(Circulation. 1997;96:2997-3005.)
© 1997 American Heart Association, Inc.
Articles |
From the Centro Cuore Columbus, Milan, Italy (R.A., C.D., B.R., A.C.); the Center for Cardiology Othmarschen, Hamburg, Germany (T.R., M.S., D.G.M., J.S.); and the University of California, Irvine (J.M.T.).
Correspondence to Antonio Colombo, MD, Centro Cuore Columbus, Via M. Buonarroti 48, 20145 Milan, Italy. E-mail columbus{at}micronet.it
| Abstract |
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Methods and Results Lesions of patients who had a 6-month angiographic follow-up study were eligible for matching. From 445 consecutive lesions treated by Palmaz-Schatz (P-S) stenting guided by IVUS (IVUS group) in Milan, 173 lesions were individually matched with 173 of 476 consecutive lesions treated by P-S stenting directed by angiography (Angio group) in Hamburg. Lesions were selected by a computerized program according to baseline clinical, angiographic, and procedural variables. Immediate and 6-month angiographic results were retrospectively compared, distinguishing an "early phase" from a "late phase." This distinction was based on the more aggressive dilation strategy with larger balloons and more demanding IVUS criteria for optimal stent expansion used in Milan in the early phase. In both phases, a larger minimum lumen diameter (MLD) immediately after stenting and after 6 months was achieved in the IVUS group than in the Angio group. In the early phase, the dichotomous restenosis rate was lower in the IVUS group than in the Angio group (9.2% versus 22.3%; P=.04). In the late phase, there was no difference in restenosis between the groups (22.7% versus 23.7%; P=1.0).
Conclusions In matched lesions treated with high-pressure stenting, IVUS guidance achieved a larger MLD than angiographic guidance. However, in the IVUS group, the restenosis rate was lower only in the early phase, when balloons larger than currently used were selected to maximize the stent lumen area.
Key Words: stents coronary disease ultrasonics angiography restenosis
| Introduction |
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| Methods |
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Matching Process
Matching was based on principles derived from the Thoraxcenter
group (Rotterdam, Netherlands)13 : (1) the angiographic
dimensions of matched lesions are assumed to be "identical"; (2)
the observed differences between the two identical lesions must be
within the range of reproducibility of the quantitative angiographic
analysis system.
Of the 445 lesions in the IVUS group, 173 were matched successfully with 173 of the 476 lesions in the Angio group. Matching was performed by a computerized program written in dBASE language that iteratively scanned the two databases chronologically and selected for each lesion in the Milan database the first lesion encountered in the Hamburg database that satisfied the selection criteria. The stented lesions were individually matched according to the following clinical, angiographic, and procedural selection variables: (1) sex, (2) history of diabetes, (3) previous PTCA at the same site, (4) vessel treated, (5) reference diameter ±0.3 mm, (6) baseline MLD ±0.1 mm, and (7) number ±0.5 of stents deployed (the PS104 stent and the disarticulated 7-mm PS153 stent were counted as half stents). Lesion length was not entered into the matching model.
Stent Implantation Procedure
In Milan, patients received aspirin 325 mg before stent
deployment and did not receive dextran or dipyridamole
before, during, or after the stent procedure. In Hamburg, patients
received aspirin 100 mg before the procedure and in addition received
intravenous low-molecular-weight dextran (dextran 40, given
at a dose of 100 mL/h for 2 hours before stenting and at a dose of 50
mL/h during and after the procedure, for a total volume of 1 L). A
bolus of 10 000 U heparin was given after sheath insertion, with a
repeat bolus of 5000 U given as needed to maintain the
activated clotting time >250 seconds in Milan or hourly in the
event of a prolonged procedure in Hamburg. Only P-S tubular slotted
stents (Johnson & Johnson Interventional Systems) were implanted in the
patients who entered this study: the standard 15-mm PS153 stent with a
central linear articulation, a disarticulated 7-mm PS153 stent, a 14-mm
PS154 stent, a 10-mm PS104 stent, an 18-mm PS204 stent with multiple
spiral bridges, a 10-mm biliary stent, and a 20-mm renal stent. For
calculating the number of stents per lesion, the short stents
(<10 mm) were counted as half stents. Biliary stents were counted
as one stent each. All other stents were counted as one stent.
Indications for stenting and their definitions were as previously
reported.4
Angiography-Guided Stenting in Milan and Hamburg
In Milan, the approach to angiography-guided stenting evolved as
experience progressed. Until September 1993, after deployment of all
stents, most angiography-guided postdilations were performed with
minimally compliant balloons, usually 9 mm long,
0.5 mm
larger than the reference lumen diameter, and inflated at moderate to
high pressure (8 to 20 atm). In this "early phase," the
angiographic evidence of a step up into the stented area and a step
down into the distal unstented segment was considered the end
point.2 Subsequently, when the IVUS criterion for optimal
stent expansion was altered ("late phase"), the approach to
angiography-guided stenting was modified: most postdilations were
performed with noncompliant balloons, more closely approximating the
size of the angiographic vessel diameter by visual estimate, and
inflated at high pressure (
14 atm up to 20 atm). In this phase, a
final angiographic result with <10% residual DS by visual estimate
was considered acceptable. In Hamburg, stent implantation strategy did
not change over time: postdilations were performed with noncompliant
balloons, closely sized to the angiographic vessel diameter by visual
estimate, and inflated at high pressure (
14 atm up to 21 atm). A
final angiographic result with <15% residual DS by visual estimate
was considered acceptable.
IVUS-Guided Stenting
In Milan, after an acceptable angiographic result was achieved,
IVUS was performed.
IVUS Equipment and Measurement
Imaging was performed with a 3.9F monorail system with a 25-MHz
transducer-tipped catheter (Interpret Catheter, InterTherapy/CVIS) or a
2.9F or 3.2F monorail system with a 30-MHz transducer-tipped catheter
(ScimedBoston Scientific Co). Validation of quantitative measurements
and pathological correlation with ultrasound measurements have been
reported.14 15 Interobserver and intraobserver
reproducibility of MLD and lumen CSA measurements have been reported
previously.4 16 Images were obtained with a manual or an
automated pullback system. Data were stored on 0.5-in Super VHS
videotape. Measurement sites were as previously
reported.2 4 The initial IVUS was the first ultrasound
examination performed after the initial angiographic success was
achieved. The final IVUS was the last IVUS evaluation, which documented
that the criteria for optimal stent expansion were achieved. Further
balloon dilatations or stent implantations performed after the initial
IVUS imaging were called IVUS-guided stent optimization.
IVUS Criteria for Optimal Stent Expansion
The first criterion was a qualitative evaluation of the
achievement of complete stent apposition to the vessel wall. The second
criterion was based on a quantitative evaluation of stent expansion.
Between March 1993 and September 1993 (early phase of the Milan
experience), the target for defining IVUS success was the achievement
of a stent lumen CSA of 60% of the average of the proximal and distal
vessel CSAs (measured at the media). This target criterion was
initially chosen to accommodate compensatory dilation that occurs with
early atheroma deposition, as observed in both pathological
and IVUS investigations even in angiographically normal reference
sites.14 17 18 In this phase, IVUS-guided stent
optimization was performed with minimally compliant balloons, usually
9 mm long, sized close to the IVUS average distal vessel
(media-to-media) diameter. These balloons were oversized to the
angiographic vessel diameter by visual estimate and were inflated at
moderate to high pressure. As previously reported,4 in
September 1993 the IVUS criterion for optimal stent expansion was
rapidly altered (late phase): the goal was to achieve a stent lumen CSA
equal to or greater than the distal reference lumen CSA. In this phase,
IVUS-guided stent optimization was generally performed with
noncompliant balloons inflated at high pressure. The balloons were
selected with a calculated nominal CSA 25% to 30% larger than distal
lumen CSA, based on the observation that the ratio of the final stent
CSA to the calculated nominal balloon CSA was 0.75 to 0.80 in the early
phase. The rapid change in the final balloon-to-artery ratio over time
in Milan, reflecting the change in IVUS-guided balloon selection
compared with Hamburg (angiography-guided), is shown in Fig 1
. The third IVUS criterion for optimal
stent expansion was that the nonstented adjacent inflow and outflow
segments should not reveal evidence of a significant lesion, defined as
plaque area >60% of the total vessel lumen.
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Angiographic Analysis
Both in Milan and in Hamburg, coronary angiograms were
analyzed by experienced technicians not involved in the
stenting procedure. Angiographic measurements of baseline, final, and
follow-up angiograms were performed in a single matched view (working
projection) at end diastole. The lesions were measured
with a digital electronic caliper (Brown and Sharp) from an optically
magnified image. The guiding catheter was used as the scaling device
for calibration. Previous studies have shown that digital calipers
correlate closely with computer-assisted methods, with a low
interobserver and intraobserver variability.19 20 The
diameters of the proximal and distal lumen reference segments were
averaged to obtain a mean reference diameter. MLD and % DS were
measured in the baseline, posttreatment, and follow-up angiograms.
Lesion length was measured on the baseline angiogram as the distance
between the proximal and distal shoulders of the lesion, detected as
the point at which the lumen becomes compromised by 50%. Lesions were
characterized according to the modified American College of
Cardiology/American Heart Association
score.21 Thrombus was defined as a filling defect seen in
multiple projections surrounded by contrast in the absence of
calcification.
Postprocedure Medication Protocol
After a successful result was achieved, no further heparin was
administered, and sheaths were removed in 4 to 6 hours. When procedures
were performed in the evening, in Milan, heparin was infused overnight
and the sheaths were removed the following morning, whereas in Hamburg,
the sheaths were removed within 4 to 6 hours. In Milan, 155 patients
(98%) were treated either with a combination of ticlopidine 250 mg BID
for 1 month and long-term aspirin 325 mg/d or long-term aspirin
alone 325 mg/d; only 3 patients (2%) were treated with
anticoagulation. In Hamburg, 151 patients (98%) were treated with a
combination of ticlopidine 250 mg BID for 3 months and long-term
aspirin 100 mg/d, and only 3 patients (2%) were treated with
anticoagulation.
Events and Follow-up
Stent thrombosis, MI (Q-wave MI or nonQ-wave MI), CABG, repeat
percutaneous intervention, or vascular complications
were considered major clinical events. Stent thrombosis, MI (Q-wave MI
or nonQ-wave MI), CABG, and vascular complications were defined as
previously reported.4 Repeat percutaneous
intervention was defined as the need for repeat PTCA involving the site
of the previously treated lesion within the first 6 months (±60 days)
after the initial revascularization. The indication
for a second intervention or CABG had to be substantiated by symptoms
or by laboratory evidence of myocardial ischemia. After a
successful procedure, patients were generally discharged from the
hospital within 1 to 2 days. Follow-up angiography was performed at 6
months unless early restudy was indicated by symptoms, after a mean
interval of 5.21 months in Milan and 5.23 months in Hamburg.
Restenosis
The primary end point of this study was the incidence of
restenosis defined in a dichotomous manner as a DS
50% at
follow-up angiography. The analysis included assessment of the
MLD and %DS immediately after stenting and at follow-up and their
cumulative distributions. Finally, according to a continuous geometric
model of restenosis proposed by Kuntz et al,11 12
seven derived indexes were examined: (1) acute gain=MLD
(poststenting)-MLD (preprocedure), (2) relative gain=acute
gain÷reference diameter before stenting, (3) late loss=MLD
(poststenting)-MLD (at follow-up), (4) relative loss=late
loss÷reference diameter before stenting, (5) net gain=acute gain-late
loss, (6) net gain index=net gain÷reference diameter before stenting,
and (7) loss index=late loss÷acute gain.
Statistical Analysis
Data were expressed as mean±SD (for normally distributed
variables), median with a range of values (for other continuous
variables), and percentage (for categorical variables). The
Kolmogorov-Smirnov test was used to test the departure of the
distribution of continuous variables from normality. Comparison of
continuous variables between the groups was performed with the
unpaired Student's t test (two-tailed) for normally
distributed data or the Mann-Whitney U test for other
continuous data. Comparisons of categorical variables were made by
2 and Fisher exact tests as appropriate.
Differences were considered statistically significant at a value of
P<.05.
| Results |
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Clinical Events
As shown in Table 4
, no stent
thrombosis occurred in either group. Moreover, the percentages of
patients who had MI and CABG during hospitalization and after discharge
were not statistically different between the groups. The percentage of
patients who needed a repeat percutaneous intervention
during follow-up was lower in the IVUS group than in the Angio group
(5.1% versus 11.7%; P=.05). However, the percentage of
patients who needed a repeat revascularization
(CABG+PTCA) was not significantly different between the groups (7%
versus 11.7%; P=.17).
|
Angiographic Analysis
Table 5
summarizes the quantitative
angiographic results of the matched lesions in the IVUS and Angio
groups during the early phase and the late phase. Reference vessel
diameter, MLD, and %DS immediately before stenting were similar in the
IVUS and Angio groups, indicating that the matching process was
adequate.
|
As illustrated in Fig 2
, IVUS-guided
stent deployment produced a significantly greater acute gain than
angiography-guided stenting in both the early phase and the late phase.
A similar late loss of 1.0 to 1.1 mm was observed at 6-month
follow-up angiography in the two groups in both phases. This resulted
in a higher net gain and a lower loss index in the IVUS group than in
the Angio group, with a statistically significant difference in the
early phase, which translated into a lower dichotomous
restenosis rate (9.2% versus 22.3%; P=.04). In the
late phase, there was no difference in restenosis between the
groups (22.7% versus 23.7%; P=1.0). Furthermore, in the
early phase, the balloons used to optimize stent expansion were larger
in the IVUS group than in the Angio group, with a higher
balloon-to-artery ratio (Fig 1
). In the late phase, although the size
of the final balloon was greater in the IVUS group than in the Angio
group, the balloon-to-artery ratio was not different between the
groups. In addition, in the early phase, the maximal balloon inflation
pressure was lower in the IVUS group than in the Angio group. Finally,
lesions were slightly longer in the IVUS group than in the Angio group.
However, the calculated total length of the stented lesion was not
different between the groups.
|
Early Phase Versus Late Phase in Milan and Hamburg
In the IVUS group, larger final balloons were selected, with a
higher balloon-to-artery ratio, and inflated at a lower maximal
inflation pressure in the early phase than in the late phase. This
resulted in a greater acute gain and net gain, which translated into a
lower restenosis rate in the early phase. In the Angio group,
no significant differences in the quantitative angiographic results
were observed between the early phase and the late phase, and there was
no difference in the observed restenosis rate between the two
phases.
IVUS Analysis
Comparisons of quantitative IVUS results between the early phase
and late phase of the Milan experience are presented in Table 6
. There were no differences in the
measurements at the proximal reference site between the two groups of
lesions. At the distal reference site, the vessel CSA and vessel
diameters were significantly larger in the lesions treated during the
early phase, with a trend toward a greater percentage of plaque area.
This resulted in a greater calculated average vessel CSA and vessel
diameters at the stent site in the lesions treated during the early
phase. Furthermore, after the initial IVUS evaluation, a higher
percentage of lesions required further therapy to achieve an adequate
IVUS result in the early phase than in the late phase (83% versus
44%; P<.001), and a greater increase in the stent CSA was
noted after optimization (51±36% versus 28±35%; P=.002).
During the early phase, the balloons selected for final stent expansion
were exactly sized to the average of the distal minor and major vessel
diameters and to the distal vessel CSA, whereas in the late phase, they
were slightly undersized (ratio of balloon diameter/IVUS average distal
vessel diameter, 1.00±0.12 versus 0.95±0.14, P=.005;
balloon CSA/IVUS distal vessel CSA, 1.00±0.25 versus 0.89±0.26,
P=.007). Finally, the ratio of the final stent CSA to the
calculated nominal balloon CSA was slightly lower during the early
phase (0.78±0.11 versus 0.82±0.16; P=.03).
|
| Discussion |
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Restenosis
In the early phase, the aggressive balloon dilation strategy used
in the IVUS group produced a significantly greater postprocedure MLD
than in the Angio group (Fig 2A
), which resulted in a significantly
lower angiographic dichotomous restenosis rate (9.2% versus
22.3%; P=.04). In the late phase, although the
postprocedure MLD was greater in the IVUS group than in the Angio
group, as displayed in Fig 2B
, the difference was slight and did not
translate into a lower restenosis rate (22.7% versus 23.7%;
P=1.0). Our findings confirm the importance of the immediate
result in determining the late result, as reported by Kuntz et
al,11 12 but deviate from the model of restenosis
proposed by these authors in that the higher acute gain observed in the
IVUS group versus the Angio group was not associated with a greater
late loss, which was similar (1.0 to 1.1 mm) in the two groups in
both phases. Coronary artery stenting prevents negative
remodeling; thus, late loss within a stent results almost exclusively
from intimal hyperplasia, as recently demonstrated by a serial IVUS
study.22 The present study demonstrates that in the
IVUS group, the more aggressive balloon dilation strategy used in the
early phase, which possibly increased vessel wall injury, was not
accompanied by a greater hyperplastic response. A possible mechanism
for this result could be that after stenting, the extent of subsequent
intimal hyperplasia is more dependent on plaque mass before
intervention, as we have recently reported,23 with the
preintervention plaque area measured by IVUS, than on the greater final
strain (overstretch) applied to the vessel wall by a larger balloon
correctly sized to the media-to-media vessel dimensions.
Late loss (and restenosis) has been reported to be influenced
by some clinical, angiographic, and procedural factors.24
The effects of these factors in our study were well balanced in the two
groups; in particular, the higher percentages of patients with
hypercholesterolemia and three-vessel disease
in the Angio group were counterbalanced by the lower percentage of
patients currently smoking, by the slightly shorter lesion length, and
by the lower percentage of calcific lesions. Furthermore, the
differences in the type and number of stents per lesion were
negligible. In fact, in Milan, two disarticulated 7-mm-long PS153
stents, instead of one standard 15-mm-long PS153 stent, were implanted
in 53% of the lesions in which only disarticulated PS153 stents were
implanted. This result is also inferable by the fact that, although the
percentage of half stents implanted was higher in the IVUS than in the
Angio group (46.2% versus 28.1%), the percentage of lesions in which
only a half stent was implanted was lower in the IVUS group (6.9%
versus 20.2%). Finally, although the mean number of stents per lesion
was higher in the IVUS than in the Angio group (1.17 versus 1.05), the
majority of patients had one stent per lesion, and the calculated
stented lesion length was equal in both groups in both phases (Table 5
). Other established risk factors for restenosis (diabetes,
unstable angina, and chronic total occlusion) were not different
between the groups.
After stenting, the inhibition of intimal hyperplasia would be the ideal therapy to reduce restenosis. The results of the present study indicate that restenosis can also be reduced mechanically by trying to achieve as large an MLD as possible and that IVUS is better than angiography guidance to achieve this goal, because angiography may underestimate the extent of atherosclerotic disease in coronary arteries that undergo compensatory enlargement, thus leading to underestimation of the size of the final balloon that can be selected to safely expand the stent and maximize the stent lumen CSA. The use of IVUS guidance allows one to better oversize the balloon (by angiography) and to obtain a larger final MLD that would not be achieved by inflating a smaller balloon at higher pressure.
IVUS-Guided Stent Optimization
In the early phase, IVUS-guided stent optimization was performed
with larger balloons than in the late phase, and with this strategy, a
greater increase in the stent CSA was obtained after stent optimization
(51±36% versus 28±35%; P=.002). Although there was no
difference in the angiographic reference vessel diameter, the vessel
CSA measured at the distal reference site by IVUS was significantly
smaller in the lesions treated during the late phase as a result of a
lower percentage of plaque area. However, this finding cannot by itself
explain the lower increase in CSA achieved in the late phase, which
probably would have been greater if the final balloons selected had
been larger and sized to the IVUS average distal vessel diameter.
IVUS Guidance Permits the Use of Balloons Traditionally
Considered Oversized
In the IVUS group, in the 76 matched lesions treated in the early
phase, there were no more complications or vessel ruptures, compared
with the 97 lesions treated in the late phase and with the lesions in
the Angio group, suggesting that in the presence of
arterial remodeling identified by IVUS, target lesions can
safely accommodate larger balloons. This hypothesis is supported by the
favorable results of the CLOUT trial,25 in which oversized
balloons were safely used in 73% of the lesions in which IVUS
identified the presence of arterial remodeling and the
absence of heavy calcification. This technique increased the
balloon-to-artery ratio from 1.12:1 after standard PTCA to 1.30:1 after
IVUS-guided PTCA and resulted in significantly improved luminal
dimensions without increasing the rate of major dissections.
Furthermore, as previously reported,2 vessel rupture
during the early phase of the Milan experience occurred only when the
operator exceeded the true distal vessel size measured at the media by
IVUS. In the whole Milan database, 6 patients sustained vessel rupture
in the early phase. In 4 of these 6 patients in whom IVUS was
performed, the balloons used for stent optimization were oversized to
the average distal vessel diameter by IVUS, and in 2, the event was
probably caused by bursting of the balloon. Moreover, in the 2 patients
with vessel rupture in whom stenting was guided only by angiography, a
correctly sized balloon burst in 1 patient, whereas in the other, the
balloon was oversized (balloon-to-artery ratio, 1.44). The use of
balloons larger than the IVUS average distal vessel diameter was due to
the inability to obtain an adequate lumen inside the stent with smaller
balloons. At present, this goal could possibly be reached by use of
prestent rotational atherectomy in hard, fibrocalcific lesions, in
which we can expect difficulties in achieving an optimal final stent
expansion.
Comparison With Other Studies (Late Phase)
The results of the late phase of the Milan experience (Table 6
) are comparable to those obtained in
the CRUISE substudy,8 in which 49% of the IVUS-guided
lesions required stent optimization, with an increase in stent CSA from
6.59 to 7.28 mm2. In the AVID trial,9 in
the ultrasound group, 33% of patients required additional therapy to
fulfill ultrasound criteria, in which an increase in luminal diameter
of 0.59 mm and an increase in CSA of 32% were noted. Our data are
also consistent with those of another report,10 in
which 53% of the stents required additional balloon inflations after
IVUS evaluation. In that study, additional balloons with an increase in
balloon size of 0.20 mm were used in 44% of cases and produced an
increase in mean stent lumen CSA from 85% to 103% of the reference
lumen CSA. In Milan, in the late phase, balloons were selected with a
calculated nominal CSA 25% to 30% larger than distal lumen CSA. This
strategy is similar to that recently reported by another
group,26 in which the achievement of an optimal IVUS
result (>90% of the average reference lumen CSA) was most frequently
reached when the ratio of the calculated balloon CSA to the reference
lumen CSA was >1.2.
Intraprocedural Complications and Postprocedure Clinical
Events
The true complication and clinical event rates of the two
different methodologies cannot be correctly analyzed from the
data presented in this study, in which a clear selection bias
was introduced, including only the patients who had a follow-up
angiographic study. However, the results observed in this selected
population are likely to reflect the results of the overall population.
The patients were selected by a computerized procedure from a larger
patient cohort, which can be considered representative
of the initial cohorts. In fact, in both centers after stenting, all
patients were scheduled for a coronary angiography at 6 months,
and a similar percentage of patients (61.4% of the Milan population
versus 71.9% of the Hamburg population) had an angiographic follow-up.
The rest did not undergo a repeat angiographic study, mostly because
they were asymptomatic and refused the study.
Study Limitations
There are several limitations in the present study. It is a
nonrandomized, observational retrospective study, limited to a subset
of patients who had a follow-up angiographic study. The quantitative
coronary angiographic analysis was not computerized.
The balloon-to-artery ratio was calculated from the nominal balloon
size and not the actual size of the inflated balloon. Although matching
for angiographic, procedural, and clinical variables can be used to
compensate for some of the limitations of nonrandomized trials, not all
bias of lesion selection can be excluded. However, this study
represents the first comparison of the 6-month
restenosis rate using IVUS to guide stent implantation compared
with angiography from two European centers with extensive experience in
placing coronary artery stents.
Conclusions and Future Directions
In the present study on matched lesions treated with
high-pressure P-S stenting, MLD immediately after treatment and at
6-month follow-up was larger when stent implantation was directed by
IVUS as opposed to angiography. In addition, in the IVUS group, the
6-month restenosis rate was lower only in the early phase, when
balloons sized to the IVUS average distal vessel (media-to-media)
diameter (angiographically oversized) were used to maximize the stent
lumen CSA. This early technique was modified because of an increase in
complications, possibly related to the use of oversized balloons not
only by angiography but also by IVUS, that is, larger than the IVUS
distal vessel diameters. When balloons were subsequently selected to
achieve the currently used IVUS criteria for optimal stent expansion
(late phase), the 6-month restenosis rate was not statistically
different from that of the Angio group. These results suggest that a
significant reduction in restenosis may be safely realized if
the size of the balloon selected to optimize the stent lumen CSA is
equal to the IVUS average distal vessel diameter. Furthermore, it is
important that the operator avoids choosing a larger balloon even when
unable to obtain an adequate stent lumen CSA, because this strategy
increases the risk of vessel rupture, especially in hard, fibrocalcific
lesions. It may be that in these types of lesions, plaque pretreatment
with rotational atherectomy is a better strategy than trying to
forcefully overcome the lesion with a bigger balloon inflated at high
pressure.
| Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms |
|---|
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| Acknowledgments |
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Received February 6, 1997; revision received May 29, 1997; accepted June 6, 1997.
| References |
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H. Mudra, C. di Mario, P. de Jaegere, H. R. Figulla, C. Macaya, R. Zahn, B. Wennerblom, W. Rutsch, V. Voudris, E. Regar, et al. Randomized Comparison of Coronary Stent Implantation Under Ultrasound or Angiographic Guidance to Reduce Stent Restenosis (OPTICUS Study) Circulation, September 18, 2001; 104(12): 1343 - 1349. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A L MCLEOD, D B NORTHRIDGE, and N G UREN Ultrasound guided stenting Heart, June 1, 2001; 85(6): 605 - 606. [Full Text] |
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D Fukuda, T Kawarabayashi, A Tanaka, Y Nishibori, H Taguchi, Y Nishida, K Shimada, and J Yoshikawa Lesion characteristics of acute myocardial infarction: an investigation with intravascular ultrasound Heart, April 1, 2001; 85(4): 402 - 406. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
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K. Hibi, A. Takagi, X. Zhang, T.-J. Teo, H. N. Bonneau, P. G. Yock, and P. J. Fitzgerald Feasibility of a Novel Blood Noise Reduction Algorithm to Enhance Reproducibility of Ultra-High-Frequency Intravascular Ultrasound Images Circulation, October 3, 2000; 102(14): 1657 - 1663. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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P. J. Fitzgerald, A. Oshima, M. Hayase, J. A. Metz, S. R. Bailey, D. S. Baim, M. W. Cleman, E. Deutsch, D. J. Diver, M. B. Leon, et al. Final Results of the Can Routine Ultrasound Influence Stent Expansion (CRUISE) Study Circulation, August 1, 2000; 102(5): 523 - 530. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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R. Albiero, T. Nishida, M. Adamian, A. Amato, M. Vaghetti, N. Corvaja, C. Di Mario, and A. Colombo Edge Restenosis After Implantation of High Activity 32P Radioactive {beta}-Emitting Stents Circulation, May 30, 2000; 101(21): 2454 - 2457. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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R. Albiero, M. Adamian, N. Kobayashi, A. Amato, M. Vaghetti, C. Di Mario, and A. Colombo Short- and Intermediate-Term Results of 32P Radioactive {beta}-Emitting Stent Implantation in Patients With Coronary Artery Disease : The Milan Dose-Response Study Circulation, January 4, 2000; 101(1): 18 - 26. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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P. J. de Feyter, P. Kay, C. Disco, and P. W. Serruys Reference Chart Derived From Post-Stent-Implantation Intravascular Ultrasound Predictors of 6-Month Expected Restenosis on Quantitative Coronary Angiography Circulation, October 26, 1999; 100(17): 1777 - 1783. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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