Long-term Clinical Results After Stent Implantation in Old Obstructed Saphenous Vein Grafts

Autor: Ribeiro Pa, Muayed Al-Zaibag, Kenneth Jutzy, Robert J. Marsa, Randall Caldron, Christopher Oh, Karen Scavetta
Rok vydání: 2000
Předmět:
Zdroj: Chest. 118:750-755
ISSN: 0012-3692
Popis: To assess the long-term clinical outcome of treating patients with coronary artery disease and obstructed saphenous vein grafts (SVGs) with stents deployed by oversized balloon catheters.The study included 89 of 92 consecutive patients who had 121 SVG stent implants (average, 1.4 stents per patient). We aimed at achieving a negative stenosis using oversized balloons to achieve a catheter to artery ratio of 1.1:1, and a 100% follow-up at 24+/-14 months (range, 0 to 54 months) was achieved.As 3 of 92 patients died during hospital admission, the study follow-up population consisted of 89 of 92 patients (mean age, 67+/-10 years). The age of the SVGs was 10+/-4 years.We implanted 118 Palmaz-Schatz and 3 Gianturco-Roubin stents. Procedural success was achieved in 87 of 92 patients (94.5%;50% stenosis, and no death, Q-wave acute myocardial infarction, or coronary artery bypass graft [CABG]). Mean SVG stenosis diameter was reduced from 80+/-13% to -11+/-12% (p0.001) and mean luminal diameter increased from 0.6+/-0.5 mm to 3.3+/-0.8 mm (p0.001). At follow-up, angina pectoris had developed in 42 of 89 patients (47%), acute myocardial infarction in 12 of 89 patients (14%), reperformed CABG in 12 of 89 patients (14%), cardiac death in 10 of 89 patients (11%), and unrelated death in 6 of 89 patients (7%). Coronary angiography was performed in 37 of 89 patients (42%), with restenosis in 16 of 37 patients (43%) and disease progression at other sites in 11 of 37 patients (30%). Only 25 of 89 patients (28%) experienced event-free survival at follow-up.Despite high procedural success and excellent angiographic results with oversized balloon catheters, the long-term clinical outcome of SVG stent implantation is suboptimal.
Databáze: OpenAIRE