Descriptive and prognostic study at 5 years of percutaneous coronary intervention by long active stents ≥ 40 mm

Archives of Cardiovascular Diseases Supplements(2023)

引用 0|浏览1
暂无评分
摘要
Introduction The treatment of long coronary lesions often requires long stents, which carries a higher risk of stent thrombosis, restenosis and major adverse cardiac events. Objective Our objective is to evaluate the clinical and angiographic results, immediate, in the medium and in the long-term of the coronary angioplasties with very long active stents≥40mm. Method We carried out a retrospective, multicenter, descriptive and prognostic study, during a period of 5years between January 2015 and January 2020 in four Tunisian centers, including all patients who underwent coronary angioplasty with an active stent≥40mm in length. Results Four hundred and eighty patients were included.Our population was at high cardiovascular risk: the mean age was 62.45years with a sex ratio of 3.40. The most frequent cardiovascular risk factors were as follows: arterial hypertension: 61.1%, diabetes: 56.6% and tobacco: 60.5%.The most common clinical presentation was acute coronary syndromes in 69.70%. The artery most frequently stented with a very long stent was the anterior interventricular artery in 49.4%. The treated lesions were complex: 23.5% were calcified, 8.7% were total chronic occlusions and 25% had bifurcations. The average length of the implanted stents was 47.72mm. The long coronary lesion required an overlap by a 2nd stent in 16.45% of the interventions. Angiographic and clinical success was observed in 96% and 95% of cases respectively. Seventeen cases of per-procedural complications were recorded during the procedure (3.55%). Angiographic control was only performed during the follow-up in 21.7% of patients. The stent thrombosis rate was 0.83%. The incidence of MACE, TVR and TLR and was 16.3%, 9.2% and 7.9%, respectively.Diabetes appeared to be predictive factors of TLR (survival without TLR at 12months=99% vs. 93.7%; P=0.01). The study of the characteristics lesion showed that ostial lesions and bifurcation lesions are predictive factors for increased TLR (ostial lesion: survival without TLR at 5years=78.2% vs. 87.4%; P=0.001/bifurcation lesion: survival without TLR at 5years=84% vs. 92.7%; P=0.03). Conclusion Coronary stenoses requiring treatment with long stents are generally associated with high cardiovascular risk and complex atheromatous disease. They can be revascularized with a long active stent (≥40mm) with an acceptable MACE, TLR, TVR and thrombosis rate.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要