April 24th, 2012
Meta-Analysis Compares Drug-Eluting and Bare-Metal Stents for Primary Angioplasty
Larry Husten, PHD
A new meta-analysis comparing drug-eluting stents (DES) and bare-metal stents (BMS) in patients with MI has provoked opposing take-away messages from the study authors and an editorialist. The authors emphasize the reduction in target-vessel revascularization (TVR) associated with DES, but the editorialist focuses on several potential DES weaknesses suggested by the study.
In the paper, published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, members of the Drug-Eluting Stent in Primary Angioplasty (DESERT) Cooperation pooled patient data from 11 clinical trials in which nearly 6300 patients were randomized to either sirolimus-eluting or paclitaxel-eluting stents or BMS. After a mean follow-up of 1201 days, DES was associated with a significant reduction in TVR but there were no significant differences in death, reinfarction, or stent thrombosis:
- TVR: 12.7% for DES vs. 20.1% for BMS, HR 0.57, CI 0.50-0.66, p<0.001
- Mortality: 8.5% vs. 10.2%, HR 0.85, CI 0.70- 1.04, p = 0.11
- Reinfarction: 9.4% vs. 5.9%, HR 1.12, CI 0.88-1.41, p = 0.36
- Stent thrombosis: 5.8% vs. 4.3%, HR 1.13, CI 0.86-1.47, p = 0.38
However, after 2 years there was a significant increase in the risk of stent thrombosis associated with the DES group (HR 2.81, CI 1.28-6.19, p=0.04).
The findings, write the authors,
provide strong evidence of the beneficial effects of SES and PES during primary PCI in STEMI. With follow-up as late as 6 years, a robust and sustained decrease in TVR was noted with use of these DES. Although the rates of late reinfarction and ST progressively increased, with the difference becoming statistically significant after 2 years in patients receiving SES and PES, the HR for mortality, while not significantly different between DES and BMS, favored DES.
In an accompanying editorial, James Brophy notes that the difference in TVR “may be artificially inflated by protocol-mandated, rather than clinically driven, repeated angiograms.” Brophy also states that analyzing the data with a different statistical approach leaves open the possibility that DES is associated with a twofold increase in the risk of reinfarction. Brophy provides the follow perspective on choosing BMS versus DES for MI patients:
An informed patient with STEMI should be told that substituting DES for BMS in 100 patients likely results in no mortality differences but approximately 5 fewer repeat revascularizations at the cost of 1 additional late reinfarction with a possibility that this risk may be substantially higher.
Click here to read a response to the editorial by DESERT senior author Gregg Stone. Comments on this topic should also be posted here.
Categories: Uncategorized
Tags: bare metal stents, drug-eluting stents, Interventional Cardiology, PCI, Primary PCI, stents
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
Comments are closed.
Search the Archive
Archives by Date
NEJM — Recent Cardiology Articles- Descending Thoracic Aortic Aneurysm July 16, 2026A man presented with a 2-month history of chest heaviness and a 2-week history of shortness of breath. Pulsations were visible between his ribs (shown in a video). Ultrasonography revealed a rounded structure near the heart.
- Balancing the Scales — Extended DAPT in Coronary Artery Disease July 16, 2026The appropriate duration of dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) has remained the subject of a central debate in cardiovascular medicine. DAPT is intended to mitigate ischemic risk, but its maintenance warrants balancing the benefit against the concomitant risk of hemorrhage.1 Consequently, determining the appropriate...
- Extended Dual Antiplatelet Therapy for Multivessel Coronary Artery Disease July 16, 2026Among patients with multivessel coronary artery disease who were in stable condition 1 year after stenting, an additional year of DAPT led to a lower risk of ischemic events than aspirin alone, without increased bleeding.
- Platelet-Activating Anti–Platelet Factor 4 Disorders July 13, 2026This review summarizes platelet-activating anti–platelet factor 4 disorders, including heparin-induced thrombocytopenia and related syndromes, highlighting diagnosis, antibody mechanisms, and treatment strategies.
- Rivaroxaban Then Aspirin vs. Aspirin Alone after Total Hip or Knee Arthroplasty July 12, 2026After total hip or knee arthroplasty, aspirin alone was noninferior to rivaroxaban followed by aspirin in preventing symptomatic venous thromboembolism, with a similarly low risk of bleeding complications.
- Descending Thoracic Aortic Aneurysm July 16, 2026
-
Tag Cloud
- ACS AF AHA anticoagulation aortic valve replacement apixaban aspirin atrial fibrillation CABG cardiovascular risk cholesterol clopidogrel dabigatran diabetes diet drug-eluting stents epidemiology ESC exercise FDA FDA approvals Fellowship training guidelines HDL heart failure hypertension ICDs MI myocardial infarction obesity PCI Primary PCI risk factors rivaroxaban statins STEMI stents stroke stroke prevention TAVI TAVR type 2 diabetes venous thromboembolism warfarin women
