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5-Year Outcomes After Bioresorbable Coronary Scaffolds Implanted With Improved Technique

Gregg W. Stone, Dean J. Kereiakes, Tommaso Gori, D. Christopher Metzger, Bernardo Stein, Matthew Erickson, Jan Torzewski, Ameer Kabour, Guy Piegari, Jeffrey J. Cavendish, Barry Bertolet, Kelly A. Stockelman, Nick E.J. West, Ori Ben‐Yehuda, James W. Choi, Steven O. Marx, John A. Spertus, Stephen G. Ellis

2023Journal of the American College of Cardiology60 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Bioresorbable vascular scaffolds (BVS) were designed to improve late event-free survival compared with metallic drug-eluting stents. However, initial trials demonstrated worse early outcomes with BVS, in part due to suboptimal technique. In the large-scale, blinded ABSORB IV trial, polymeric everolimus-eluting BVS implanted with improved technique demonstrated noninferior 1-year outcomes compared with cobalt chromium everolimus-eluting stents (CoCr-EES). OBJECTIVES: This study sought to evaluate the long-term outcomes from the ABSORB IV trial. METHODS: We randomized 2,604 patients at 147 sites with stable or acute coronary syndromes to BVS with improved technique vs CoCr-EES. Patients, clinical assessors, and event adjudicators were blinded to randomization. Five-year follow-up was completed. RESULTS: Target lesion failure at 5 years occurred in 216 (17.5%) patients assigned to BVS and 180 (14.5%) patients assigned to CoCr-EES (P = 0.03). Device thrombosis within 5 years occurred in 21 (1.7%) BVS and 13 (1.1%) CoCr-EES patients (P = 0.15). Event rates were slightly greater with BVS than CoCr-EES through 3-year follow-up and were similar between 3 and 5 years. Angina, also centrally adjudicated, recurred within 5 years in 659 patients (cumulative rate 53.0%) assigned to BVS and 674 (53.3%) patients assigned to CoCr-EES (P = 0.63). CONCLUSIONS: In this large-scale, blinded randomized trial, despite the improved implantation technique, the absolute 5-year rate of target lesion failure was 3% greater after BVS compared with CoCr-EES. The risk period for increased events was limited to 3 years, the time point of complete scaffold bioresorption; event rates were similar thereafter. Angina recurrence after intervention was frequent during 5-year follow-up but was comparable with both devices.(Absorb IV Randomized Controlled Trial; NCT02173379).

Topics & Concepts

MedicineTarget lesionRandomizationEverolimusRandomized controlled trialSurgeryClinical endpointClinical trialInternal medicineMyocardial infarctionPercutaneous coronary interventionCoronary Interventions and DiagnosticsCardiac Imaging and DiagnosticsCoronary Artery Anomalies