Title of article :
Three-year clinical follow-up after Palmaz-Schatz stenting
Author/Authors :
Bruce D. Klugherz، نويسنده , , Debr L. DeAngelo، نويسنده , , Back K. Kim، نويسنده , , Howard C. Herrmann، نويسنده , , John W. Hirshfeld Jr، نويسنده , , Daniel M. Kolansky، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1996
Abstract :
Objectives.
Our goals were to examine late clinical outcome in cohort of patients who electively received Palmaz-Schatz intracoronary stents, to identify specific predictors of outcome and to determine the time course of the development of ischemic cardiac events after stenting.
Background.
Short-term results of Palmaz-Schatz intracoronary stenting have been promising, with reduction in both angiographic restenosis and clinical cardiac events up to 1 year after stenting.
Methods.
We analyzed the clinical outcomes in 65 consecutive patients who underwent stenting at least 3 years before analysis. Demographic, clinical and procedural predictors of survival and event-free survival, defined as freedom from myocardial infarction, stent-site percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty, coronary artery bypass graft surgery or death, were analyzed at mean follow-up of 39 ± 17 months.
Results.
Absolute survival and event-free survival at 3 years were 88% and 56%, respectively. Three-year freedom from stentsite revascularization was 66%. Predictors of decreased long-term survival (p < 0.05) included diabetes and high angin score (Canadian Cardiovascular Society class III/IV) at 6 and 12 months after stenting. Predictors of decreased event-free survival (p < 0.05) included high angin score at 3, 6 and 12 months after stenting, smaller stent deployment balloon size and greater number of stents implanted. Freedom from adverse events by 6 months after stenting also correlated with long-term event-free survival. Eighty-five percent of stent-site revascularizations occurred within 1 year. During late follow-up (>24 months), no patients had stent-site stenoses requiring revascularization, whereas 11% of patients required revascularization in nonstented coronary segments.
Conclusions.
Clinical predictors of worse long-term outcome included diabetes mellitus, higher angin score at follow-up, smaller stent deployment balloon size and greater number of stents at implantation. During follow-up, the majority of adverse events and stent-site revascularizations occurred early after stenting, and disease progression in nonstented vessels accounted for the majority of late revascularization events.
Journal title :
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)
Journal title :
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)