薬剤溶出ステントは予後を改善する

エストロゲンレベルは肺がん患者の予後に影響することが示された 
ISAR-CABG:Drug-eluting stents lead to improved outcomes in saphenous vein graft lesions
伏在静脈グラフト病変に植え込んだ薬剤溶出ステント(DES)とベアメタルステント(BMS)を比較した最大規模の無作為多施設トライアルの結果、死亡、心筋梗塞、および血行再建術再施行の合計の発現率がDESにおいて低いことが示されたと第60回American College of Cardiology学会で発表された。研究者らは過去に冠動脈バイパス(CABG)手術を施行された患者610人を組み入れた。対象患者は全員がその後に伏在静脈グラフトに1つ以上の病変を発現し、スタディにおいて血管形成術施行時にDES(303人)またはBMS(307人)のいずれかを植え込まれる群に無作為に割り付けられた。1年後の主要な心有害事象はBMS群と比較しDES群において35%少なかった。つまり、一次エンドポイントを発現したのは DES群において16.5%であったのに対しBMS群においては22.1%であった(p=0.028)。DES群におけるイベント発現率低下は、主に標的病変に対する再血行再建術施行率がDES群において7.2%であったのに対しBMS群で 12.9%と、DES群において有意に低かった(p=0.020)ためであった。
Full Text

In the largest randomized, multicenter trial to compare drug-eluting stents (DES) and bare-metal stents (BMS) placed in saphenous vein graft lesions, researchers found that DES led to a lower combined rate of death, heart attack, and repeat revascularization, according to research presented at the American College of Cardiology's 60th Annual Scientific Session.

While saphenous vein grafts (SVGs) have been used extensively in coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery, these conduits develop atherosclerotic disease that results in vessel narrowing or closure in a high percentage of patients. Conducting a second CABG surgery to fix the graft is a possibility but can result in higher mortality and morbidity rates than the first operation. Performing angioplasty with a stent is an alternative to repeat CABG surgery; research is still being conducted to optimize this procedure.

"DES have proven superior to BMS in all coronary artery lesion subsets examined, but their performance has been insufficiently evaluated in SVG lesions," said Julinda Mehilli, M.D., director of clinical research and data coordinating in the Intracoronary Stenting and Antithrombosis Research (ISAR) Center at the German Heart Center Munich, Germany. "The only two very small randomized trials comparing DES with BMS in SVG lesions provided conflicting results. Thus, the aim of the ISAR-CABG trial was to investigate this question in a larger population sufficiently powered to provide information on clinical endpoints."

For the study, German researchers enrolled 610 patients who had previously undergone CABG surgery. All study patients had subsequently developed at least one lesion in their saphenous vein graft and were randomized to receive either a DES (n = 303) or a BMS (n = 307) in the study angioplasty procedure.

The study's primary endpoint was a composite of major adverse cardiac events [death, heart attack, and target-lesion revascularization (TLR)] at the one-year follow-up point. The secondary endpoints were the individual rates of death, myocardial infarction, ARC- definite stent thrombosis (ARC - Academic Research Consortium), and the need for TLR over one year.

The researchers found that the incidence of major adverse cardiac events was reduced by 35 percent in the DES cohort compared to the BMS group. Specifically, 16.5 percent of patients in the DES group experienced the primary endpoint compared with 22.1 percent of patients in the BMS group (hazard ratio [HR] 0.65; 95 percent confidence interval [CI] 0.45 ? 0.96; p = 0.028). The reduction in the DES group was primarily due to a significantly lower rate of TLR, which occurred in 7.2 percent of patients in the DES group and in 12.9 percent of patients in the BMS group (hazard ratio [HR] 0.52; 95 percent confidence interval [CI] 0.30 - 0.90; p = 0.020).

The research team found no significant differences in the individual rates of death or heart attack. Additionally, only one patient in the DES cohort experienced ARC-definite stent thrombosis. None of the patients in the BMS group experienced this outcome.

"Saphenous vein graft lesions remain a challenging disease subset for angioplasty. The ISAR-CABG trial, however, demonstrates that DES can safely be used to reduce adverse events in this high-risk subset of patients," Mehilli said.

The study was funded by the German Heart Center Munich and by Cordis. Mehilli had no disclosures to report.