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Favorable vessel healing after nobori biolimus A9-eluting stent implantation-6- and 12-month follow-up by optical coherence tomography.

Authors :
Konishi A
Shinke T
Otake H
Takaya T
Nakagawa M
Inoue T
Hariki H
Osue T
Taniguchi Y
Iwasaki M
Nishio R
Hiranuma N
Kinutani H
Kuroda M
Takahashi H
Terashita D
Shite J
Hirata K
Source :
Circulation journal : official journal of the Japanese Circulation Society [Circ J] 2014; Vol. 78 (8), pp. 1882-90. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Jun 09.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Background: Nobori is a novel biolimus A9-eluting stent (BES) coated with a biodegradable polymer only on the abluminal side, which degrades over 6-9 months post-stent deployment. The course of vessel reaction after deployment at these time points remains unclear.<br />Methods and Results: We serially evaluated 28 BES implanted in de novo coronary lesions of 23 patients using optical coherence tomography (OCT) at 6 and 12 months post-stenting. Standard OCT variables, the percentage of stent with peri-strut low-intensity area (PLIA, a region around stent struts homogenously showing lesser intensity than the surrounding tissue, suggesting fibrin deposition or impaired neointima maturation) and that with in-stent thrombi were evaluated. There was a significant, but small increase in neointimal thickness (72 ± 23 to 82 ± 25 µm, P=0.006) from the 6- to the 12-month follow-up, without a significant decrease in minimum lumen area (P=0.30). The incidences of uncovered and malapposed struts were low at 6 months and reduced further at 12 months (3.96 ± 3.97% to 1.51 ± 1.63%, P=0.001, and 0.50 ± 1.84% to 0.06 ± 0.24%, P=0.20, respectively). The frequency of stent with PLIA decreased during the follow-up (57% to 32%, P=0.05) and that with in-stent thrombi also numerically decreased (7% to 0%, P=0.24).<br />Conclusions: Neointimal hyperplasia was persistently suppressed following BES implantation up to 12 months. Simultaneously, favorable vessel healing was achieved at 6 months without a delaying adverse reaction for up to 12 months.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1347-4820
Volume :
78
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Circulation journal : official journal of the Japanese Circulation Society
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24909891
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1253/circj.cj-13-1474