(Circulation. 2000;101:18.)
© 2000 American Heart Association, Inc.
Clinical Investigation and Reports |
From the EMO Centro Cuore Columbus, Milan, Italy.
Correspondence to Remo Albiero, MD, EMO Centro Cuore Columbus, Via M. Buonarroti 48, 20145 Milan, Italy. E-mail albire{at}micronet.it
| Abstract |
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Methods and ResultsA total of 122 32P radioactive ß-emitting stents (initially the Palmaz-Schatz and later the BX Isostent) with an activity level of 0.75 to 3.0 µCi (group 1), 3.0 to 6.0 µCi (group 2), and 6.0 to 12.0 µCi (group 3) were implanted in 91 lesions in 82 patients. There were no procedural events. At 6-month follow-up, no deaths had occurred, and only 1 patient had stent thrombosis. Pure intrastent binary restenosis was 16% in group 1, 3% in group 2, and 0% in group 3. However, intralesion restenosis was 52% in group 1, 41% in group 2, and 50% in group 3.
ConclusionsThe use of 32P radioactive ß-emitting stents in patients with CAD is feasible. At 6-month follow-up, intrastent neointimal hyperplasia was reduced in a dose-related manner. However, in the 3 groups, intralesion restenosis was high because of a high late lumen loss in the reference segments at the stent edges, possibly as a result of a low activity level of radiation at the edges of the stent combined with an aggressive approach to stenting. We called this "edge effect" the "candy wrapper."
Key Words: radioisotopes stents restenosis coronary disease
| Introduction |
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Catheter-based endovascular delivery of both ß- and
-radiation have been shown to reduce neointimal
formation in the animal model5 6 7 8 and in patients with
coronary artery disease (CAD).9 10 Animal studies
in rabbit iliac arteries11 and in porcine coronary
arteries12 have shown that implantation of a
ß-particleemitting radioactive stent has a similar efficacy in the
inhibition of subsequent intrastent neointimal cell
proliferation.
The safety and feasibility of 32P radioactive ß-emitting stent implantation in patients with symptomatic de novo or restenotic native coronary lesions has been evaluated in the low-dose IRIS 1A (0.5 to 1.0 µCi, n=32 patients)13 and IRIS 1B (0.75 to 1.5 µCi, n=25 patients) trials.14 15 16 These pilot clinical trials have found that 32P radioactive Palmaz-Schatz stents can be safely implanted with a high short-term success rate. However, coronary angiography, performed in 52 of 57 patients (92.9%) at 6-month follow-up, showed a binary intralesion restenosis, both within the stent and at the edges, in 21 of 52 patients (40.4%), not different from or perhaps higher than that of currently available nonradioactive stents.
The purpose of this single-center, nonrandomized, dose-response study was to evaluate the safety and the efficacy for prevention of restenosis at 4- to 6-month follow-up of 32P radioactive stent implantation with 3 increasingly higher activity levels: 0.75 to 3.0 µCi, 3.0 to 6.0 µCi, and 6.0 to 12.0 µCi, in patients with CAD.
| Methods |
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Inclusion criteria for enrollment were the presence of a de novo or
restenotic lesion of a major, native coronary artery
with a reference artery size visually estimated to be appropriate for
the available stent diameters (3.0 to 3.5 mm). The lesion had to
be treated with 1 or 2 tandem 15-mm stents with a target lesion length
visually estimated as
28 mm.
The trial was approved by the Columbus Hospital Ethical Committee. Written informed consent to the procedure and to return for repeat angiography and IVUS at 4 or 6 months was obtained from each patient.
Description of the Fischell Isostent
The Fischell radioactive stent used in this study initially
consisted of a Palmaz-Schatz (PS 153) stent and later of a BX stainless
steel stent (Isostent, Inc) mounted on a compliant balloon covered with
an integral sheet (delivery system), and with a lucite radiation
shield attached to the distal end of the stent delivery system, which
prevents operator exposure to the radiation. The BX stent, designed by
computer-aided technique, provides flexibility, without a central
articulation, with a homogeneous dosimetry along the length
of the stent and has been demonstrated to favorably influence the
vascular response in normal porcine coronary arteries compared
with the Palmaz-Schatz stent.17 The radioisotope
32P, a pure ß-particle emitter with a half-life
of 14.3 days and maximum energy of 1.71 MeV, was embedded beneath the
surface of the stent. Activity levels of 0.75 to 12 µCi deliver a
total dose to the tissue at 0.5 mm from the stent surface of
8
to 140 Gy over a 28-day period. The total dose to tissue is higher than
with catheter-based radiation therapies, which range from 8 to 50 Gy at
2 mm from the source. However, this dose is delivered at a lower
dose rate over a much greater length of time. The ß-particle
32P also has a short distance of tissue
penetration: at 2 to 3 mm from the stent, the activity drops off
significantly and is almost negligible. In addition, 1 of the potential
problems associated with ß-radiation is shielding by previously
implanted stents, which may reduce the tissue exposure
further.18
Stenting Procedure and Medical Regimen
Patients received aspirin 325 mg daily continued long-term plus
ticlopidine 250 mg twice daily continued for 3 months after the
procedure. In this group of patients, there were no adverse
consequences of ticlopidine therapy. The technique used for
implantation of a radioactive stent is nearly identical to that
required for optimal placement of a nonradioactive stent. After lesion
predilatation, usually with a 20-mm-long balloon, the delivery system
was advanced to the target lesion site, and the 15-mm-long stent was
delivered at the recommended pressure of 8 to 10 atm (mean 9 atm, range
5 to 12 atm). The stent was premounted on a 20-mm-long compliant
balloon so that 2.5 mm of the length of the delivery balloon
emerged beyond each stent edge. Further stent expansion with a larger
and usually shorter balloon at higher pressure was used to achieve an
optimal angiographic result. After high-pressure inflation, IVUS was
performed. Further expansion was indicated if the stent was not fully
apposed to the vessel wall or the cross-sectional area (CSA) was not
appropriately large compared with the adjacent reference segments.
Angiographic Analysis
Quantitative coronary angiography (QCA) was performed at
our institution with an automated computer-based system by experienced
angiographers not involved in the stenting procedure as previously
described.19 Lesions were characterized according to the
American College of Cardiology/American Heart
Association classification.20 Image calibration was
performed with a contrast-filled catheter. The external diameter of the
catheter was used as the calibration standard. Reference diameter,
minimum lumen diameter (MLD), percent diameter stenosis (%DS),
and lesion length were measured for each lesion from coronary
end-diastolic matched frames in the single worst view
obtained on initial, final, and follow-up angiograms by use of a
contour-detection minimum-cost algorithm (QCA-CMS version 3.0, MEDIS).
Lesion length was measured from the first narrowing of the vessel. In
addition, after stenting and at follow-up, MLD was measured in 3
different segments of the lesion: at the stent level and in the 10
mm proximal and the 10 mm distal to the stent edges. Acute lumen
gain, late lumen loss, and loss index were defined as previously
reported.21
IVUS Equipment and Measurement
IVUS imaging was performed by use of the
Cardiovascular Imaging System (CVIS) with a 3.2F
catheter. The ultrasound catheter was advanced
10 mm distal to
the distal stent edge, and an automatic pullback at 0.5 mm/s was
performed. Data were stored on 0.5-in high-resolution Super VHS
videotape for offline analysis. Quantitative IVUS
analysis was performed to measure stent/external elastic
membrane (EEM) CSA, lumen CSA, and plaque CSA and in 15 segments inside
the stent and, when feasible, in 10 reference segments proximal and
distal to the stent. The image cross sections analyzed were
1 mm apart. Intrastent plaque volume was calculated at follow-up
according to Simpsons rule and was therefore the product of the
15 plaque CSAs and the distance of 1 mm separating them. For each
of the 15 segments inside the stent and for the reference segments, the
following calculations were made: remodeling=postintervention (PI)
stent or EEM CSA-follow-up (FU) stent or EEM CSA; late lumen loss=PI
lumen CSA-FU lumen CSA; and tissue growth=FU plaque CSA-PI plaque
CSA. Validation of quantitative measurements and pathological
correlation with ultrasound measurements has been
reported.22 23 Interobserver and intraobserver
reproducibility of MLD and lumen CSA measurements has been reported
previously.24 25
Follow-Up
All patients were requested to return for clinical,
angiographic, and IVUS follow-up at 4 to 6 months after the procedure
(the first 10 patients in group 2 and group 3 were requested to return
at 4 months, and the remainder at 6 months).
Definitions
At the follow-up angiogram, pure intrastent restenosis
was defined as
50% luminal reduction occurring only inside the stent
with absence of restenosis in the proximal and distal reference
segments. Intralesion restenosis was defined as
50% luminal
reduction occurring inside the stent or at the proximal or distal
reference segments.
Death, myocardial infarction (MI) (Q-wave or nonQ-wave MI), and stent thrombosis (which were considered major adverse clinical events), CABG, and repeat percutaneous coronary intervention were defined as previously reported.21 25
Statistical Analysis
Statistical analysis was performed with the
StatView statistical package (StatView 5, SAS Institute). Continuous
normally distributed data were expressed as mean±SD. Comparisons of
continuous variables between groups were performed by ANOVA.
Subgroup comparisons of categorical variables were performed by the
Fisher exact test or the
2 test. Regression
analysis was used to assess the correlation among plaque volume
and stent radioactivity level. Differences were considered
statistically significant at P<0.05.
| Results |
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Quantitative Angiographic Analysis
Table 3
summarizes the baseline and postprocedure
quantitative angiographic results. Reference vessel diameter, MLD, and
%DS immediately before stenting were similar in the 3 groups. Final
%DS was significantly higher in group 3 than in the other 2 groups
because of the above-mentioned less aggressive stent implantation
strategy in the late phase of the study. However, there was no
difference in final MLD and acute gain between the groups.
Clinical Events
As shown in Table 4
, at
6-month follow-up there had been no deaths, and only 1 patient in group
3 had a subacute stent thrombosis with a Q-wave MI 1 week after he
had stopped both aspirin and ticlopidine 3 months after stenting. A
repeat percutaneous coronary intervention was
performed in all the lesions with angiographic restenosis even
if the patients were asymptomatic and had no objective
evidence of ischemia. Three patients underwent elective CABG
during the follow-up period.
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Follow-Up Quantitative Angiographic Measurements
Table 5
shows the angiographic
results of the 74 of 91 lesions (81% of lesions) of patients who
underwent angiographic follow-up after 4 to 6 months. Reference vessel
diameter, MLD, %DS, acute gain, late loss, and loss index were similar
in the 3 groups. A longer lesion length was observed in group 3, a
result similar to that observed before stenting. Intralesion
restenosis rate was 52% in group 1, 41% in group 2, and 50%
in group 3 (average 47%). As shown in Table 5
and Figure 1
, the increase in the stent activity
level resulted in a progressive reduction of pure intrastent
restenosis: 16% in group 1, 3% in group 2, and 0% in the 6-
to 12-µCi group. However, restenosis in 1 or both edges of
the stent or at the edges plus in the first 1 to 4 mm inside the
stent was present in 31% to 39% of the lesions. Moreover, in 4
lesions, a total occlusion was observed: 3 occlusions were not
associated with clinical events, and only 1 of these 4 occlusions was
associated with a clinical syndrome of stent thrombosis.
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Figure 2
shows the late loss calculated
by QCA in the proximal reference segment, inside the stent (from edge
to edge), and in the distal reference segment. A similar late loss of
0.8 mm was detected in the proximal reference segment in the 3
groups. Intrastent late loss was lower, although not significantly,
inside the stent in group 2 (0.58 mm) and group 3 (0.56 mm)
than in group 1 (0.84 mm). Note that intrastent QCA
analysis was performed from edge to edge of the stent and that
intrastent late loss in the proximal and distal part was higher than in
the central part of the stent, as shown in Figure 4
by IVUS
analysis. Finally, late loss in the distal reference segment
was significantly higher (0.98 mm) in group 3 than in group 1 and
group 2 (0.44 and 0.52 mm, respectively).
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IVUS Quantitative Measurements
The final quantitative IVUS measurements of the 75 lesions in
which IVUS was performed immediately after stenting are
presented in Table 6
: there were
no significant differences between the 3 groups. In the 36 lesions in
which a single 15-mm-long radioactive 32P
ß-particleemitting stent was implanted, a direct correlation was
observed at follow-up between the decrease in intrastent intimal
hyperplasia, measured as plaque volume, and the increase in the initial
stent radioactivity level, as shown in Figure 3
. By regression statistical
analysis, we tried to fit the points of this correlation. These
points were best fitted (r=0.64, P=0.0007) by a
polynomial model of third order, which graphically looks sigmoidal and
by which a prediction can be made that with an initial stent
radioactivity level >11 µCi, there should be an almost complete
inhibition of intimal hyperplasia inside the stent. Figure 4
shows late lumen loss, remodeling, and
tissue growth, obtained by serial IVUS analysis and measured in
slices 1 mm apart inside the stent and in the proximal and distal
reference segments, in the 13 lesions with restenosis at
follow-up, in which a single 15-mm radioactive stent with an initial
activity level
3 µCi was implanted. Late lumen loss in the proximal
and distal reference segments was higher than inside the stent and was
mainly a result of tissue growth (intimal hyperplasia) in the first 2
to 3 mm and of remodeling (shrinkage of the vessel) in the last 4
to 10 mm from the edges of the stent. Inside the stent, no
remodeling was observed, and late lumen loss was only a result of
tissue growth, which was lower in the central 5 mm than in the
5 mm adjacent to the margins of the stent.
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Comparison of Lesions With and Without Edge Restenosis
Edge restenosis was documented in 31 of 74 lesions of
patients with angiographic follow-up. As shown in Table 7
, by univariate
analysis the final balloon-to-artery ratio and the ratio of the
maximum diameter of the longest balloon (used to predilate, deploy, or
postdilate the stent) to the reference vessel diameter were
significantly higher in the edge restenosis group than in the
lesions without edge restenosis. In addition, the edge
restenosis group had a significant smaller reference lumen
diameter and a smaller final MLD by angiography and a smaller distal
and proximal lumen and vessel CSA by IVUS, with a nonsignificant lower
percent area stenosis at these sites. The initial stent
activity level, the number of stents per lesion, the maximum inflation
pressure, the delivery balloon pressure, and the lesion length were not
different between the 2 groups.
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| Discussion |
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Comparison With Ongoing Clinical Studies Using 32P
Radioactive Stents
The preliminary results from 2 small clinical studies started in
1997 in Heidelberg26 and Rotterdam27 using
32P radioactive Palmaz-Schatz or BX Isostents
with low activity levels (0.75 to 3.0 µCi) have shown that clinical
or angiographic restenosis was not lower than in contemporary
stent trials using nonradioactive stents or than observed in the 0.75-
to 3.0-µCi group in our study. At 6-month follow-up, the 11 patients
enrolled in Heidelberg had a clinically driven target vessel
revascularization rate of 36% (4 of 11 patients).
Restenosis was found at the articulation of the Palmaz-Schatz
stents and, at a lower rate, at the proximal and distal
edges.28
Inhibition of Intrastent Intimal Hyperplasia: Potential
Mechanisms
Whether the predominant mechanism by which radioactive stents
prevent neointimal hyperplasia is inhibition of smooth
muscle cell proliferation and migration or radiation-induced
apoptosis is still unclear. In our study, the inhibition of
neointimal proliferation in stents with activities >3
µCi could be, as proposed by Fischell et al,29 a result
of inhibition of the migration of smooth muscle cells and
myofibroblasts from the tunica media and adventitia into the
neointima as these cells pass through the "electron
fence" at the plane of the stent wires. In addition, it could be that
with higher activity levels, up to 12 µCi, there is a deeper effect
on the media and adventitia similar to that seen with catheter-based
radiation therapies, in which the cells are disabled before their
attempt to migrate. Finally, Hehrlein28 found that in the
early phase of vascular injury, up to 1 week after stent implantation,
the arterial media contained more apoptotic cells
when the stents were radioactive.
The Problem of Edge Restenosis
Our study is the first to report the result of
32P radioactive stent implantation with activity
levels between 3.0 and 12 µCi in patients with CAD. It demonstrates
an almost complete inhibition of intimal hyperplasia within the stent
with activities >3 µCi, but an increased late loss and
restenosis in the first 1 to 3 mm proximal and distal to
the stent edges compared with the results reported in the literature
with nonradioactive stents. The precise mechanism by which this
phenomenon occurs remains poorly understood. It could be that the
exaggerated proliferative response at the stent margins is the result
of a low dose of radiation at the stent edges, due to a sharp decline
of dose rate within millimeters from the stent margins,30
in combination with the balloon injury in the segments adjacent to the
stent when an aggressive stent implantation strategy with a high
balloon-to-artery ratio is used, as in our population with edge
restenosis. Previous studies with nonradioactive stents have
demonstrated that inside a 15-mm-long Palmaz-Schatz stent, late loss
was higher at the stent edges or at the central articulation than in
the body of the stent. The injury at the stent margins has been
advocated as 1 of the mechanisms of restenosis at these
sites.31 32
Predictors of Edge Restenosis
In a serial IVUS study by Hoffmann et al33 of
nonradioactive Palmaz-Schatz stents, the dominant periprocedural
predictor of stent margin restenosis was the plaque burden of
the contiguous reference segments. The same authors,4 by
serial IVUS analysis of sections sampled at a point closer to
the stent edge, showed that late loss was due to a similar amount of
remodeling and cellular proliferation.
The results of these studies differ from those of our study, in which we did not find that plaque burden of the contiguous reference segments was a predictor of edge restenosis. Instead, we found that the only predictors of edge restenosis were a high balloon-to-artery ratio and a small vessel size. In addition, unlike previous studies, late loss at the stent margins was mainly due to tissue growth (intimal hyperplasia) in the first 2 to 3 mm and to remodeling (shrinkage of the vessel) in the last 4 to 10 mm from the edges of the stent.
Edge Restenosis: Insights From the Animal Models
We are aware that artery models of restenosis in animal
models are not really equivalent to data from a clinical investigation.
However, the results from animal studies can give insights into the
interpretation of the results obtained in the clinical setting.
Animal studies in rabbit iliac arteries11 and in porcine coronary arteries12 have shown the efficacy of a ß-particleemitting radioactive stent in the inhibition of subsequent intrastent neointimal cell proliferation. However, in some circumstances, radioactive stents can stimulate rather than inhibit intimal hyperplasia, as demonstrated by Carter at al12 in the porcine model of restenosis, in which the 1.0-µCi stents had a significantly greater neointimal formation and luminal narrowing than the control nonradioactive stents. Other animal studies28 34 have analyzed the effect of radiation delivery by a stent on the extracellular matrix deposition. In the rabbit model, Hehrlein28 demonstrated by immunocytochemical analysis an increase in the expression of collagen type I after radioactive stent implantation, whereas production of collagen type III and IV was unchanged. We do not have data regarding the composition of the plaque in the lesions with edge restenosis. However, we observed that the plaques at the sites of restenosis had a low echo density by IVUS and were easily treated with balloon inflations at low pressure, suggesting that these plaques probably consisted mostly of extracellular matrix. Finally, a study by Carter et al35 in cholesterol-fed pigs demonstrated stimulation of intimal hyperplasia when radioactive stents were implanted 1 month after angioplasty, possibly because the plaque was still in the healing phase. These results support our hypothesis that the mechanism of edge restenosis is the consequence of a combination of 2 factors: (1) a low dose of radiation at the stent margins and (2) the fact that an aggressive approach to stenting, as indicated by a high balloon-to-artery ratio, creates an injury in the reference segments, and these segments are possibly still in the healing phase after 1 month.
Study Limitations
Angiographic follow-up was obtained in 70 of 82 patients (85%).
However, at 6-month clinical follow-up in the 12 patients without
angiographic follow-up, 2 underwent bypass surgery shortly after
stenting because of a multivessel CAD and persistent angina, 2 had
atypical chest pain, and 8 were asymptomatic. IVUS imaging
was not performed in all the lesions because of technical problems
(after stenting), the inability of the operator to cross the lesions
with the IVUS catheter, or the decision of the operator not to cross a
tight restenotic lesion for the patients safety (at
follow-up).
Future Directions
We are continuing this dose-finding study (12 to 20 µCi) to
determine whether a further increase in the overall stent radioactivity
level combined with a different approach to radioactive stent
implantation will solve the problem of edge restenosis. The
stent implantation technique we are currently using is more
conservative, selecting a small balloon to predilate the lesion and
deploying the stent on a balloon with a diameter that closely matches
the angiographic reference diameter inflated at the nominal pressure of
8 atm. In addition, postdilation is done with a shorter balloon whose
ends do not extend outside the stent struts, so as not to mechanically
damage the proximal and distal reference segments, with a 1:1
balloon-to-artery ratio.
Conclusions
Implantation of 32P radioactive ß-emitting
stents in patients with CAD is feasible. At 6-month follow-up, there
had been no deaths, and only 1 patient had stent thrombosis with a
Q-wave MI associated with discontinuation of both aspirin and
ticlopidine. Radioactive ß-emitting stents with an initial activity
level between 0.75 and 12.0 µCi reduce intrastent
neointimal hyperplasia in a dose-related manner. However,
intralesion restenosis was higher because of a high late lumen
loss in the reference segments at the stent edges, possibly resulting
from a low activity level of radiation at the edges of the stent in
combination with an aggressive approach to stenting, as indicated by a
high balloon-to-artery ratio.
Received April 9, 1999; revision received July 22, 1999; accepted July 29, 1999.
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