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Impact of final kissing balloon and of imaging on patients treated on unprotected left main coronary artery with thin-strut stents (from the RAIN-CARDIOGROUP VII study)

Authors :
Giuseppe Venuti
Fabrizio D'Ascenzo
Filippo Figini
Bernardo Cortese
Claudio Moretti
Christian Templin
Michele Autelli
Maurizio D'Amico
Wojciech Wańha
Carloalberto Biolè
Carlo Di Mario
Giacomo Boccuzzi
Zenon Huczek
Diego Gallo
Enrico Cerrato
Thomas F. Lüscher
Francesco Romeo
Giorgio Quadri
Iván J. Núñez-Gil
Pierluigi Omedè
Ovidio De Filippo
Radosław Parma
Nicola Ryan
Satoru Mitomo
Umberto Morbiducci
Gérard Helft
Federico Conrotto
Andrea Rognoni
Javier Escaned
Sebastiano Gili
Alaide Chieffo
Grzegorz Smolka
Leonardo De Luca
Ferdinando Varbella
Andrea Montabone
Davide Capodanno
Saverio Muscoli
Cristina Rolfo
Daniela Trabattoni
Alessio Mattesini
Imad Sheiban
Mario Iannaccone
Wojciech Wojakowski
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier Inc., 2019.

Abstract

Few data are available about the impact on outcomes of procedural strategies for percutaneous coronary intervention with thin-struts stents on unprotected left main (ULM): 792 patients with an ULM stenosis treated with percutaneous coronary intervention with thin-strut stents were enrolled in the present multicenter registry. Target lesion revascularization (TLR) was the primary end point. MACE (a composite of all-cause death, myocardial infarction, TLR, and stent thrombosis) and its single components, along with target vessel revascularization were the secondary end points. Subgroup analyses were performed according to complex versus noncomplex bifurcation lesions. After 16 months, 5.5% of patients experienced a TLR. At multivariate analysis, provisional stenting (odds ratio [OR] 0.46: 0.85 to 0.23, p = 0.006), use of imaging (OR 0.45: 0.23 to 0.98, p = 0.003) and final kissing balloon (FKB) (OR 0.41: 0.83 to 0.21, p = 0.001) reduced risk of TLR. FKB reduced risk of overall TLR only for 2 stents-strategy (6.2% vs 32.4%, p

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....97830af9121cbc152a56fdf60305211e