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Comparison of Everolimus-Eluting and Sirolimus-Eluting Coronary Stents

Authors :
Takeshi, Kimura
Takeshi, Morimoto
Masahiro, Natsuaki
Hiroki, Shiomi
Keiichi, Igarashi
Kazushige, Kadota
Kengo, Tanabe
Yoshihiro, Morino
Takashi, Akasaka
Yoshiki, Takatsu
Hideo, Nishikawa
Yoshito, Yamamoto
Yoshihisa, Nakagawa
Yasuhiko, Hayashi
Masashi, Iwabuchi
Hisashi, Umeda
Kazuya, Kawai
Hisayuki, Okada
Kazuo, Kimura
Charles A, Simonton
Ken, Kozuma
Shunsuke, Akatsuka
Source :
Circulation. 126:1225-1236
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2012.

Abstract

Background— Several recent randomized trials comparing everolimus-eluting stent (EES) and sirolimus-eluting stent (SES) reported similar outcomes. However, only 1 trial was powered for a clinical end point, and no trial was powered for evaluating target-lesion revascularization. Methods and Results— Randomized Evaluation of Sirolimus-eluting versus Everolimus-eluting stent Trial is a prospective multicenter randomized open-label trial comparing EES with SES in Japan. The trial was powered for evaluating noninferiority of EES relative to SES in terms of target-lesion revascularization. From February and July 2010, 3197 patients were randomly assigned to receive either EES (1597 patients) or SES (1600 patients). At 1 year, the primary efficacy end point of target-lesion revascularization occurred in 65 patients (4.3%) in the EES group and in 76 patients (5.0%) in the SES group, demonstrating noninferiority of EES to SES ( P noninferiority P superiority =0.34). Cumulative incidence of definite stent thrombosis was low and similar between the 2 groups (0.32% versus 0.38%, P =0.77). An angiographic substudy enrolling 571 patients (EES, 285 patients and SES, 286 patients) demonstrated noninferiority of EES relative to SES regarding the primary angiographic end point of in-segment late loss (0.06±0.37 mm versus 0.02±0.46 mm, P noninferiority P superiority =0.24) at 278±63 days after index stent implantation. Conclusions— One-year clinical and angiographic outcome after EES implantation was noninferior to and not different from that after SES implantation in a stable coronary artery disease population with relatively less complex coronary anatomy. One-year clinical outcome after both EES and SES use was excellent with a low rate of target-lesion revascularization and a very low rate of stent thrombosis. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT01035450.

Details

ISSN :
15244539 and 00097322
Volume :
126
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Circulation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....181671b16dab4f343c4c11a8ee415a08
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/circulationaha.112.104059