Genous™ endothelial progenitor cell capturing stent vs. the Taxus Liberté stent in patients with de novo coronary lesions with a high-risk of coronary restenosis: a …

MAM Beijk, M Klomp, NJW Verouden… - European heart …, 2010 - academic.oup.com
MAM Beijk, M Klomp, NJW Verouden, N van Geloven, KT Koch, JPS Henriques, J Baan…
European heart journal, 2010academic.oup.com
Aims The purpose of this study was to evaluate the GenousTM endothelial progenitor cell
capturing stent vs. the Taxus Liberté paclitaxel-eluting stent in patients with de novo
coronary lesions with a high-risk of coronary restenosis. Methods and results We randomly
assigned 193 patients with lesions carrying a high risk of restenosis to have the Genous
stent or the Taxus stent implanted. Lesions were considered high risk of restenosis if one of
the following applied: chronic total occlusion, lesion length> 23 mm, vessel diameter< 2.8 …
Aims
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the GenousTM endothelial progenitor cell capturing stent vs. the Taxus Liberté paclitaxel-eluting stent in patients with de novo coronary lesions with a high-risk of coronary restenosis.
Methods and results
We randomly assigned 193 patients with lesions carrying a high risk of restenosis to have the Genous stent or the Taxus stent implanted. Lesions were considered high risk of restenosis if one of the following applied: chronic total occlusion, lesion length >23 mm, vessel diameter <2.8 mm, or any lesion in a diabetic patient. At 1-year, the rate of the primary end point, target vessel failure (TVF), was 17.3% in the Genous stent group when compared with 10.5% in the Taxus stent group [risk difference (RD) 6.8%, 95% CI −3.1 to 16.7%], a difference predominantly due to a higher incidence of repeat revascularization in patients treated with the Genous stent. In contrast, no stent thrombosis was observed in the Genous stent group compared to 4 stent thromboses in the Taxus stent group (RD −4.2%; 95% CI −10.3 to 0.3%). Repeat angiography between 6 and 12 months in a subgroup of patients showed a significantly higher late loss in the Genous stent compared with the Taxus stent (1.14 ± 0.64 and 0.55 ± 0.61 mm).
Conclusion
In patients with lesions carrying a high risk of restenosis, the Genous stent resulted in a non-significant higher rate of TVF compared with the Taxus stent mainly due to more repeat revascularizations in the Genous stent group. There were four stent thromboses with Taxus stent, none with the Genous stent.
Oxford University Press