Publikation

Relation of stent design and stent surface material to subsequent in-stent intimal hyperplasia in coronary arteries determined by intravascular ultrasound

Wissenschaftlicher Artikel/Review - 15.06.2002

Bereiche
PubMed

Zitation
Hoffmann R, vom Dahl J, Mudra H, Beythien C, Gross M, Grube E, Bozoglu T, Haager P, Mintz G, Hanrath P. Relation of stent design and stent surface material to subsequent in-stent intimal hyperplasia in coronary arteries determined by intravascular ultrasound. The American journal of cardiology 2002; 89:1360-4.
Art
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel/Review (Englisch)
Zeitschrift
The American journal of cardiology 2002; 89
Veröffentlichungsdatum
15.06.2002
ISSN (Druck)
0002-9149
Seiten
1360-4
Kurzbeschreibung/Zielsetzung

A variety of different stent designs and coatings have become available. This study sought to determine the impact of stent design and gold-coating of stents on intimal hyperplasia (IH) in human atherosclerotic coronary arteries in relation to known predictors of restenosis. Angiographic and intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) studies were performed at 6-month follow-up on 311 native coronary lesions of 311 patients treated with 99 Multi-Link stents, 74 InFlow steel stents, 73 InFlow gold-coated stents, 41 Palmaz-Schatz stents, 12 NIR steel stents, and 12 gold-coated NIR Royal stents. Lumen and stent cross-sectional area (CSA) were measured at 1-mm axial increments. Mean IH CSA (stent CSA - lumen CSA) and mean IH thickness were calculated and averaged over the total stent length. IVUS demonstrated different levels of IH for the 6 stents. Mean IH thickness ranged from 0.20 +/- 0.13 mm for Multi-Link stents to 0.43 +/- 0.14 mm for InFlow goal-coated stents (p <0.001). Multivariate analysis proved non-Multi-Link stent design (odds ratio 3.45, 95% confidence intervals 1.13 to 11.11, p <0.034) and gold coating (odds ratio 3.78, 95% confidence intervals 1.88 to 7.54, p <0.001) to be the only independent predictors of IH thickness >0.3 mm. In conclusion, stent design and surface material have an important impact on the IH response to stents implanted in human coronary arteries. However, the differences in IH thickness between the analyzed stents were relatively small compared with the absolute lumen dimensions.