医学
再狭窄
心脏病学
内科学
血管成形术
支架
冠状动脉疾病
人口
心肌梗塞
经皮冠状动脉介入治疗
血运重建
狭窄
外科
环境卫生
作者
Sylvia Otto,Víctor Alfonso Jiménez Díaz,Daniel Weilenmann,Florim Cuculi,Amin Ariff Nuruddin,Gregor Leibundgut,Fernándo Alfonso,Wan Azman Wan Ahmad,Stylianos A. Pyxaras,Harald Rittger,Philip Steen,Luise Gaede,Christian Schulze,Jochen Wöhrle,Mark Rosenberg,Matthias Waliszewski
标识
DOI:10.1186/s12872-023-03187-x
摘要
Abstract Background A decade ago, the iopromide-paclitaxel coated balloon (iPCB) was added to the cardiologist‘s toolbox to initially treat in-stent restenosis followed by the treatment of de novo coronary lesions. In the meantime, DES technologies have been substantially improved to address in-stent restenosis and thrombosis, and shortened anti-platelet therapy. Recently, sirolimus-coated balloon catheters (SCB) have emerged to provide an alternative drug to combat restenosis. Methods The objective of this study is to determine the safety and efficacy of a novel crystalline sirolimus-coated balloon (cSCB) technology in an unselective, international, large-scale patient population. Percutaneous coronary interventions of native stenosis, in-stent stenosis, and chronic total occlusions with the SCB in patients with stable coronary artery disease or acute coronary syndrome were included. The primary outcome variable is the target lesion failure (TLF) rate at 12 months, defined as the composite rate of target vessel myocardial infarction (TV-MI), cardiac death or ischemia-driven target lesion revascularization (TLR). The secondary outcome variables include TLF at 24 months, ischemia driven TLR at 12 and 24 months and all-cause death, cardiac death at 12 and 24 months. Discussion Since there is a wealth of patient-based all-comers data for iPCB available for this study, a propensity-score matched analysis is planned to compare cSCB and iPCB for the treatment of de novo and different types of ISR. In addition, pre-specified analyses in challenging lesion subsets such as chronic total occlusions will provide evidence whether the two balloon coating technologies differ in their clinical benefit for the patient. Trial registration number ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04470934.
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