American Journal of Cardiology
Volume 98, Issue 7 , Pages 918-922, 1 October 2006

Clinical and Angiographic Outcomes After Placement of Multiple Overlapping Drug-Eluting Stents in Diffuse Coronary Lesions

Department of Medicine, Asan Medical Center, University of Ulsan, Seoul, Korea.

Received 27 January 2006; received in revised form 25 April 2006; accepted 1 May 2006. published online 10 August 2006.

Multiple overlapping drug-eluting stents have increasingly been used to treat diffuse coronary disease, but the safety and efficacy of this approach remains unclear. We assayed the clinical and angiographic outcomes after placement of “full metal jacket” stents (stented length ≥60 mm) in 347 consecutive patients (352 lesions) with very long de novo coronary lesions. Mean age was 61.0 ± 10.1 years, and the mean stented length was 71.9 ± 13.7 mm. The procedural success rate was 97.7%. Major in-hospital complications (1 death, 2 cases of acute stent thrombosis) occurred in 3 patients (0.7%). Angiographic follow-up data, obtained for 230 (234 lesions) of the 328 eligible patients (70.1%), showed that the restenosis rate was 13.7%. Multivariate analysis found that the reference artery diameter (odds ratio 0.05, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.01 to 0.33, p = 0.002) and the use of Taxus stents (odds ratio 2.88, 95% CI 1.03 to 8.04, p = 0.043) were significant predictors of restenosis. During follow-up (16.6 ± 6.9 months), 9 deaths (6 cardiac and 3 noncardiac), 1 nonfatal myocardial infarction, and 13 target lesion revascularizations occurred. The cumulative probability of survival without major adverse cardiac events (cardiac death, Q-wave myocardial infarction, and target lesion revascularization) was 95.4 ± 1.1% and 91.4 ± 2.1% at 1 and 2 years, respectively. Left ventricular dysfunction (ejection fraction <45%) was the only predictor of stent thrombosis (hazard ratio 18.24, 95% CI 1.65 to 201.19, p = 0.018) and cardiac death/Q-wave myocardial infarction (hazard ratio 5.37, 95% CI 1.28 to 22.49, p = 0.021). In conclusion, full metal jacket drug-eluting stents may be a safe and effective method to treat diffuse coronary disease and may be a useful treatment option for complex long lesions.

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 This study was supported by grants from the CardioVascular Research Foundation, Asan Institute for Life Science (Grant 2006-217), and the Korea Health 21 R&D Project, Ministry of Health & Welfare, Korea (Grant 0412-CR02-0704-0001).

PII: S0002-9149(06)01179-9

doi:10.1016/j.amjcard.2006.05.011

American Journal of Cardiology
Volume 98, Issue 7 , Pages 918-922, 1 October 2006