Early and late coronary stent thrombosis of sirolimus-eluting and paclitaxel-eluting stents in routine clinical practice: data from a large two-institutional cohort study — Joost Daemen (2007) | RDL Network
Early and late coronary stent thrombosis of sirolimus-eluting and paclitaxel-eluting stents in routine clinical practice: data from a large two-institutional cohort study
The Lancet 369(9562): 667-678
Article 2007 English
Authors
JD
Joost Daemen
PW
Peter Wenaweser
KT
Keiichi Tsuchida
Abstract
1 min read
Background
Stent thrombosis is a safety concern associated with use of drug-eluting stents. Little is known about occurrence of stent thrombosis more than 1 year after implantation of such stents.
Methods
Between April, 2002, and Dec, 2005, 8146 patients underwent percutaneous coronary intervention with sirolimus-eluting stents (SES; n=3823) or paclitaxel-eluting stents (PES; n=4323) at two academic hospitals. We assessed data from this group to ascertain the incidence, time course, and correlates of stent thrombosis, and the differences between early (0–30 days) and late (>30 days) stent thrombosis and between SES and PES.
Findings
Angiographically documented stent thrombosis occurred in 152 patients (incidence density 1·3 per 100 person-years; cumulative incidence at 3 years 2·9%). Early stent thrombosis was noted in 91 (60%) patients, and late stent thrombosis in 61 (40%) patients. Late stent thrombosis occurred steadily at a constant rate of 0·6% per year up to 3 years after stent implantation. Incidence of early stent thrombosis was similar for SES (1·1%) and PES (1·3%), but late stent thrombosis was more frequent with PES (1·8%) than with SES (1·4%; p=0·031). At the time of stent thrombosis, dual antiplatelet therapy was being taken by 87% (early) and 23% (late) of patients (p<0·0001). Independent predictors of overall stent thrombosis were acute coronary syndrome at presentation (hazard ratio 2·28, 95% CI 1·29–4·03) and diabetes (2·03, 1·07–3·83).
Interpretation
Late stent thrombosis was encountered steadily with no evidence of diminution up to 3 years of follow-up. Early and late stent thrombosis were observed with SES and with PES. Acute coronary syndrome at presentation and diabetes were independent predictors of stent thrombosis.
Lorenz Räber, Michael Magro, Giulio Stefanini, Bindu Kalesan, Ron T. van Domburg, Yoshinobu Onuma, Peter Wenaweser, Joost Daemen, Bernhard Meier, Peter Jüni, Patrick W. Serruys, Stephan Windecker
Peter Wenaweser, Joost Daemen, Marcel Zwahlen, Ron van Domburg, Peter Jüni, Sophia Vaina, G Hellige, Keiichi Tsuchida, Cyrill Morger, Eric Boersma, Neville Kukreja, Bernhard Meier, Patrick W. Serruys, Stephan Windecker
Lorenz Räber, Sandro Baumgartner, Hector M. Garcia Garcia, Bindu Kalesan, Jörn Justiz, Thomas Pilgrim, Aris Moschovitis, Ahmed A. Khattab, Lutz Buellesfeld, P. Wenaweser, Bernhard Meier, Patrick W. Serruys, Peter Jüni, Stephan Windecker
Cihan Şimşek, Michael Magro, Eric Boersma, Yoshinobu Onuma, Sjoerd T. Nauta, Marcia P. Gaspersz, Willem J. van der Giessen, Ron T. van Domburg, Patrick W. Serruys
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.