Korean Circ J.  2006 Feb;36(2):115-120. 10.4070/kcj.2006.36.2.115.

The First Clinical Trial of Antioxidant, Carvedilol-Eluting Stent in Coronary Artery Diseases

Affiliations
  • 1The Heart Center of Chonnam National University Hospital, The Chonnam National University Research Institute of Medical Sciences, Gwangju, Korea. myungho@chol.com

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Carvedilol is a beta- and alpha-receptor blocker, a direct inhibitor of smooth muscle cell proliferation and migration, and it produced a significant suppression of neointimal hyperplasia in our porcine experiment. The purpose of the study was to investigate the safety and efficacy of carvedilol-eluting BiodiVysio stent implantation for de novo lesions.
SUBJECTS AND METHODS
We performed a prospective randomized trial to compare two types of stents for revascularization in 39 patients [Group I (carvedilol-eluting stent): n=20, 58.3+/-11.1 years, and Group II (control stent): n=19, 59.9+/-8.5 years]. The primary effective end points were major adverse cardiac events (MACE): cardiac death, acute myocardial infarction, target lesion revascularization (TLR), in-stent restenosis and late lumen loss at the one-year clinical and angiographic follow-up.
RESULTS
All the stents were successfully deployed and the patients were discharged without experiencing any clinical events. The baseline clinical characteristics, baseline diameter stenosis and minimal luminal diameter were not different between the two groups. The follow-up diameter stenosis and late loss were significantly lower in the group I compared with group II (23.1+/-12.7% vs. 47.3+/-23.6%, p=0.012; and 0.52+/-0.26 mm vs. 1.12+/-0.67 mm; p=0.020, respectively). There were no TLR and MACE in group I; however the differences were not significant [0% (0/20) vs. 10.5% (2/19); p=0.231 and 0% (0/20) vs. 15.8% (3/19), p=0.106, respectively].
CONCLUSION
Carvediloleluting stents appear feasible to use and they may be effective in the prevention of coronary restenosis. These results warrant further confirmation with a large, randomized multi-center trial.

Keyword

Antioxidants; Stents; Coronary restenosis; Coronary disease

MeSH Terms

Antioxidants
Constriction, Pathologic
Coronary Artery Disease*
Coronary Disease
Coronary Restenosis
Coronary Vessels*
Death
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Hyperplasia
Myocardial Infarction
Myocytes, Smooth Muscle
Phenobarbital
Prospective Studies
Stents*
Antioxidants
Phenobarbital

Cited by  1 articles

Inhibitory Effect of Double Coating with Echinomycin and Hydrophobic Heparin in a Porcine Coronary In-Stent Restenosis Model
Sang Yup Lim, Myung Ho Jeong, Doo Sun Sim, Young Joon Hong, Ju Han Kim, Youngkeun Ahn, Jeong Gwan Cho, Jong Chun Park, Jung Chaee Kang, Hyun Tae Moon, Youngro Byun
Chonnam Med J. 2009;45(2):87-91.    doi: 10.4068/cmj.2009.45.2.87.

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