August 23rd, 2012
New DES Get COMFORTABLE with AMI
Richard A. Lange, MD, MBA and L. David Hillis, MD
The use of drug-eluting stents (DES) in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) has recently generated concern. In two meta-analyses (De Luca et al and Kaleson et al) , the use of early-generation DES resulted in a lower risk of repeat revascularization compared with bare-metal stents (BMS) in patients with AMI, but the DES group had a 2-fold increased risk for very late stent thrombosis (after the first year). These findings were attributed, at least in part, to the permanent polymer coating on the DES that has “an early protective effect against stent thrombosis and a late proinflammatory and prothrombotic effect,” which may be responsible for the delayed arterial healing, incomplete endothelialization, uncovered stent struts, inflammation, and persistent fibrin deposition that was observed.
Second-generation DES with biodegradable polymers provide controlled drug release with subsequent degradation of the polymer and a lower risk for stent thrombosis than first generation DES.
In the prospective, randomized COMFORTABLE AMI (Comparison of Biolimus Eluted From an Erodible Stent Coating With Bare Metal Stents in Acute ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction) trial, 1161 patients with STEMI were randomized to receive biolimus (an equipotent sirolimus analogue)-eluting stents or BMS, after which they were followed-up for 12 months. Compared with BMS, the use of biolimus-eluting stents with a biodegradable polymer resulted in a lower rate of major adverse cardiac events (4.4% absolute reduction).
COMFORTABLE AMI Trial Results
|
Endpoint |
Bare metal stent |
Biolimus-eluting stent (n=575) |
Hazard ratio (HR), |
| Composite of cardiac death, target vessel-related reinfarction, and ischemia-driven target-lesion revascularization |
8.7% |
4.3% |
HR, 0.49; |
| Target vessel–related reinfarction |
2.7% |
0.5% |
HR, 0.20; |
| Ischemia-driven target-lesion revascularization |
5.7% |
1.6% |
HR, 0.28; |
(Adapted from Räber L et al. JAMA 2012 Aug 22/29; 308:77.)
The findings for the composite endpoint were consistent across stratified analyses for diabetes mellitus, renal failure, thrombus aspiration, small-vessel disease, and lesion length.
Unfortunately, the biolimus-eluting stent is currently not approved by the U.S. FDA.
Do concerns of late stent thrombosis influence your decision to use DES in the setting of AMI?
Given concerns about overuse of DES, should we be using DES less — or more — frequently in AMI patients?
Categories: Uncategorized
Tags: acute myocardial infarction, bare metal stents, biodegradable stents, COMFORTABLE AMI, drug-eluting stents, Interventional Cardiology, late stent thrombosis, 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- Thromboprophylaxis for Atrial Fibrillation in Patients with Drug-Eluting Stents February 12, 2026Stroke prevention is one of the pillars of treatment for patients with atrial fibrillation, and oral anticoagulation with a direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) is now the preferred option for thromboprophylaxis.1 Nevertheless, patients with atrial fibrillation commonly have coexistent vascular disease, so they may present with an acute...
- Adenoviral Inciting Antigen and Somatic Hypermutation in VITT February 12, 2026VITT is caused by a somatic hypermutation of an anti–adenovirus pVII antibody that generates more avid binding of platelet factor 4 than of adenovirus pVII, its original target, which results in platelet activation.
- Case 5-2026: An 18-Year-Old Woman with Headache and Hypertension February 12, 2026An 18-year-old woman with chronic headaches was admitted to the pediatric intensive care unit for a hypertensive emergency. The potassium level was 2.0 mmol per liter. A diagnosis was made.
- Therapy for Atrial Fibrillation in Patients with Drug-Eluting Stents February 12, 2026In patients with atrial fibrillation and a drug-eluting stent placed at least 1 year earlier, monotherapy with a non–vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulant was noninferior to combination therapy with clopidogrel for net adverse clinical events.
- LVAD February 5, 2026When a man ends up in the ED after having severed the driveline of his left ventricular assist device, the medical student on his team learns that sometimes a life saved is not the life the patient wants to live.
- Thromboprophylaxis for Atrial Fibrillation in Patients with Drug-Eluting Stents February 12, 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
