Health News - Reduce Cholesterol. Learn about stroke, blood pressure, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, heart disease and other medical conditions.
A Member of the Healthscout Network
 Printer Friendly  Send to a Friend

Newest Coated Stent Does Well in Real-World Trial

Safe and effective in an 'all-comer population,' researchers say

By Ed Edelson
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, June 17 (HealthDay News) -- The newest drug-coated stent has performed well in a real-life trial, Dutch cardiologists report.

The Xience stent -- a flexible metal-mesh tube coated with the drug everolimus -- is inserted to keep blood flowing after artery-opening procedures such as angioplasty, and is already in widespread use. It was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration last July, on the basis of good results in controlled trials.

Advertisement
Related Stories
 border=
Papaya Could Be a Cancer Fighter
Body's Response to Foods' Smell, Taste Could Be Diabetes Risk Factor
Alternative to Statins Shows Promise
Related Videos
 border=
The Safety Gap: Food Fight
Recipe for a Healthy Holiday
7 Diet Roadblocks
Related Slides
 border=
Liposuction
Hyperlipidemia
Related Encyclopedia
 border=
Cholesterol


But those trials included only people with simple artery blockages and the effectiveness of the new stent in "complex, unselected patients treated in daily practice still remains unknown and cannot be extrapolated from these randomized controlled trials," said cardiologists at Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam in their report, which was released online June 17 in advance of publication in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology. "We therefore sought to evaluate the impact of this second-generation drug-eluting stent on the clinical outcomes in consecutive patients treated in a real-life, all-comer population."

The trial compared the outcomes of 649 people given Xience stents with individuals who previously had stents implanted -- 450 with bare-metal stents, 508 with stents coated with the drug sirolimus and 576 with stents coated with the drug paclitaxel. The data include people with multiple artery blockages and some treated after heart attacks.

In the cautious phrasing of the Rotterdam group, "this study suggests that the use of everolimus-eluting stents in an unselected population may be as safe as and more effective than bare-metal stents, may be as safe and effective as sirolimus-eluting stents, may be as safe as paclitaxel-eluting stents, and may be more effective than paclitaxel-eluting stents."

Specifically, in a six-month follow-up period, the incidence of death, heart attack and stenosis (new blockage of the artery) was lower for the Xience group than for those with bare-metal stents and slightly better than those with first-generation drug-eluting stents.

This is good news, said Dr. Gregg W. Stone, an interventional cardiologist who is a professor of medicine at Columbia University and who took part in the controlled trials that led to FDA approval of Xience.

"This more real-world experience is reassuring," Stone said. But additional studies are needed because "the patient size in this trial was small, and it is more difficult to draw conclusions from non-randomized trials," Stone explained.

Nevertheless, the American cardiology community appears to have drawn its own conclusions already, Stone said. Drug-coated stents now are used in about 75 percent of cases, and the Xience stent is used in "50 to 60 percent of that 75 percent," he said.

Everolimus is a more potent drug than those used in the first-generation coated stents and also is contained in a thin, inert polymer that is less likely to cause inflammation, Stone said. The Xience stent itself is also thinner than the previous devices, he added.

"This is a good step forward on evaluating the next generation of drug-eluting stents," said Dr. Manesh Patel, director of the catheterization research laboratory at Duke University.

"The data I see from the [new study] is reassuring," Patel said. "If you are a patient who is being evaluated and a stent is being considered for your coronary, this stent looks safe for at least six months."

Longer follow-up data on more recipients is needed, he noted. Abbott Vascular, which markets the Xience V stent, is sponsoring a data bank that already has information on 5,000 recipients, Patel said.

Stent research and development continues, Stone stated. A stent with a bioabsorbable polymer that disappears is being tested, and further down the road is a stent that itself would dissolve over time, he said.

More information

The why and how of stents are explained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

SOURCES: Gregg W. Stone, M.D., professor, medicine, Columbia University, New York City; Manesh Patel, M.D., associate professor, medicine, Duke University, Durham, N.C.; June 17, 2009, Journal of the American College of Cardiology, online

Copyright © 2009 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
Last updated 6/17/2009



Disclaimer: The information provided on this website is for educational purposes only and does not serve as a replacement for care provided by your own personal health care team. This website does not render or provide medical advice, and no individual should make any medical decisions or change their health behavior based on information provided here. All pertinent content provided on this website should be discussed with your personal physician to evaluate whether it has any relevance to or impact on your specific condition. Reliance on any information provided by this website is solely at your own risk.


Mar 13, 2010
Home
Search
Powered By HealthLine
New! For timely and trustworth health information, expert advice and much more, visit Heart Disease Connection
Patient Guide
News
Health Videos
Health Encyclopedia
Health News Archive
Affiliate Information
HealthScout Network
Contact Us
Newsletters
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use

We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health
information:
verify here.
About The HealthScout Network Contact Us
Copyright © 2001. The HealthCentralNetwork, Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy  Terms of Service  

To find more information on specific conditions, please visit our partner sites: