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Clinical follow-up of long nontapered sirolimus-eluting coronary stent in real-world patients with de novo lesions. The Billar registry

Authors :
Enric Domingo Ribas
Juan Casanova-Sandoval
Imanol Otaegui
Ramón Calviño Santos
Javier León Jiménez
Xavier Carrillo Suarez
Alfonso Torres
Juan Francisco Cara Muñoz
Josep Guindo
Leire Andraka
and Mónica Fuertes
Bruno García del Blanco
Ramiro Trillo Nouche
Joan Antoni Gómez
Raymundo Ocaranza Sánchez
Juan E. Sánchez
Source :
REC: Interventional Cardiology (English Ed.), Vol 4, Iss 1, Pp 27-32 (2022)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Publicidad Permanyer, SLU, 2021.

Abstract

Introduction and objectives: Coronary lesions with stent overlapping are associated with higher neointimal proliferation that leads to more restenosis. Furthermore, the tapering of coronary arteries is a major challenge when treating long coronary lesions. This study attempted to assess the safety and clinical level of performance of long nontapered sirolimus-eluting coronary stent systems (> 36 mm) to treat long and diffused de novo coronary lesions in real-world scenarios. Methods: This was a prospective, non-randomized, multicentre study that included 696 consecutive patients treated with the long nontapered BioMime sirolimus-eluting coronary stent system in long and diffused de novo coronary lesions. The safety endpoint was major adverse cardiovascular events defined as a composite of cardiac death, myocardial infarction, clinically driven target lesion revascularization, stent thrombosis, and major bleeding at the 12-month follow-up. Results: Of a total of 696 patients, 38.79% were diabetic. The mean age of all the patients was 64.6 ± 14 years, and 80% were males. The indication for revascularization was acute coronary syndrome in 63.1%. A total of 899 lesions were identified out of which 742 were successfully treated with long BioMime stents (37 mm, 40 mm, 44 mm, and 48 mm). The cumulative incidence of major adverse cardiovascular events was 8.1% at the 12-month follow-up including cardiac death (2.09%), myocardial infarction (1.34%), and total stent thrombosis (0.5%). Conclusions: This study confirms the safety and good performance of long nontapered BioMime coronary stents to treat de novo coronary stenosis. Therefore, it can be considered a safe and effective treatment for long and diffused de novo coronary lesions in the routine clinical practice.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
REC: Interventional Cardiology (English Ed.), Vol 4, Iss 1, Pp 27-32 (2022)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a00686769f1efb54e3b25095e6f5d2f6