1. In vitro thrombogenicity of drug-eluting and bare metal stents.
- Author
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Palmerini, Tullio, Barozzi, Chiara, Tomasi, Luciana, Riva, Diego Della, Marengo, Mario, Cicoria, Gianfranco, Bruno, Antonio G., Bacchi-Reggiani, Maria-Letizia, Naldi, Marina, Bartolini, Manuela, Fanti, Stefano, Galiè, Nazzareno, and Stone, Gregg W.
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METALS , *FLUOROPOLYMERS , *ALBUMINS , *PERFUSION - Abstract
We sought to investigate the thrombogenicity of different DES and BMS in an in vitro system of stent perfusion. The experimental model consisted of a peristaltic pump connected to 4 parallel silicone tubes in which different stents were deployed. Blood was drawn from healthy volunteers and the amount of stent surfaced-induced thrombus deposition was determined using 125I-fibrinogen. Compared to Resolute, Biomatrix and Vision, Xience was associated with the lowest amount of stent surface-induced thrombus formation, with a significant difference compared to Vision (125I-fibrinogen median value deposition [IQ range]: 50 ng [25–98] versus 560 ng [320–1520], respectively, p < 0.05), but not to other DES. In the second set of experiments Fluoropolymer-coated BMS not eluting drug was associated with a significant 3-fold reduction in 125I-fibrinogen deposition (245 ng [80–300]) compared to Vision (625 ng [320–760], p < 0.05), but a 7-fold increase compared to Xience (35 ng [20–60], p < 0.05). Finally Xience was associated with a significantly greater absorption of albumin compared to BMS. In an in vitro system of stent perfusion, Xience was associated with the lowest amount of stent surface-induced thrombus formation compared with Resolute, Biomatrix and Vision, with a noted synergistic effect between the fluoropolymer and the drug. • The thrombogenicity of different stents was studied in an in vitro model. • Fluoropolymer coated drug-eluting stents are less thrombogenic than bare metal stents. • Fluoropolymers have thromboresistant properties. • Fluoropolymer-coated stents absorb albumin more avidly than bare metal stents. • Fluoropolymers and everolimus have a synergistic antithrombotic action. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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