Treatment of small coronary arteries with a paclitaxel-coated balloon catheter in the PEPCAD I study: are lesions clinically stable from 12 to 36 months?

Martin Unverdorben, Franz X Kleber, Hubertus Heuer, Hans-Reiner Figulla, Christian Vallbracht, Matthias Leschke, Bodo Cremers, Stefan Hardt, Michael Buerke, Hanns Ackermann, Michael Boxberger, Ralf Degenhardt, Bruno Scheller, Martin Unverdorben, Franz X Kleber, Hubertus Heuer, Hans-Reiner Figulla, Christian Vallbracht, Matthias Leschke, Bodo Cremers, Stefan Hardt, Michael Buerke, Hanns Ackermann, Michael Boxberger, Ralf Degenhardt, Bruno Scheller

Abstract

Aims: The one-year outcome of lesions in small coronary arteries by using a paclitaxel-iopromide-coated (3 µg/mm²) balloon catheter (DCB) has yielded good six-month angiographic and one-year clinical data. We now report the three-year clinical follow-up.

Methods and results: One hundred and twenty patients with >70% stenoses <22 mm in length in small coronary vessels (vessel diameter: 2.25-2.8 mm) were treated with the DCB. The primary endpoint was angiographic in-segment late lumen loss. The secondary endpoints encompassed all other angiographic and clinical data up to three years post intervention. In total 82/120 (68.3%) patients with a vessel diameter of 2.35±0.19 mm were treated with the DCB only, and 32/120 (26.7%) patients required additional bare metal stent (BMS) deployment. Both the 12- and 36-month major adverse cardiac event rates were 5/82 (6.1%) for DCB only and 12/32 (37.5%) for DCB+BMS, primarily due to the need for target lesion revascularisation in 4/82 (4.9%) patients and 9/32 (28.1%) (p<0.001) patients, respectively. Total MACE rate after 36 months was 18/120 (15%; intention-to-treat).

Conclusions: Treatment of small vessel coronary artery disease with a paclitaxel-iopromide-coated balloon exhibited good six-month angiographic and one-year clinical data that persisted during the three-year follow-up period. Randomised trials will clarify its role as an alternative to drug-eluting stents in the treatment of small vessel coronary artery disease. (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00404144).

Source: PubMed

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