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Drug-eluting stents versus bare-metal stents in saphenous vein grafts: a double-blind, randomised trial

Authors :
Emmanouil S Brilakis
Robert Edson
Deepak L Bhatt
Steven Goldman
David R Holmes
Sunil V Rao
Kendrick Shunk
Bavana V Rangan
Kreton Mavromatis
Kodangudi Ramanathan
Anthony A Bavry
Santiago Garcia
Faisal Latif
Ehrin Armstrong
Hani Jneid
Todd A Conner
Todd Wagner
Judit Karacsonyi
Lauren Uyeda
Beverly Ventura
Aaron Alsleben
Ying Lu
Mei-Chiung Shih
Subhash Banerjee
Bina Ahmed
D Michelle Ratliff
Mark Ricciardi
Mark Sheldon
Milton Icenogle
Richard Snider
Amer Ardati
Brahmajee Nallamothu
Claire Duvernoy
Daniel S Menees
Hitinder Gurm
Michael P Thomas
Paul Grossman
Kristine Owen
On Topaz
Gautam Kumar
Peter Block
David A Zidar
Hiram Bezerra
Jonathan Goldberg
Jose Ortiz
Joseph Jozic
Mohammed Osman
Noah Rosenthal
Sahil A Parikh
Tom A Lassar
Albert Chan
Arun Kumar
Kul Aggarwal
Tillmann Cyrus
Jerrold Grodin
Brack Hattler
Ivan Casserly
John Messenger
Michael Kim
R Kevin Rogers
Stephen Waldo
Thomas Tsai
Kenneth Morris
Mitchell Krucoff
Sunil Rao
Thomas J Povsic
William S Jones
Anthony Bavry
Calvin Choi
Ki Park
Jayson Liu, MD
Biswajit Kar
David Paniagua
Jeffrey Breall
Islam Bolad
Rita Mukerji
Roopa Subbarao
Ahmed Abdel-Latif
David C Booth
Khaled M Ziada
Lawrence Rajan
Abdul Hakeem
Barry F Uretsky
Mayank Agrawal
Rajesh Sachdeva
Zubair Ahmed
Jesse McGee
Rahman Shah
Alok Sharma
Edward McFalls
Rizwan Siddiqui
Selcuk Adabag
Stefan Bertog
Anand Irimpen
Drew Baldwin
Nidal Abi Rafeh
Owen Mogabgab
Patrice Delafontaine
Jeffrey Lorin
Steven Sedlis
Eliot Schechter
Mazen Abu-Fadel
Talla Rousan
Udho Thadani
Fady Malik
Jeffrey Zimmet
Tony Chou
Alexis Beatty
Kenneth Lehmann
Michael Stadius
Andrew Klein
Caroline Rowe
Megumi Taniuchi
Andrew J Klein
Michael Forsberg
Divya Kapoor
Elizabeth Juneman
Huu Tam Truong
Kapildeo Lotun
Ryan Tsuda
Sergio Thai
Hoang Thai
David Lu
Vasilios Papademetriou
David Faxon
Kevin Croce
Sammy Elmariah
Scott Kinlay
Source :
Lancet (London, England), vol 391, iss 10134
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2018.

Abstract

Summary Background Few studies have examined the efficacy of drug-eluting stents (DES) for reducing aortocoronary saphenous vein bypass graft (SVG) failure compared with bare-metal stents (BMS) in patients undergoing stenting of de-novo SVG lesions. We assessed the risks and benefits of the use of DES versus BMS in de-novo SVG lesions. Methods Patients were recruited to our double-blind, randomised controlled trial from 25 US Department of Veterans Affairs centres. Eligible participants were aged at least 18 years and had at least one significant de-novo SVG lesion (50–99% stenosis of a 2·25–4·5 mm diameter SVG) requiring percutaneous coronary intervention with intent to use embolic protection devices. Enrolled patients were randomly assigned, in a 1:1 ratio, by phone randomisation system to receive a DES or BMS. Randomisation was stratified by presence or absence of diabetes and number of target SVG lesions requiring percutaneous coronary intervention (one or two or more) within each participating site by use of an adaptive scheme intended to balance the two stent type groups on marginal totals for the stratification factors. Patients, referring physicians, study coordinators, and outcome assessors were masked to group allocation. The primary endpoint was the 12-month incidence of target vessel failure, defined as the composite of cardiac death, target vessel myocardial infarction, or target vessel revascularisation. The DIVA trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01121224. Findings Between Jan 1, 2012, and Dec 31, 2015, 599 patients were randomly assigned to the stent groups, and the data for 597 patients were used. The patients' mean age was 68·6 (SD 7·6) years, and 595 (>99%) patients were men. The two stent groups were similar for most baseline characteristics. At 12 months, the incidence of target vessel failure was 17% (51 of 292) in the DES group versus 19% (58 of 305) in the BMS group (adjusted hazard ratio 0·92, 95% CI 0·63–1·34, p=0·70). Between-group differences in the components of the primary endpoint, serious adverse events, or stent thrombosis were not significant. Enrolment was stopped before the revised target sample size of 762 patients was reached. Interpretation In patients undergoing stenting of de-novo SVG lesions, no significant differences in outcomes between those receiving DES and BMS during 12 months of follow-up were found. The study results have important economic implications in countries with high DES prices such as the USA, because they suggest that the lower-cost BMS can be used in SVG lesions without compromising either safety or efficacy. Funding US Department of Veterans Affairs Cooperative Studies Program.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Lancet (London, England), vol 391, iss 10134
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0e3ee527abb70573cfb908f310018b1b