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Cath Conference 7/9/08 Priya Pillutla, M.D. History • HPI – 58 y/o M presented in May ‘08 w/escalating chest pressure at rest and with exertion – Symptoms relieved with NTG; exertional chest pain better with rest – Cath planned but patient eloped; referred back from clinic for persistent chest pain • PMH – CAD, DJD – NSTEMI 11/07. Cath showed R dominant system, 90% proximal LAD stenosis s/p PCI (3.5x12mm taxus and 4x18mm driver) Priya Pillutla, MD History • Meds – Metoprolol, clopidigrel, simvastatin, lisinopril, NTG as needed, adderal • Allergies - ?iodine (no complications 11/07) • Social hx - Marginally housed, denies substance abuse – Utox + meth, cannabis • Family hx - noncontributory Priya Pillutla, MD Physical Exam VS – BP 128/65, HR 60, RR 13, 98% RA Disheveled JVP 7 cm H20. Neck supple, normal carotid upstrokes PMI nonsustained, nondisplaced. RRR nl s1/s2. No s3/s4. No murmurs. Lungs clear Abdomen soft, nontender No edema 2+ radial, femoral and dorsalis pedis pulses Priya Pillutla, MD Laboratory Data Electrolytes - K 4.5, Cr 0.8 Hematocrit - 40.8 Platelets - 230K INR - 1 Cardiac biomarkers - Troponin neg, CKMB normal x 3 Priya Pillutla, MD Priya Pillutla, MD Cardiac Catheterization Priya Pillutla, MD Summary • High-grade (95-99%) in-stent restenosis of the proximal LAD and proximal stent 40% stenosis • PCI of proximal LAD using cutting balloon (4x10mm) – Probable compliance issues given living situation and +utox • Excellent angiographic result with TIMI 3 flow and resolution of chest pain • Patient observed overnight and discharged the following day without complications • Missed cath f/u appointment Priya Pillutla, MD In-stent restenosis Can be seen in 5-35%1 of patients after PCI Somewhat lower after DES Mechanisms include: Negative remodeling Elastic recoil Neointimal hyperplasia 1Stone Priya Pillutla, MD et al, JAMA, 2005 Treatment options Angioplasty (PTCA, cutting balloon) High rates of restenosis1 (39-67%) Mechanical debulking (rotational, laser) Repeat stenting (BMS, DES) Intracoronary radiation (brachytherapy) 1Scheller Priya Pillutla, MD et al, NEJM, 2006 (Not shown - TAXUS V, showing that PES is better than brachytherapy) Priya Pillutla, MD Dauerman, JACC, 2006 Current effective treatments Brachytherapy Works well but considerable safety, logistical and technical issues Risk of stent-edge restenosis and thrombosis DES Recurrence rates 13-22%1 DES + DES = higher rate of restenosis2 (43%) Very small but serious risk of stent thrombosis 1Scheller 2Lemos Priya Pillutla, MD et al, NEJM, 2006 et al, Circulation, 2004 What’s special about DES? Drug-elution is key Can drug be delivered for a shorter time? Can lower levels of drug still attain antiproliferative effects? Data (cell-culture and swine experiments) suggest that both of the above are true! Priya Pillutla, MD Paclitaxel-Coated Balloon Angioplasty – PACCOCATH ISR NEJM, 2006 (Scheller et al) Hypothesis - Angioplasty using paclitaxel-coated balloons will prevent in-stent restenosis Balloon delivers all of the drug at once and is then withdrawn Priya Pillutla, MD Study design Double-blind, randomized pilot study Inclusion Angina or +functional study Single restenotic lesion Exclusion Recent MI, CKD, allergy Sick or noncompliant Long (>30mm) or small (<2.5mm) lesions <70% stenosis Significant calcification Thrombus Priya Pillutla, MD Study Design Patients randomized to Conventional PTCA PTCA with paclitaxel-coated balloon (3 ug/mm2) Angiography before, after and at 6 months using QCA (quantitative coronary angiography) ASA, plavix x 1 month then ASA alone Endpoints Primary – late luminal loss (lumen at 6 months vs after PTCA) Secondary – restenosis, combined clinical events Priya Pillutla, MD Results 52 patients 26 patients in each group Similar baseline and procedural characteristics Mean age 64 years 71% men Most patients had multi-vessel disease with diffuse ISR Priya Pillutla, MD Angiographic findings – 6 months Uncoated Coated p value 1.6 mm 2.3 mm 0.004 LLL (in-segment) 0.74 mm ** primary endpoint 0.03 mm 0.002 Restenosis (%) 5 0.002 MLD (in-stent) Priya Pillutla, MD 43 MLD = minimal lumen diameter; LLL = late lumen loss Priya Pillutla, MD Priya Pillutla, MD Priya Pillutla, MD Adverse events – related or possibly related to procedure Uncoated group 2 small groin hematomas 6 revascularizations, 1 unstable angina Coated group 3 small groin hematomas 1 MI (possibly related) ** Second MI noted in a patient randomized to uncoated balloon who erroneously received coated balloon, possibly related to balloon Priya Pillutla, MD Limitations Extremely small Not truly blinded – coated balloons had distinct appearance Should be studied in comparison with standard of care (DES) Anti-platelet agents only given for 1 month Was LLL an appropriate parameter? DES trials show that early LLL may not correlate well with restenosis Nevertheless results are encouraging Priya Pillutla, MD Summary In-stent restenosis continues to complicate PCIs Neoproliferation, negative remodeling and elastic recoil are causative factors Therapy Data most strongly supports DES at this time Drug-coated balloon PTCA is likely to be an emerging modality Priya Pillutla, MD