Bioresorbable scaffolds: rationale, current status, challenges, and future
European Heart Journal 35(12): 765-776
Article 2013 English
Authors
JI
Javaid Iqbal
YO
Yoshinobu Onuma
JO
John A. Ormiston
Abstract
1 min read
Current generation of drug-eluting stents has significantly improved the outcomes of percutaneous coronary intervention by substantially reducing in-stent restenosis and stent thrombosis. However, a potential limitation of these stents is the permanent presence of a metallic foreign body within the artery, which may cause vascular inflammation, restenosis, thrombosis, and neoatherosclerosis. The permanent stents also indefinitely impair the physiological vasomotor function of the vessel and future potential of grafting the stented segment. Bioresorbable scaffolds (BRSs) have the potential to overcome these limitations as they provide temporary scaffolding and then disappear, liberating the treated vessel from its cage and restoring pulsatility, cyclical strain, physiological shear stress, and mechanotransduction. While a number of BRSs are under development, two devices with substantial clinical data have already received a Conformité Européenne marking. This review article presents the current status of these devices and evaluates the challenges that need to be overcome before BRSs can become the workhorse device in coronary intervention.
Carlos M. Campos, Yao‐Jun Zhang, Christos V. Bourantas, Takashi Muramatsu, Héctor M. García‐García, Pedro A. Lemos, Javaid Iqbal, Yoshinobu Onuma, Patrick W. Serruys
Takashi Muramatsu, Yoshinobu Onuma, Yao‐Jun Zhang, Christos V. Bourantas, Alexander Kharlamov, Roberto Diletti, Vasim Farooq, Bill D. Gogas, Scot Garg, Héctor M. García‐García, Yukio Ozaki, Patrick W. Serruys
Carlos M. Campos, Takashi Muramatsu, Javaid Iqbal, Yao‐Jun Zhang, Yoshinobu Onuma, Héctor M. García‐García, Michael Haude, Pedro A. Lemos, Boris Warnack, Patrick W. Serruys
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