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ImpaCt of an optimal Implantation strategy on Absorb long-term Outcomes: the CIAO Registry

Authors :
Damiano Regazzoli
Ferdinando Varbella
Giuseppe Caramanno
Alberto Ranieri De Caterina
Flavio Ribichini
Alessandro Durante
Bruno Loi
Elisa Nicolini
Attilio Varricchio
Leonardo Spedicato
A Rossi
Raffaela Fetiveau
Alfonso Ielasi
Maria Carmen De Angelis
Bernardo Cortese
Andrea Cuculo
Sergio Berti
Arnaldo Poli
Mario Iannaccone
Maurizio Tespili
Antonio Colombo
Gianfranco De Candia
Massimo Leoncini
Antonio Centola
Claudio Rapetto
Tommaso Piva
Raimondo Pirisi
Marco De Carlo
Giorgio Quadri
Luca Testa
Gaetano Di Palma
Anna Sonia Petronio
Enrico Favaretto
Mario Bollati
Enrico Cerrato
Roberto Garbo
Salvatore Geraci
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Aim To compare the long-term outcomes of patients implanted with Absorb bioresorbable scaffold (BRS) with optimal versus suboptimal technique. Methods and results All patients who received an Absorb between March 2012 and January 2016 were selected from 19 Italian centers databases to assess the impact of an optimal implantation technique (CIAO criteria) on long-term device-oriented composite end-point (DOCE) - including cardiac death (CD), target-vessel myocardial infarction (TV-MI) and ischemia-driven target lesion revascularization (ID-TLR) - on its single components and on scaffold thrombosis (ScT). CIAO criteria consist of predilation (balloon/vessel ratio 1:1), correct sizing (BRS/proximal reference vessel diameter -RVD- ratio 0.8–1.2) and high-pressure postdilation with non-compliant (NC) balloon (≥20 atm for balloon/BRS ratio 1:1 or ≥16 atm for a 0.25–0.5 mm oversized balloon). Among the 1.434 patients analyzed, 464 (32.4%) fulfilled all CIAO criteria for every BRS implanted (CIAO 3 group), while 970 (67.6%) did not in at least one of the received BRS (CIAO 0-1-2 group). At 31.0 (interquartile range -IQR- 24.8–38.5) months follow-up, CIAO criteria did not impact on DOCE (8.2% vs. 8.0%, p = 0.92), ID-TLR (6.9% vs. 7.1%, p = 0.72) or ScT (1.9% vs. 1.8%, p = 0.80) in the overall population. At multivariate analysis overall BRS length ( p = 0.001), severely calcified lesions (p = 0.03) and absence of CIAO criteria (CIAO 0, p = 0.005) were independent predictors of DOCE in long-term follow-up. Conclusion Our data suggest that strict application of an optimal Absorb implantation technique doesn't improve long-term DOCE or ScT but may mitigate the worse outcome of patients with calcific lesions.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f9d646813d2d5f042dba478100eb8b64