9 research outputs found
Outcomes After Implantation of the TAXUS Paclitaxel-Eluting Stent in Saphenous Vein Graft Lesions Results From the ARRIVE (TAXUS Peri-Approval Registry: A Multicenter Safety Surveillance) Program
ObjectivesThe aim of this study was to examine the incidence of clinical events after implantation of the TAXUS Express (Boston Scientific Corporation, Natick, Massachusetts) paclitaxel-eluting stent in saphenous vein graft (SVG) lesions in an unselected patient population.BackgroundSaphenous vein grafts have 1-year occlusion rates of 12% to 20%, with >50% failure by 7 to 10 years. Many diseased SVGs are treated by percutaneous coronary intervention to avoid higher-risk reoperation, but bare-metal stents have 35% to 40% historical SVG restenosis rates by 18 months. Reported outcomes of drug-eluting stents in SVG lesions are limited and mainly retrospective.MethodsThe ARRIVE (TAXUS Peri-Approval Registry: A Multicenter Safety Surveillance) program compiled data on 7,492 patients receiving ≥1 TAXUS Express (Boston Scientific) stent, including 474 patients with SVG. All cardiac events were monitored with independent adjudication of end points. Patients enrolled at procedure start with no mandated inclusion/exclusion criteria.ResultsThe ARRIVE SVG patient 2-year follow-up was 96% complete (457 of 474). The SVG patients had significantly more baseline comorbidities/complex disease than simple-use patients (n = 2,698) undergoing native coronary intervention or other expanded-use patients (n = 4,320 without SVG patients). They had higher 2-year rates of mortality (10.9% vs. 4.2%, p < 0.001), myocardial infarction (5.3% vs. 2.2%, p < 0.001), and Academic Research Consortium definite/probable stent thrombosis (4.7% vs. 1.4%, p < 0.001) than the simple-use group. They also had higher 2-year adverse event rates, including significantly more mortality (10.9% vs. 7.5%, p = 0.008) than other expanded-use patients.ConclusionsThe ARRIVE SVG patients have significantly different baseline risk and higher clinical risk through 2 years than simple-use and other expanded-use patients. Nonetheless, compared with historical SVG revascularization rates, treatment with paclitaxel-eluting stent seems to offer a reasonable therapeutic option in this high-risk group. (TAXUS ARRIVE: TAXUS Peri-Approval Registry: A Multicenter Safety Surveillance Program; NCT00569491) and (TAXUS ARRIVE 2: A Multicenter Safety Surveillance Program; NCT00569751
Drug-eluting stent thrombosis in routine clinical practice: two-year outcomes and predictors from the TAXUS ARRIVE registries.
BACKGROUND: Stent thrombosis (ST) is an uncommon but serious complication of drug-eluting and bare metal stents. To assess drug-eluting stent ST in contemporary practice, we analyzed 2-year data from the 7492-patient ARRIVE registry.
METHODS AND RESULTS: Patients were enrolled at the initiation of percutaneous coronary intervention with no inclusion/exclusion criteria beyond use of the paclitaxel-eluting TAXUS stent. Two-year follow-up was 94% with independent adjudication of major cardiac events. A second, autonomous committee adjudicated Academic Research Consortium (ARC) definite/probable ST. Cumulative 2-year ARC-defined ST was 2.6% (1.0% early ST [\u3c30 \u3edays], 0.7% late ST [31 to 365 days], and 0.8% very late ST [\u3e1 year]). Simple-use (single-vessel and single-stent) cases had lower rates than expanded use (broader patient/lesion characteristics, 2-year cumulative: 1.4% versus 3.3%, P28 mm, lesion calcification) and late ST (vessel
CONCLUSIONS: The relative risks of early and late ST differ. Knowledge of ST risk for specific subgroups may guide revascularization options until the completion of randomized trials in these broad populations