Coronary Artery Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Safety and Effectiveness of the Self-aPposing, bAlloon-delivered, dRug-eluting Stent for the Treatment of the Coronary Artery Disease: A multiCenter Registry
Self-apposing, drug-eluting Stentys coronary stents represent a valuable tool for the
treatment of coronary artery stenosis. Their ability to adapt to widely varying vessel
calibers and to auto-expand after their release to self-appose to vessel walls is
particularly useful in the presence of ectasic coronary arteries or significant vessel
tapering. The investigators planned this study to assess the feasibility, the effectiveness
and the safety of the implantation of self-apposing, drug-eluting Stentys stents for
percutaneous coronary intervention.
Consecutive patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention with implantation of a
self-apposing Stentys stent were enrolled in this multi center registry. Inclusion criteria
were age ≥ 18 years and ability to provide informed consent. No exclusion criteria were
defined.
Primary end-point of the study is the occurrence of MACE (death, myocardial infarction,
stent thrombosis, unplanned hospitalization for unstable angina, target lesion
revascularization). Secondary end-points include individual components of MACE, procedural
complications (periprocedural MI, bleedings, access site complication, failure to cross
stent struts with guidewire in the treatment of bifurcation, failure to delivery the stent,
contrast-induced nephropathy), bleedings at follow up.
Rationale: Choice of the appropriate size of stents in the treatment of coronary artery
stenosis can often be challenging. Marked tapering of vessels' diameter in their
proximal-distal development may lead to sub-optimal results. Distal under-expansion of the
drug-eluting stent (DES) or vessel perforation may occur if a larger DES, best suited for
the proximal diameter, is chosen. Proximal DES under-sizing with struts malapposition may
happen if a smaller DES, fitting the distal diameter, is implanted. Moreover, ectasic
vessels present irregular and varying diameter, which may lead as well to segmental
malapposition or under-expansion of DES. Self-apposing stents can overcome these limitations
thanks to their ability to self-expand also after their release in the vessel and to adapt
to a wide range of vessel diameters. Multiple generation of self-apposing, drug-eluting
stents have been developed, with progressive amendments pertaining the stent-deployment
technique (from deployment by covering-sheath retraction to balloon-delivery) and the drug
released (from paclitaxel to sirolimus). The last generation of the self-apposing stents is
represented by the sirolimus-eluting, balloon-delivered Xposition S stents. Studies
assessing performance of this stent are however limited in sample size and length of follow
up, and are mainly controlled trials. Few data are available regarding the clinical outcomes
of the self-apposing Stentys stents in a "real-life" setting.
Aim of this study is to assess the feasibility, the effectiveness and the safety of the
implantation of self-apposing, drug-eluting Stentys stents for percutaneous coronary
intervention.
Study population: Patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention with implantation
of a self-apposing Stentys stent.
Primary analysis: Longitudinal cohort follow up
Study end-points:
Primary efficacy end-point:
- Major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) (a composite end point including death,
myocardial infarction (MI, excluding periprocedural MI), stent thrombosis, unplanned
hospitalization for unstable angina, target lesion revascularization (TLR))
Secondary efficacy end-points:
- Individual components of MACE (death, MI, stent thrombosis, unplanned hospitalization,
TLR)
Secondary safety end-points:
- Procedural complications:
- Periprocedural MI
- Bleedings
- Access site complication
- Failure to cross stent struts with guidewire in the treatment of bifurcation
- Failure to delivery the stent
- Contrast-induced nephropathy
- Bleedings at follow up
;
Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Prospective
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