Maintenance of long-term clinical benefit with sirolimus-eluting coronary stents: three-year results of the RAVEL trial

Jean Fajadet, Marie-Claude Morice, Christoph Bode, Paul Barragan, Patrick W Serruys, William Wijns, Constantino R Constantini, Jean-Léon Guermonprez, Hélène Eltchaninoff, Didier Blanchard, Antonio Bartorelli, Gert-Jan Laarman, MarcoAntonio Perin, J Eduardo Sousa, Gerhard Schuler, Ferenc Molnar, Giulio Guagliumi, Antonio Colombo, Ernesto Ban Hayashi, Egon Wülfert, Jean Fajadet, Marie-Claude Morice, Christoph Bode, Paul Barragan, Patrick W Serruys, William Wijns, Constantino R Constantini, Jean-Léon Guermonprez, Hélène Eltchaninoff, Didier Blanchard, Antonio Bartorelli, Gert-Jan Laarman, MarcoAntonio Perin, J Eduardo Sousa, Gerhard Schuler, Ferenc Molnar, Giulio Guagliumi, Antonio Colombo, Ernesto Ban Hayashi, Egon Wülfert

Abstract

Background: The use of sirolimus-eluting coronary stents has been associated with a nearly complete elimination of restenosis at 6 months and with a very low 1-year incidence of major adverse cardiac events (MACE). This analysis examined whether these beneficial effects persist over the longer term.

Methods and results: This multicenter trial randomly assigned 238 patients to revascularization of single, de novo, native coronary artery lesions with sirolimus-eluting versus conventional bare-metal stents. Survival free from target lesion revascularization (TLR), target vessel failure (TVF), and MACE up to 3 years of follow-up was compared between the 2 treatment groups. Complete data sets were available in 94.2% of patients treated with sirolimus-eluting stents and in 94.1% of patients randomized to the control group. The cumulative 1-, 2-, and 3-year event-free survival rates were 99.2%, 96.5%, and 93.7% for TLR and 95.8%, 92.3%, and 87.9% for TVF, respectively, in the sirolimus-eluting stent group, versus 75.9%, 75.9%, and 75.0% for TLR and 71.2%, 69.4%, and 67.3% for TVF in the control group (P<0.001 for both comparisons at 3 years). Rates of MACE at 3 years were 15.8% in patients randomly assigned to sirolimus-eluting stents versus 33.1% in patients assigned to bare-metal stents (P=0.002). One patient treated with a sirolimus-eluting stent died of a cardiac cause between 12 and 36 months.

Conclusions: Treatment of de novo coronary stenosis with sirolimus-eluting stents was associated with a sustained clinical benefit and very low rates of TLR and of other MACE up to 3 years after device implantation.

Source: PubMed

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