1. 1-year results after PCI with the COMBO stent in all-comers in Asia versus Europe: Geographical insights from the COMBO collaboration.
- Author
-
Chandrasekhar J, Kalkman DN, Aquino MB, Sartori S, Hájek P, Atzev B, Hudec M, Ong TK, Mates M, Borisov B, Warda HM, den Heijer P, Wojcik J, Iñiguez A, Coufal Z, Khashaba A, Schee A, Munawar M, Gerber RT, Yan BP, Tejedor P, Kala P, Liew HB, Lee M, Baber U, Vogel B, Dangas GD, Colombo A, de Winter RJ, and Mehran R
- Subjects
- Asia epidemiology, Europe epidemiology, Female, Geography, Humans, Prosthesis Design, Risk Factors, Stents, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Coronary Artery Disease surgery, Drug-Eluting Stents, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: The COMBO drug-eluting stent combines sirolimus-elution from a biodegradable polymer with an anti-CD34+ antibody coating for early endothelialization., Objective: We investigated for geographical differences in outcomes after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with the COMBO stent among Asians and Europeans., Methods: The COMBO Collaboration is a pooled patient-level analysis of the MASCOT and REMEDEE registries of all-comers undergoing attempted COMBO stent PCI. The primary outcome was 1-year target lesion failure (TLF), composite of cardiac death, target vessel myocardial infarction (TV-MI) and target lesion revascularization (TLR)., Results: This study included 604 Asians (17.9%) and 2775 Europeans (82.1%). Asians were younger and included fewer females, with a higher prevalence of diabetes mellitus but lower prevalence of other comorbidities than Europeans. Asians had a higher prevalence of ACC/AHA C type lesions and received longer stent lengths. More Asians than Europeans were discharged on clopidogrel (86.5% vs 62.8%) rather than potent P2Y
12 inhibitors. One-year TLF occurred in 4.0% Asians and 4.1% of Europeans, p = 0.93. The incidence of cardiac death was higher in Asians (2.8% vs. 1.3%, p = 0.007) with similar rates of TV-MI (1.5% vs. 1.2%, p = 0.54) and definite stent thrombosis (0.3% vs. 0.5%, p = 0.84) and lower incidence of TLR than Europeans (1.0% vs. 2.5%, p = 0.025). After adjustment, differences for cardiac death and TLR were no longer significant., Conclusions: In the COMBO collaboration, although 1-year TLF was similar regardless of geography, Asians experienced higher rates of cardiac death and lower TLR than Europeans, while incidence of TV-MI and ST was similar in both regions. Adjusted differences did not reach statistical significance. CLINICALTRIAL., Gov Identifier-Numbers: NCT01874002 (REMEDEE Registry), NCT02183454 (MASCOT registry)., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest Dr. Mehran has received institutional research grant support from Eli Lilly/Daiichi-Sankyo Inc., AstraZeneca, The Medicines Company, Bristol-Myers Squibb, OrbusNeich, Beth Israel Deaconess, and Bayer; has served as a consultant for Boston Scientific, Cardiovascular Systems Inc., Medscape, and Shanghai BraccoSine Pharmaceutical; has received institutional advisory board funding from Bristol-Myers Squibb; has received institutional funding from Claret Medical; owns equity in Claret Medical and Elixir Medical; has served on the executive committee for Janssen Pharmaceuticals and Osprey Medical; has served on the data safety monitoring board for Watermark Research Partners; and has a spouse who has served as a consultant for Abiomed and the Medicines Company. Dr. Kala has served as a consultant for Boston Scientific; has received research support from AstraZeneca, Novartis, Zoll; has served on advisory board for Astra Zeneca, Bayer, Medtronic and Boston Scientific. All other authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF