Incidence and potential mechanism of resolved, persistent and newly acquired malapposition three days after implantation of self-expanding or balloon-expandable stents in a STEMI population: insights from optical coherence tomography in the APPOSITION II study.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_212D0EC2816A
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Incidence and potential mechanism of resolved, persistent and newly acquired malapposition three days after implantation of self-expanding or balloon-expandable stents in a STEMI population: insights from optical coherence tomography in the APPOSITION II study.
Journal
Eurointervention
Author(s)
Nakatani S., Onuma Y., Ishibashi Y., Karanasos A., Regar E., Garcia-Garcia H.M., Tamburino C., Fajadet J., Vrolix M., Witzenbichler B., Eeckhout E., Spaulding C., Reczuch K., La Manna A., Spaargaren R., Capodanno D., Van Langenhove G., Verheye S., Serruys P.W., van Geuns R.J.
ISSN
1969-6213 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1774-024X
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2015
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
11
Number
8
Pages
885-894
Language
english
Abstract
AIMS: The aim of the current study was to investigate the frequency and mechanisms of sequential incomplete stent apposition (ISA) changes such as persistent, resolved or newly acquired ISA during the first three days after primary PCI (pPCI) in a matched segment-level analysis, with the comparison between self-expanding and balloon-expandable stents assessed by optical coherence tomography (OCT).
METHODS AND RESULTS: The current analysis is a substudy of the APPOSITION II study that included 69 patients (self-expanding: 35, balloon-expandable: 34) using serial optical coherence tomography (OCT) post procedure and three days after pPCI. In order to evaluate a temporal change in ISA, stented regions were segmented using fiduciary landmarks. In a total of 228 corresponding segments, persistent and newly acquired ISA were less frequently observed in self-expanding stents than in balloon-expandable stents (11.5% vs. 33.9%, p<0.01, 2.7% vs. 14.8%, p<0.01, respectively). New appearances of ISA were caused by tissue resorption, vasorelaxation and "early" recoil in balloon-expandable stents, and only tissue resorption in self-expanding stents.
CONCLUSIONS: Three days after pPCI, tissue resorption and vasorelaxation were biological factors associated with new appearance of ISA while "early" recoil of balloon-expandable stents was a mechanical factor. Both persistent ISA and newly acquired ISA occurred less frequently in self-expanding stents, resulting in a low number of ISA segments compared to balloon-expandable stents. Clinical Trials Registration Information: Randomised Comparison Between the STENTYS Self-expanding Coronary Stent and a Balloon-expandable Stent in Acute Myocardial Infarction (APPOSITION II). ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01008085
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
05/04/2016 17:21
Last modification date
20/08/2019 12:57
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