR Excluding TLR TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
4 years
Secondary Number of Participants With ID-TVR Excluding TLR TVR is defined as any repeat percutaneous intervention or surgical bypass of any segment of the target vessel. The target vessel is defined as the entire major coronary vessel proximal and distal to the target lesion which includes upstream and downstream branches and the target lesion itself.
TVR includes both Ischemic driven TVR and Non-ischemic driven TVR.
TVR includes all TVR, excluding TLR
5 years
Secondary Number of Participants With All Coronary Revascularization Revascularization includes TLR, TVR excluding TLR, and non TVR. In-hospital (= 7 days post index procedure)
Secondary Number of Participants With All Coronary Revascularization Revascularization includes TLR, TVR excluding TLR, and non TVR. 30 days
Secondary Number of Participants With All Coronary Revascularization Revascularization includes TLR, TVR excluding TLR, and non TVR. 90 days
Secondary Number of Participants With All Coronary Revascularization Revascularization includes TLR, TVR excluding TLR, and non TVR. 180 days
Secondary Number of Participants With All Coronary Revascularization Revascularization includes TLR, TVR excluding TLR, and non TVR. 270 days
Secondary Number of Participants With All Coronary Revascularization Revascularization includes TLR, TVR excluding TLR, and non TVR. 1 year
Secondary Number of Participants With All Coronary Revascularization Revascularization includes TLR, TVR excluding TLR, and non TVR. 2 years
Secondary Number of Participants With All Coronary Revascularization Revascularization includes TLR, TVR excluding TLR, and non TVR. 3 years
Secondary Number of Participants With All Coronary Revascularization Revascularization includes TLR, TVR excluding TLR, and non TVR. 4 years
Secondary Number of Participants With All Coronary Revascularization Revascularization includes TLR, TVR excluding TLR, and non TVR. 5 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced All Death/All MI All deaths includes
Cardiac death: Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Vascular death: Death due to non-coronary vascular causes such as cerebrovascular disease, pulmonary embolism, ruptured aortic aneurysm, dissecting aneurysm, or other vascular cause.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
Myocardial Infarction (MI) - Q wave MI: Development of new, pathological Q wave on the ECG.
-Non-Q wave MI: Those MIs which are not Q-wave MI
In-hospital (= 7 days post index procedure)
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced All Death/All MI All deaths includes
Cardiac death: Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Vascular death: Death due to non-coronary vascular causes such as cerebrovascular disease, pulmonary embolism, ruptured aortic aneurysm, dissecting aneurysm, or other vascular cause.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
Myocardial Infarction (MI) - Q wave MI: Development of new, pathological Q wave on the ECG.
-Non-Q wave MI: Those MIs which are not Q-wave MI
30 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced All Death/All MI All deaths includes
Cardiac death: Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Vascular death: Death due to non-coronary vascular causes such as cerebrovascular disease, pulmonary embolism, ruptured aortic aneurysm, dissecting aneurysm, or other vascular cause.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
Myocardial Infarction (MI) - Q wave MI: Development of new, pathological Q wave on the ECG.
-Non-Q wave MI: Those MIs which are not Q-wave MI
90 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced All Death/All MI All deaths includes
Cardiac death: Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Vascular death: Death due to non-coronary vascular causes such as cerebrovascular disease, pulmonary embolism, ruptured aortic aneurysm, dissecting aneurysm, or other vascular cause.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
Myocardial Infarction (MI) - Q wave MI: Development of new, pathological Q wave on the ECG.
-Non-Q wave MI: Those MIs which are not Q-wave MI
180 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced All Death/All MI All deaths includes
Cardiac death: Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Vascular death: Death due to non-coronary vascular causes such as cerebrovascular disease, pulmonary embolism, ruptured aortic aneurysm, dissecting aneurysm, or other vascular cause.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
Myocardial Infarction (MI) - Q wave MI: Development of new, pathological Q wave on the ECG.
-Non-Q wave MI: Those MIs which are not Q-wave MI
270 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced All Death/All MI All deaths includes
Cardiac death: Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Vascular death: Death due to non-coronary vascular causes such as cerebrovascular disease, pulmonary embolism, ruptured aortic aneurysm, dissecting aneurysm, or other vascular cause.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
Myocardial Infarction (MI) - Q wave MI: Development of new, pathological Q wave on the ECG.
-Non-Q wave MI: Those MIs which are not Q-wave MI
1 year
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced All Death/All MI All deaths includes
Cardiac death: Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Vascular death: Death due to non-coronary vascular causes such as cerebrovascular disease, pulmonary embolism, ruptured aortic aneurysm, dissecting aneurysm, or other vascular cause.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
Myocardial Infarction (MI) - Q wave MI: Development of new, pathological Q wave on the ECG.
-Non-Q wave MI: Those MIs which are not Q-wave MI
2 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced All Death/All MI All deaths includes
Cardiac death: Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Vascular death: Death due to non-coronary vascular causes such as cerebrovascular disease, pulmonary embolism, ruptured aortic aneurysm, dissecting aneurysm, or other vascular cause.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
Myocardial Infarction (MI) - Q wave MI: Development of new, pathological Q wave on the ECG.
-Non-Q wave MI: Those MIs which are not Q-wave MI
3 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced All Death/All MI All deaths includes
Cardiac death: Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Vascular death: Death due to non-coronary vascular causes such as cerebrovascular disease, pulmonary embolism, ruptured aortic aneurysm, dissecting aneurysm, or other vascular cause.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
Myocardial Infarction (MI) - Q wave MI: Development of new, pathological Q wave on the ECG.
-Non-Q wave MI: Those MIs which are not Q-wave MI
4 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced All Death/All MI All deaths includes
Cardiac death: Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment.
Vascular death: Death due to non-coronary vascular causes such as cerebrovascular disease, pulmonary embolism, ruptured aortic aneurysm, dissecting aneurysm, or other vascular cause.
Non-cardiovascular death: Any death not covered by the above definitions such as death caused by infection, malignancy, sepsis, pulmonary causes, accident, suicide or trauma.
Myocardial Infarction (MI) - Q wave MI: Development of new, pathological Q wave on the ECG.
-Non-Q wave MI: Those MIs which are not Q-wave MI
5 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment. In-hospital (= 7 days post index procedure)
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment. 30 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment. 90 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment. 180 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment. 270 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment. 1 year
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment. 2 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment. 3 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment. 4 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI Cardiac death (CD): Any death due to proximate cardiac cause (e.g. MI, low-output failure, fatal arrhythmia), unwitnessed death and death of unknown cause, all procedure related deaths including those related to concomitant treatment. 5 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/TV-MI/ID-TLR (TLF) Target Lesion Failure is composite of Cardiac death/ Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI)/ Ischemic-Driven Target Lesion Revascularization (ID-TLR). In-hospital (= 7 days post index procedure)
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/TV-MI/ID-TLR (TLF) Target Lesion Failure is composite of Cardiac death/ Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI)/ Ischemic-Driven Target Lesion Revascularization (ID-TLR). 30 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/TV-MI/ID-TLR (TLF) Target Lesion Failure is composite of Cardiac death/ Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI)/ Ischemic-Driven Target Lesion Revascularization (ID-TLR). 90 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/TV-MI/ID-TLR (TLF) Target Lesion Failure is composite of Cardiac death/ Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI)/ Ischemic-Driven Target Lesion Revascularization (ID-TLR). 180 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/TV-MI/ID-TLR (TLF) Target Lesion Failure is composite of Cardiac death/ Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI)/ Ischemic-Driven Target Lesion Revascularization (ID-TLR). 270 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/TV-MI/ID-TLR (TLF) Target Lesion Failure is composite of Cardiac death/ Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI)/ Ischemic-Driven Target Lesion Revascularization (ID-TLR). 1 year
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/TV-MI/ID-TLR (TLF) Target Lesion Failure is composite of Cardiac death/ Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI)/ Ischemic-Driven Target Lesion Revascularization (ID-TLR). 2 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/TV-MI/ID-TLR (TLF) Target Lesion Failure is composite of Cardiac death/ Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI)/ Ischemic-Driven Target Lesion Revascularization (ID-TLR). 3 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/TV-MI/ID-TLR (TLF) Target Lesion Failure is composite of Cardiac death/ Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI)/ Ischemic-Driven Target Lesion Revascularization (ID-TLR). 4 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/TV-MI/ID-TLR (TLF) Target Lesion Failure is composite of Cardiac death/ Target Vessel Myocardial Infarction (TV-MI)/ Ischemic-Driven Target Lesion Revascularization (ID-TLR). 5 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR (Major Adverse Cardiac Events-MACE) Major adverse cardiac events (MACE) is defined as the composite of cardiac death, all myocardial infarction, and ischemic driven target lesion revascularization (ID-TLR). In-hospital (= 7 days post index procedure)
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced With Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR (MACE) Major adverse cardiac events (MACE) is defined as the composite of cardiac death, all myocardial infarction, and ischemic driven target lesion revascularization (ID-TLR). 30 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR (MACE) Major adverse cardiac events (MACE) is defined as the composite of cardiac death, all myocardial infarction, and ischemic driven target lesion revascularization (ID-TLR). 90 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR (MACE) Major adverse cardiac events (MACE) is defined as the composite of cardiac death, all myocardial infarction, and ischemic driven target lesion revascularization (ID-TLR). 180 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR (MACE) Major adverse cardiac events (MACE) is defined as the composite of cardiac death, all myocardial infarction, and ischemic driven target lesion revascularization (ID-TLR). 270 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR (MACE) Major adverse cardiac events (MACE) is defined as the composite of cardiac death, all myocardial infarction, and ischemic driven target lesion revascularization (ID-TLR). 1 year
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR (MACE) Major adverse cardiac events (MACE) is defined as the composite of cardiac death, all myocardial infarction, and ischemic driven target lesion revascularization (ID-TLR). 2 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR (MACE) Major adverse cardiac events (MACE) is defined as the composite of cardiac death, all myocardial infarction, and ischemic driven target lesion revascularization (ID-TLR). 3 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR (MACE) Major adverse cardiac events (MACE) is defined as the composite of cardiac death, all myocardial infarction, and ischemic driven target lesion revascularization (ID-TLR). 4 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR (MACE) Major adverse cardiac events (MACE) is defined as the composite of cardiac death, all myocardial infarction, and ischemic driven target lesion revascularization (ID-TLR). 5 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR/ID-TVR, Non TL (Target Vessel Failure, TVF) Target Vessel Failure (TVF) is the composite of Cardiac Death, Myocardial infarction (MI) or Ischemic-Driven Target Vessel Revascularization (ID-TVR). In-hospital (= 7 days post index procedure)
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR/ID-TVR, Non TL (TVF) Target Vessel Failure (TVF) is the composite of Cardiac Death, Myocardial infarction (MI) or Ischemic-Driven Target Vessel Revascularization (ID-TVR). 30 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR/ID-TVR, Non TL (TVF) Target Vessel Failure (TVF) is the composite of Cardiac Death, Myocardial infarction (MI) or Ischemic-Driven Target Vessel Revascularization (ID-TVR). 90 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR/ID-TVR, Non TL (TVF) Target Vessel Failure (TVF) is the composite of Cardiac Death, Myocardial infarction (MI) or Ischemic-Driven Target Vessel Revascularization (ID-TVR). 180 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR/ID-TVR, Non TL (TVF) Target Vessel Failure (TVF) is the composite of Cardiac Death, Myocardial infarction (MI) or Ischemic-Driven Target Vessel Revascularization (ID-TVR). 270 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR/ID-TVR, Non TL (TVF) Target Vessel Failure (TVF) is the composite of Cardiac Death, Myocardial infarction (MI) or Ischemic-Driven Target Vessel Revascularization (ID-TVR). 1 year
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR/ID-TVR, Non TL (TVF) Target Vessel Failure (TVF) is the composite of Cardiac Death, Myocardial infarction (MI) or Ischemic-Driven Target Vessel Revascularization (ID-TVR). 2 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR/ID-TVR, Non TL (TVF) Target Vessel Failure (TVF) is the composite of Cardiac Death, Myocardial infarction (MI) or Ischemic-Driven Target Vessel Revascularization (ID-TVR). 3 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR/ID-TVR, Non TL (TVF) Target Vessel Failure (TVF) is the composite of Cardiac Death, Myocardial infarction (MI) or Ischemic-Driven Target Vessel Revascularization (ID-TVR). 4 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Cardiac Death/All MI/ID-TLR/ID-TVR, Non TL (TVF) Target Vessel Failure (TVF) is the composite of Cardiac Death, Myocardial infarction (MI) or Ischemic-Driven Target Vessel Revascularization (ID-TVR). 5 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Death/All MI/All Revascularization (DMR) DMR is the composite of All Death, All Myocardial infarction (MI) and All Revascularization. In-hospital (= 7 days post index procedure)
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Death/All MI/All Revascularization (DMR) DMR is the composite of All Death, All Myocardial infarction (MI) and All Revascularization. 30 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Death/All MI/All Revascularization (DMR) DMR is the composite of All Death, All Myocardial infarction (MI) and All Revascularization. 90 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Death/All MI/All Revascularization (DMR) DMR is the composite of All Death, All Myocardial infarction (MI) and All Revascularization. 180 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Death/All MI/All Revascularization (DMR) DMR is the composite of All Death, All Myocardial infarction (MI) and All Revascularization. 270 days
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Death/All MI/All Revascularization (DMR) DMR is the composite of All Death, All Myocardial infarction (MI) and All Revascularization. 1 year
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Death/All MI/All Revascularization (DMR) DMR is the composite of All Death, All Myocardial infarction (MI) and All Revascularization. 2 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Death/All MI/All Revascularization (DMR) DMR is the composite of All Death, All Myocardial infarction (MI) and All Revascularization. 3 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Death/All MI/All Revascularization (DMR) DMR is the composite of All Death, All Myocardial infarction (MI) and All Revascularization. 4 years
Secondary Number of Participants Experienced Death/All MI/All Revascularization (DMR) DMR is the composite of All Death, All Myocardial infarction (MI) and All Revascularization. 5 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Acute Scaffold/Stent Thrombosis (Per Academic Research Consortium (ARC) Definition) Stent thrombosis was defined by Academic Research Consortium (ARC) criteria as definite (angiographic confirmation with at least one of the following: acute onset of ischemic symptoms at rest, new ischemic ECG changes that suggest acute ischemia or typical rise and fall of cardiac biomarkers OR pathological confirmation at autopsy or via examination of tissue retrieved following thrombectomy), probable (any unexplained death within the first 30 days or, regardless of the time after the index procedure, any Myocardial infarction (MI) related to documented acute ischemia in the territory of the implanted stent without angiographic confirmation and in the absence of any other obvious cause), and possible (any unexplained death from 30 days after intracoronary stenting until end of trial follow-up). Stent thrombosis was categorized as acute (0-24 hours post stent implantation), Subacute (>24 hours to 30 days post stent implantation), late (>30 days to 1 year post stent implantation). 0 - 24 hours post stent implantation
Secondary Number of Participants With Subacute Scaffold/Stent Thrombosis (Per ARC Definition) Stent thrombosis was defined by Academic Research Consortium (ARC) criteria as definite (angiographic confirmation with at least one of the following: acute onset of ischemic symptoms at rest, new ischemic ECG changes that suggest acute ischemia or typical rise and fall of cardiac biomarkers OR pathological confirmation at autopsy or via examination of tissue retrieved following thrombectomy), probable (any unexplained death within the first 30 days or, regardless of the time after the index procedure, any Myocardial infarction (MI) related to documented acute ischemia in the territory of the implanted stent without angiographic confirmation and in the absence of any other obvious cause), and possible (any unexplained death from 30 days after intracoronary stenting until end of trial follow-up). Stent thrombosis was categorized as acute (0-24 hours post stent implantation), Subacute (>24 hours to 30 days post stent implantation), late (>30 days to 1 year post stent implantation). >24 hours - 30 days post stent implantation
Secondary Number of Participants With Late Scaffold/Stent Thrombosis (Per ARC Definition) Stent thrombosis was defined by Academic Research Consortium (ARC) criteria as definite (angiographic confirmation with at least one of the following: acute onset of ischemic symptoms at rest, new ischemic ECG changes that suggest acute ischemia or typical rise and fall of cardiac biomarkers OR pathological confirmation at autopsy or via examination of tissue retrieved following thrombectomy), probable (any unexplained death within the first 30 days or, regardless of the time after the index procedure, any Myocardial infarction (MI) related to documented acute ischemia in the territory of the implanted stent without angiographic confirmation and in the absence of any other obvious cause), and possible (any unexplained death from 30 days after intracoronary stenting until end of trial follow-up). Stent thrombosis was categorized as acute (0-24 hours post stent implantation), Subacute (>24 hours to 30 days post stent implantation), late (>30 days to 1 year post stent implantation). 30 days - 1 year post stent implantation
Secondary Number of Participants With Cumulative Scaffold/Stent Thrombosis (Per ARC Definition) Stent thrombosis was defined by Academic Research Consortium (ARC) criteria as definite (angiographic confirmation with at least one of the following: acute onset of ischemic symptoms at rest, new ischemic ECG changes that suggest acute ischemia or typical rise and fall of cardiac biomarkers OR pathological confirmation at autopsy or via examination of tissue retrieved following thrombectomy), probable (any unexplained death within the first 30 days or, regardless of the time after the index procedure, any Myocardial infarction (MI) related to documented acute ischemia in the territory of the implanted stent without angiographic confirmation and in the absence of any other obvious cause), and possible (any unexplained 0 to 730 Days
Secondary Number of Participants With Rehospitalization Coronary artery disease (CAD) related
Cardiovascular, non-CAD related
Non-cardiovascular related
30 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Rehospitalization CAD related
Cardiovascular, non-CAD related
Non-cardiovascular related
90 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Rehospitalization CAD related
Cardiovascular, non-CAD related
Non-cardiovascular related
180 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Rehospitalization CAD related
Cardiovascular, non-CAD related
Non-cardiovascular related
270 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Rehospitalization CAD related
Cardiovascular, non-CAD related
Non-cardiovascular related
1 year
Secondary Number of Participants With Rehospitalization CAD related
Cardiovascular, non-CAD related
Non-cardiovascular related
2 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Rehospitalization CAD related
Cardiovascular, non-CAD related
Non-cardiovascular related
3 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Rehospitalization CAD related
Cardiovascular, non-CAD related
Non-cardiovascular related
4 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Rehospitalization CAD related
Cardiovascular, non-CAD related
Non-cardiovascular related
5 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Repeat Coronary Arteriography In-hospital (= 7 days post index procedure)
Secondary Number of Participants With Repeat Coronary Arteriography 30 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Repeat Coronary Arteriography 90 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Repeat Coronary Arteriography 180 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Repeat Coronary Arteriography 270 days
Secondary Number of Participants With Repeat Coronary Arteriography 1 year
Secondary Number of Participants With Repeat Coronary Arteriography 2 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Repeat Coronary Arteriography 3 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Repeat Coronary Arteriography 4 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Repeat Coronary Arteriography 5 years
Secondary Number of Participants With Target Lesion Failure (TLF) The analysis will be based on 4610 subjects (2000 primary analysis subjects of ABSORB III and 2610 subjects of ABSORB IV) 1 year
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