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Volumetric intravascular ultrasound assessment of neointimal hyperplasia and nonuniform stent strut distribution in sirolimus-eluting stent restenosis

Sano, Koichi; Mintz, Gary S; Carlier, Stephane G; Fujii, Kenichi; Takebayashi, Hideo; Kimura, Masashi; Costa, Jose Ribamar Jr; Tanaka, Kaoru; Costa, Ricardo A; Lui, Joanna; Weisz, Giora; Moussa, Issam; Dangas, George D; Mehran, Roxana; Lansky, Alexandra J; Kreps, Edward M; Collins, Michael; Stone, Gregg W; Moses, Jeffrey W; Leon, Martin B
The neointimal hyperplasia (IH) distribution pattern of in-stent restenotic lesions after sirolimus-eluting stent (SES) implantation has not been well described. We identified 48 in-stent restenotic lesions (41 patients) after SES implantation and performed volumetric intravascular ultrasound analyses. Lumen area, stent area, and IH area at the minimal lumen area site were 2.7 +/- 1.0, 5.4 +/- 1.9, and 2.7 +/- 1.4 mm(2), respectively. IH area at the minimal lumen site was larger in the group with a stent area > or =5.0 mm(2) than the group with a stent area <5.0 mm(2) (3.7 +/- 1.3 vs 1.9 +/- 0.8 mm(2), p <0.001). There were fewer visualized stent struts in lesions with a minimum stent area > or =5.0 mm(2) at the minimum lumen site compared with those with a stent area <5.0 mm(2) (0.69 +/- 0.25 vs 0.83 +/- 0.16, p = 0.04). When we compared lesions in patients with diabetes mellitus with patients without diabetes, minimum lumen areas, percent IH at minimal lumen area, percent IH, and neointima-free stent length were identical. In conclusion, (1) lesions without SES underexpansion at the minimum lumen site had more IH and greater nonuniform stent strut distribution compared with restenotic SESs that were underexpanded, and (2) the IH response did not appear to be more aggressive in patients with diabetes mellitus than in those without diabetes mellitus
PMID: 17145209
ISSN: 0002-9149
CID: 147328

Outcome after acute incomplete sirolimus-eluting stent apposition as assessed by serial intravascular ultrasound

Kimura, Masashi; Mintz, Gary S; Carlier, Stephane; Takebayashi, Hideo; Fujii, Kenichi; Sano, Koichi; Yasuda, Takenori; Costa, Ricardo A; Costa, Jose R Jr; Quen, Jie; Tanaka, Kaoru; Lui, Joanna; Weisz, Giora; Moussa, Issam; Dangas, George; Mehran, Roxana; Lansky, Alexandra J; Kreps, Edward M; Collins, Michael; Stone, Gregg W; Moses, Jeffrey W; Leon, Martin B
We investigated the fate of postprocedural incomplete stent apposition (ISA) after sirolimus-eluting stent (SES) implantation by evaluating long-term intravascular ultrasound findings in 168 consecutive patients (182 de novo lesions). Postprocedural ISA was defined as > or = 1 stent strut that was clearly separated from the vessel wall with evidence of blood speckle behind the strut without overlapping a side branch. After SES implantation, there were 61 ISA sites in 46 stents in 31 patients (23 at the proximal edge, 7 at the distal edge, and 31 within the stent body). There were no clinical, procedural, or intravascular ultrasound measurement differences between patients and lesions with versus without ISA. At follow-up, 15 acute ISA sites (25%) in 11 patients completely resolved and 40 sites (75%) in 20 patients persisted, although 32 of 46 persisting ISA sites (70%) decreased. There was a greater decrease in effective lumen area and a greater increase in peristent plaque area in the complete-resolution group than in the persistent-ISA group. No lesion developed stent thrombosis or in-stent restenosis (angiographic diameter stenosis > 50%). Six acute ISA sites were also associated with new, late acquired ISA, only 1 of which resulted in aneurysm formation. Although most ISAs after SES implantation do not resolve completely, the incidence of restenosis or thrombosis is not affected
PMID: 16893693
ISSN: 0002-9149
CID: 147329

Intravascular ultrasound assessment of fibrous cap remnants after coronary plaque rupture

Jensen, Lisette Okkels; Mintz, Gary S; Carlier, Stephane G; Fujii, Kenichi; Moussa, Issam; Dangas, George; Mehran, Roxanna; Stone, Gregg W; Leon, Martin B; Moses, Jeffrey W
BACKGROUND: Although intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) can detect plaque rupture, the fibrous cap remnant has not previously been studied in detail. The aim of the present study is to assess the fibrous cap remnants by IVUS in ruptured plaques. METHODS: In 53 patients, a ruptured plaque with a fibrous cap remnant was studied by IVUS. RESULTS: In 36 (68%) patients, the rupture of the fibrous cap appeared to have occurred at the shoulder. The absolute length of the fibrous cap remnant was significantly longer in the center rupture site compared with the shoulder rupture site (1.37 +/- 0.56 vs 0.84 +/- 0.34 mm, P = .001); however, the estimated length of the original fibrous cap did not differ between the 2 rupture site groups (2.28 +/- 0.66 vs 2.11 +/- 0.69, P = not significant). In none of the patients did the remnants of the fibrous cap cover the entire mouth of the cavity. The estimated absolute length of the missing part of the fibrous cap correlated significantly with the cavity area (r = 0.517, P < .001), the lesion external elastic membrane area (r = 0.330, P = .016), the lumen area (r = 0.289, P = .036), the maximum plaque thickness (r = 0.364, P = .007), and the length of the estimated original fibrous cap (r = 0.709, P < .001). CONCLUSION: In general, the postrupture fibrous cap does not cover the entire mouth of the ruptured plaque cavity in its postrupture state. Potential explanations include the following: (1) part of the fibrous cap may be too thin to be visualized with IVUS, (2) part of it may have embolized, or (3) the prerupture fibrous cap may have been stretched and/or there were postrupture changes in lesion geometry
PMID: 16875918
ISSN: 1097-6744
CID: 147330

Drug-eluting stents in the treatment of intermediate lesions: pooled analysis from four randomized trials

Moses, Jeffrey W; Stone, Gregg W; Nikolsky, Eugenia; Mintz, Gary S; Dangas, George; Grube, Eberhard; Ellis, Stephen G; Lansky, Alexandra J; Weisz, Giora; Fahy, Martin; Na, Yingbo; Russell, Mary E; Donohoe, Dennis; Leon, Martin B; Mehran, Roxana
OBJECTIVES: To address the safety and efficacy of drug-eluting stents (DES) in the treatment of intermediate lesions, we performed a pooled analysis of four randomized DES versus bare-metal stent (BMS) trials and assessed outcomes among patients with intermediate lesions. BACKGROUND: Before the introduction of DES, intermediate coronary lesions were commonly managed based on physiologic or anatomic assessment of lesion severity. The DES may challenge this paradigm. METHODS: The study population involved 167 of 2,478 randomized patients (6.7%) with intermediate lesions (diameter stenosis <50% [mean 44%] by quantitative coronary angiography) from the Sirolimus-coated Bx Velocity Balloon Expandable Stent in the Treatment of Patients with De Novo Coronary Artery Lesions (SIRIUS), TAXUS-IV, and the First and Second First Use to Underscore Restenosis Reduction with Everolimus (FUTURE-I and -II) trials. End points examined included early (in-hospital and 30-day) and late (1-year) major adverse cardiac events (MACE), including cardiac death, myocardial infarction (MI), target vessel revascularization (TVR), stent thrombosis, and follow-up angiographic restenosis. RESULTS: Patients with intermediate lesions randomized to DES versus BMS had low rates of 30-day MACE (1.1% vs. 4.0% respectively; p = 0.22). At one-year follow-up, patients treated with DES versus BMS had similar rates of cardiac death (0% vs. 2.7%, respectively; p = 0.11) and MI (3.4% vs. 5.4%; p = 0.49) but markedly lower rates of TVR (3.4% vs. 20.3%; p = 0.0004), MACE (5.6% vs. 25.4%; p = 0.0003), and binary angiographic restenosis (1.8% vs. 34.0%; p < 0.0001). No patient in either group developed stent thrombosis. CONCLUSIONS: Compared with BMS, treatment of intermediate lesions with DES appears safe and results in a marked reduction in clinical and angiographic restenosis. The efficacy of DES may require a reevaluation of current treatment paradigms for intermediate lesions
PMID: 16750680
ISSN: 1558-3597
CID: 147335

Intravascular ultrasonic differences between aorto-ostial and shaft narrowing in saphenous veins used as aortocoronary bypass grafts

Sano, Koichi; Mintz, Gary S; Carlier, Stephane G; Fujii, Kenichi; Yasuda, Takenori; Kimura, Masashi; Costa, Jose Ribamar Jr; Costa, Ricardo A; Lui, Joanna; Weisz, Giora; Moussa, Issam; Dangas, George D; Mehran, Roxana; Lansky, Alexandra J; Kreps, Edward M; Collins, Michael; Stone, Gregg W; Moses, Jeffrey W; Leon, Martin B
Previous studies have reported differences in interventional complication rates that depend on saphenous vein graft (SVG) lesion location. However, little is known about morphologic differences between lesions in different SVG locations. We evaluated preintervention intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) images of 75 de novo SVG lesions (aorto-ostial, n = 15; shaft, n = 60) in 63 patients. IVUS data were measured at the minimal lumen area and at 2 proximal and 2 distal references. Positive remodeling was defined as a lesion site SVG area that was larger than the average of the 2 distal references. Shaft lesions more often contained soft plaque (60.0% vs 26.7%, p = 0.02). Minimal lumen areas were identical (4.5 +/- 2.9 vs 4.3 +/- 1.5 mm2, p = 0.3); however, plaque burden at the minimal lumen area was greater in shaft locations (79.3 +/- 9.4% vs 72.1 +/- 9.2%, p = 0.01). The frequency of positive remodeling in shaft versus aorto-ostial lesions was 70.2% versus 26.7% (p = 0.002). SVG shaft lesions have more soft plaque and larger plaque burdens and undergo positive remodeling more frequently than SVG aorto-ostial lesions. These IVUS differences may account for some of the location-specific differences in interventional complications
PMID: 16679084
ISSN: 0002-9149
CID: 147336

Percutaneous recanalization of chronically occluded coronary arteries: a consensus document: part II

Stone, Gregg W; Reifart, Nicolaus J; Moussa, Issam; Hoye, Angela; Cox, David A; Colombo, Antonio; Baim, Donald S; Teirstein, Paul S; Strauss, Bradley H; Selmon, Matthew; Mintz, Gary S; Katoh, Osamu; Mitsudo, Kazuaki; Suzuki, Takahiko; Tamai, Hideo; Grube, Eberhard; Cannon, Louis A; Kandzari, David E; Reisman, Mark; Schwartz, Robert S; Bailey, Steven; Dangas, George; Mehran, Roxana; Abizaid, Alexander; Moses, Jeffrey W; Leon, Martin B; Serruys, Patrick W
PMID: 16230504
ISSN: 1524-4539
CID: 147345

Percutaneous recanalization of chronically occluded coronary arteries: a consensus document: part I

Stone, Gregg W; Kandzari, David E; Mehran, Roxana; Colombo, Antonio; Schwartz, Robert S; Bailey, Steven; Moussa, Issam; Teirstein, Paul S; Dangas, George; Baim, Donald S; Selmon, Matthew; Strauss, Bradley H; Tamai, Hideo; Suzuki, Takahiko; Mitsudo, Kazuaki; Katoh, Osamu; Cox, David A; Hoye, Angela; Mintz, Gary S; Grube, Eberhard; Cannon, Louis A; Reifart, Nicolaus J; Reisman, Mark; Abizaid, Alexander; Moses, Jeffrey W; Leon, Martin B; Serruys, Patrick W
PMID: 16216980
ISSN: 1524-4539
CID: 147346

Percutaneous recanalization of chronically occluded coronary arteries: procedural techniques, devices, and results

Stone, Gregg W; Colombo, Antonio; Teirstein, Paul S; Moses, Jeffrey W; Leon, Martin B; Reifart, Nicolaus J; Mintz, Gary S; Hoye, Angela; Cox, David A; Baim, Donald S; Strauss, Bradley H; Selmon, Matthew; Moussa, Issam; Suzuki, Takahiko; Tamai, Hideo; Katoh, Osamu; Mitsudo, Kazuaki; Grube, Eberhard; Cannon, Louis A; Kandzari, David E; Reisman, Mark; Schwartz, Robert S; Bailey, Steven; Dangas, George; Mehran, Roxana; Abizaid, Alexander; Serruys, Patrick W
PMID: 16155889
ISSN: 1522-1946
CID: 147347

Bifurcation coronary lesions treated with the "crush" technique: an intravascular ultrasound analysis

Costa, Ricardo A; Mintz, Gary S; Carlier, Stephane G; Lansky, Alexandra J; Moussa, Issam; Fujii, Kenichi; Takebayashi, Hideo; Yasuda, Takenori; Costa, Jose R Jr; Tsuchiya, Yoshihiro; Jensen, Lisette O; Cristea, Ecaterina; Mehran, Roxana; Dangas, George D; Iyer, Sriram; Collins, Michael; Kreps, Edward M; Colombo, Antonio; Stone, Gregg W; Leon, Martin B; Moses, Jeffrey W
OBJECTIVES: We report intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) findings after crush-stenting of bifurcation lesions. BACKGROUND: Preliminary results with the crush-stent technique are encouraging; however, isolated reports suggest that restenosis at the side branch (SB) ostium continues to be a problem. METHODS: Forty patients with bifurcation lesions underwent crush-stenting with the sirolimus-eluting stent. Postintervention IVUS was performed in both branches in 25 lesions and only the main vessel (MV) in 15 lesions; IVUS analysis included five distinct locations: MV proximal stent, crush area, distal stent, SB ostium, and SB distal stent. RESULTS: Overall, the MV minimum stent area was larger than the SB (6.7 +/- 1.7 mm2 vs. 4.4 +/- 1.4 mm2, p < 0.0001, respectively). When only the MV was considered, the minimum stent area was found in the crush area (rather than the proximal or MV distal stent) in 56%. When both the MV and the SB were considered, the minimum stent area was found at the SB ostium in 68%. The MV minimum stent area measured <4 mm2 in 8% of lesions and <5 mm2 in 20%. For the SB, a minimum stent area <4 mm2 was found in 44%, and a minimum stent area <5 mm2 in 76%, typically at the ostium. 'Incomplete crushing'--incomplete apposition of SB or MV stent struts against the MV wall proximal to the carina--was seen in >60% of non-left main lesions. CONCLUSIONS: In the majority of bifurcation lesions treated with the crush technique, the smallest minimum stent area appeared at the SB ostium. This may contribute to a higher restenosis rate at this location
PMID: 16098422
ISSN: 0735-1097
CID: 114485

Intravascular ultrasound study of patterns of calcium in ruptured coronary plaques

Fujii, Kenichi; Carlier, Stephane G; Mintz, Gary S; Takebayashi, Hideo; Yasuda, Takenori; Costa, Ricardo A; Moussa, Issam; Dangas, George; Mehran, Roxana; Lansky, Alexandra J; Kreps, Edward M; Collins, Michael; Stone, Gregg W; Moses, Jeffrey W; Leon, Martin B
Coronary calcium is intimately associated with coronary atherosclerotic plaque development, although it is controversial as to whether coronary calcium is associated with plaque instability. We analyzed 101 IVUS-detected ruptured plaques and compared them with 101 computer-matched control plaques without evidence of plaque rupture. The arc of calcium was measured every 0.5 mm within 10-mm-long segments that spanned the minimum lumen cross-sectional area, and the number and length of calcium deposits were assessed. Ruptured plaques had a significantly larger number of individual calcium deposits than control plaques (3.5 +/- 1.7 vs 1.8 +/- 1.1, p <0.001). However, the arc of the largest calcium deposit was smaller and the length of the largest calcium deposit in each plaque was shorter in ruptured plaques compared with control plaques (67.3 degrees +/- 41.4 degrees vs 114.9 degrees +/- 77.4 degrees , p <0.001, and 1.6 +/- 1.3 vs 4.0 +/- 2.7 mm, p <0.001, respectively). There was no difference in the number of superficial calcium deposits between the 2 groups, although ruptured plaques had significantly smaller arcs of superficial calcium compared with control plaques (56.2 degrees +/- 35.5 degrees vs 95.8 degrees +/- 65.2 degrees , p <0.001). Conversely, the number of deep calcium deposits was significantly larger in ruptured plaques than in control plaques (1.8 +/- 1.4 vs 0.3 +/- 0.6, p <0.001), although the arc of deep calcium was similar in the 2 groups. Ruptured plaques had quantitatively less calcium, especially superficial calcium, but a larger number of small calcium deposits, especially deep calcium deposits. In conclusion, ruptured plaques are associated with a larger number of calcium deposits within an arc of <90 degrees , a larger number of deep calcium deposits, and a remodeling index
PMID: 16054456
ISSN: 0002-9149
CID: 147352