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Archive for the ‘Stents & Tools’ Category

First-of-Its-Kind FDA Approval for ‘AUI’ Device with Endurant II AAA Stent Graft: Medtronic Expands in Endovascular Aortic Repair in the United States

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

Medtronic, Inc. (MDT) Expands Endovascular Aortic Portfolio With Two New Devices

5/30/2013 8:39:47 AM

Medtronic Garners First-Of-Its-Kind FDA Approval for ‘AUI’ Device with Endurant II AAA Stent Graft 

MINNEAPOLIS — May 30, 2013 — Medtronic, Inc. (NYSE: MDT) is expanding its market-leading portfolio of products for endovascular aortic repair in the United States with two new medical devices: the company recently received approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the Endurant II Aorto-Uni-Iliac (AUI) Stent Graft System and the FDA’s 510(k) clearance for the Sentrant Introducer Sheath; both devices will be on exhibit at the Medtronic booth during the Society for Vascular Surgery‘s “Vascular Annual Meeting,” which runs May 30-June 2 in San Francisco.

Endurant II AUI Stent Graft System

The Endurant II AUI Stent Graft System is the only FDA-approved AUI device in the United States indicated for the primary endovascular treatment of infrarenal abdominal aortic or aorto-iliac aneurysms in patients whose anatomy does not allow for the use of a bifurcated device. Both the bifurcated and AUI configurations of the Endurant Stent Graft System provide a new pathway for blood flow through the iliac arteries in abdominal aortic aneurysms, thereby reducing risk of aneurysm rupture.

Whereas use of the bifurcated device requires access to both iliac arteries, the AUI device requires access to only one iliac artery (Endurant II Aorto-Uni-Iliac (AUI)). In published studies of endovascular abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair.

Current global usage of AUI stent graft configurations averages

  • 5 percent (range 0-26%) for intact AAA and
  • 39 percent (range 0-91%) for ruptured AAA.[i],[ii]

“The new Endurant II Aorto-Uni-Iliac Stent Graft extends the proven performance of the Endurant System to patients with difficult access,” said Dr. Michel Makaroun, chief of vascular surgery at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and co-director of the UPMC Heart and Vascular Institute. “By maintaining the deliverability, conformability and deployment accuracy of the bifurcated Endurant device, the AUI configuration offers aneurysm patients with challenging outflow anatomies a better option for a successful endovascular aortic repair.”

As with the bifurcated Endurant II Stent Graft, distinguishing features of the Endurant II AUI Stent Graft include a low delivery profile, tip capture for easy and accurate deployment and compatibility with contralateral iliac limbs and aortic extensions for ultimate patient applicability.

Sentrant Introducer Sheath

The Sentrant Introducer Sheath complements Medtronic’s market-leading portfolio of stent grafts for endovascular aortic repair. It is specially designed for use with the Endurant II AAA and Valiant Captivia Stent Graft Systems and is also compatible with competitive systems. The Sentrant Introducer Sheath is inserted at the access site

in the patient’s femoral artery and advanced upwards into the iliac arteries to facilitate the implant procedure and enable smooth passage of the stent graft delivery system en route to the treatment site in the aorta.

The Sentrant Introducer Sheath can accommodate a wide range of anatomies, with diameters of 12-26 French and shaft lengths of 28cm. Other distinguishing features of the accessory device include:

  • optimal seal for superior hemostasis,
  • reinforced coil for kink resistance,
  • hydrophilic coating and
  • flexibility for easy tracking through tortuous and calcified iliacs and a
  • dilator locking mechanism for secure positioning.

The Sentrant Introducer Sheath received the CE (Conformité Européenne) mark in April 2013. Its FDA clearance expands the accessory device’s availability to endovascular specialists in the United States.

In collaboration with leading clinicians, researchers and scientists, Medtronic offers the broadest range of innovative medical technology for the interventional and surgical treatment of cardiovascular disease and cardiac arrhythmias. The company strives to offer products and services that deliver clinical and economic value to healthcare consumers and providers worldwide.

ABOUT MEDTRONIC

Medtronic, Inc. (www.medtronic.com), headquartered in Minneapolis, is the global leader in medical technology-alleviating pain, restoring health and extending life for millions of people around the world.

Any forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties such as those described in Medtronic’s periodic reports on file with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Actual results may differ materially from anticipated results.

http://www.devicespace.com/news_story.aspx?NewsEntityId=298363&type=email&source=DS_053013

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Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

2013 GREAT DEBATE: THE BURNING ISSUES – BIORESORBABLE SCAFFOLDS AND DUAL ANTIPLATELET THERAPY

With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC

Watch the videoWatch the video

WATCH VIDEO

BIORESORBABLE SCAFFOLDS AND DUAL ANTIPLATELET THERAPY

SOURCE:

http://www.pcronline.com/EuroPCR/EuroPCR-2013/2013-Great-Debate-The-burning-issues-Bioresorbable-scaffolds-and-dual-antiplatelet-therapy

 

Full Program for May 21 to May 24, 2013 is presented, below

EUROPCR 2013, Paris 5/21-5/24, 2013 Conference for Cardiolovascular Intervention and Interventional Medicine

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/05/29/europcr-2013-paris-521-524-2013-conference-for-cardiolovascular-intervention-and-interventional-medicine/

 

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Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

PCR is an organisation dedicated to education and information in the field of cardiovascular therapies, most notably for cardiolovascular intervention and interventional medicine.
Its activities cover a large spectrum, from the organisation of annual courses in Europe, Asia and the Middle East to editing a scientific journal, publishing textbooks as well as providing training seminars on thematic subjects.

[92] TUESDAY 21 MAY

Abstract & Case Corner
Complex and unusual interventions for structural heart disease 12:30 – 13:30
Congenital disease treatment in children and adults 13:30 – 15:00
Challenges during percutaneous balloon mitral valvuloplasty 15:00 – 16:30
Percutaneous treatment of mitral regurgitation 16:45 – 18:15
Interactive Case Corner
Interactive case corner #1 13:15 – 14:45
Interactive case corner #2 15:00 – 16:30
Interactive case corner #3 16:45 – 18:15
Main arena
Opening 10:00 – 13:00
2013 Great Debate: The burning issues – Bioresorbable scaffolds and dual antiplatelet therapy 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC
13:00 – 14:30
Presentation of the 2013 Ethica award by Jean Fajadet & William Wijns 14:30 – 15:00
From late breaking trial to clinical practice 15:00 – 16:45
Moderated Poster Area
Moderated posters 1 16:45 – 18:15
PCR Sharing Centre
Understand what you see with the iPad Atlas of OCT – Interactive OCT image interpretation 14:00 – 15:30
Do you want to become comfortable with health economics? Practical example: is TAVI cost effective? 15:40 – 16:40
Peripheral Abstract & Case Corner
Renal artery stenting: what you cannot leave behind 12:30 – 14:00
Subclavian artery angioplasty: rare but real 14:00 – 15:30
In vascular disease, think global! 15:30 – 16:30
Room 241
Embolic stroke and cardiovascular interventions 13:30 – 15:00
RSICA@EuroPCR – Combined structural heart disease interventions 
With the collaboration of the Russian Scientific Society of Interventional Cardioangiology
15:00 – 16:30
Percutanous haemodynamic support in high-risk PCI and cardiogenic shock: your safety net in the cathlab 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ABIOMED
16:45 – 18:15
Room 242AB
How to decide between antegrade versus retrograde recanalisation of coronary chronic total occlusions? 12:30 – 13:30
Techniques for antegrade revascularisation of coronary chronic total occlusion 13:30 – 14:30
Techniques for retrograde coronary chronic total occlusion recanalisation 14:30 – 15:30
Coronary chronic total occlusion: from procedural success to long-term outcome 15:30 – 16:30
Coronary chronic total occlusion: set up your strategy to achieve success while keeping it simple 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ABBOTT VASCULAR
16:45 – 18:15
Room 243
A decade of experience with DES: insights from large registries and randomised clinical trials 12:30 – 14:00
DES: updated evidence from randomised clinical trials 14:00 – 15:00
Coronary perforation and interventional devices 15:00 – 16:30
Coronary dissection: management of rare and common cases 16:45 – 18:15
Room 251
Managing challenges during TAVI 12:30 – 14:00
Current and future technologies in the cathlab 14:00 – 15:30
TAVI update 15:30 – 16:30
Room 252AB
Renal denervation for resistant hypertension: procedural aspects, clinical effects and off-target indications 12:30 – 14:00
Selecting the right patient for catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation: a case-based discussion 14:00 – 15:30
Emerging technologies for transcatheter aortic valve therapies – Part I 
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15:30 – 16:30
Catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation: long-term Symplicity clinical evidence, new data and future perspectives 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC
16:45 – 18:15
Room 253
Interventional strategies for thrombus management in STEMI 12:30 – 14:00
Stent for Life and 2012 ESC STEMI guidelines implementation 14:00 – 15:30
Primary PCI for STEMI: prevention of thrombus embolism 15:30 – 16:30
Clot, too much clot, new clots: primary PCI for STEMI 16:45 – 18:15
Room 341
Outcome in contemporary coronary intervention 12:30 – 14:00
Cardiovascular Innovation Pipeline – New stents, scaffolds and drug-eluting balloons 14:00 – 15:30
Procedural factors determining outcome in high-risk patients 15:30 – 16:30
Novelties in peripheral interventions 16:45 – 17:45
Room 342A
Is there consensus in approach to coronary chronic total occlusion management? 
Under the auspices of the British Cardiovascular Intervention Society (BCIS) and the Cardiovascular Society of India
12:30 – 14:00
Patients in whom PCI is preferred over CABG 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Croatian Cardiac Society, the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Cyprus Society of Cardiology, the South African Society of Cardiovascular Interventions (SASCI) and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Serbian Society of Cardiology
14:00 – 16:30
Mechanical device support during PCI: when, to whom and which device? 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MAQUET Cardiovascular GETINGE GROUP
16:45 – 18:15
Room 342B
Use of intravascular imaging during PCI 12:30 – 13:30
Impact of IVUS in a real-world practice 13:30 – 14:30
Use of adjunctive imaging during PCI in ACS 14:30 – 15:30
Use of adjunctive imaging during PCI 15:30 – 16:30
Unsettled issues with oral antiplatelet therapy: which one? How much? How long? 16:45 – 18:15
Room 343
Risk scores to aid decision making between CABG and PCI – Role of SYNTAX Score II 12:30 – 14:00
Intra-coronary haemodynamic parameters for evaluation of coronary lesion severity during cardiac catheterisation: how should we use them for clinical decision making? 
Under the auspices of the British Cardiovascular Intervention Society (BCIS) and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Netherlands Society of Cardiology (WIC)
14:00 – 15:30
Percutaneous interventions for congenital disease 15:30 – 16:30
Strategies in percutaneous management of left main stem stenosis 16:45 – 18:15
Room 351
TAVI results from worldwide registries 12:30 – 14:00
Overcoming TAVI challenges 14:00 – 15:30
Managing difficulties during TAVI 15:30 – 16:30
Transapical TAVI and other surgical transcatheter techniques 
With an unrestricted educational grant from EDWARDS LIFESCIENCES, JENAVALVE, MEDTRONIC and SYMETIS S.A.
16:45 – 18:15
Room 352A
You are facing a patient who needs a PCI: how to build your strategy and select your material? 14:00 – 15:30
Clinical impact of stent design – What’s new in 2013? 15:30 – 16:30
How to prevent distal embolisation during PCI of diseased saphenous vein graft 16:45 – 18:15
Room 352B
Various imaging techniques for TAVI procedures 12:30 – 14:00
TAVI nightmares 
Under the auspices of the British Cardiovascular Intervention Society (BCIS) and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology (AGIK) of the German Society of Cardiology (DGK)
14:00 – 15:30
Percutaneous valve implantation for rare causes 15:30 – 16:30
TAVI: predictors of clinical outcomes 16:45 – 18:15
Room 353
Non-aortic transcatheter valvular interventions 12:30 – 13:30
All you need to know about interventions for mitral regurgitation 13:30 – 15:00
Percutaneous treatment options for degenerative mitral regurgitation 15:00 – 16:30
Atrial septal defect and left atrial appendage closure 16:45 – 18:15
Room Cordis
Training Village: Radial approach for coronary diagnostic and interventions – hands-on with the experts 
With an unrestricted educational grant from CORDIS CARDIAC & VASCULAR INSTITUTE
13:00 – 15:00
Training Village: Catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation: introduction to an irrigated technology 
With an unrestricted educational grant from CORDIS CARDIAC & VASCULAR INSTITUTE
15:30 – 16:30
Training Village: Catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation: introduction to an irrigated technology 
With an unrestricted educational grant from CORDIS CARDIAC & VASCULAR INSTITUTE
16:30 – 17:30
Training Village: Femoral artery access and haemostasis 
With an unrestricted educational grant from CORDIS CARDIAC & VASCULAR INSTITUTE
17:30 – 18:30
Room Maillot
Trials and innovations for peripheral interventions 13:00 – 14:00
Revascularisation strategies in patients with lower limb disease 14:00 – 16:30
Titanium-nitride-oxide active coated stents in renal applications: the true indications of renal stenting after ASTRAL and after the introduction of denervation 
With an unrestricted educational grant from HEXACATH
16:45 – 18:15
Room Medtronic Academia
Training Village: Hands-on introduction to the new Symplicity Spyral catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation system 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC ACADEMIA
13:00 – 14:30
Training Village: Hands-on introduction to the new Symplicity Spyral catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation system 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC ACADEMIA
14:45 – 16:15
Training Village: Hands-on introduction to the new Symplicity Spyral catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation system 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC ACADEMIA
16:30 – 18:00
Room St Jude Medical
Training Village: PCI optimisation – Focus on FFR 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
14:00 – 15:00
Training Village: PCI optimisation – Focus on FFR 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
15:15 – 16:15
Training Village: Left atrial appendage 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
15:45 – 17:15
Training Village: TAVI 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
16:30 – 17:30
Theatre Bleu
NIC@EuroPCR – Interventional procedures complicated with fatal outcome 
With the collaboration of the National Intervention Council of India
14:00 – 16:30
Left main PCI using transradial approach 
With an unrestricted educational grant from TERUMO
16:45 – 18:45
Theatre Bordeaux
Expanding the indication for TAVI: who, why and when? 14:30 – 16:30
Tips and tricks on the four key steps of left atrial appendage closure: selection, planning, imaging, and guidance 
PHILIPS and ST JUDE MEDICAL
16:45 – 18:45
Theatre Havane
Learning bifurcations – How to successfully perform PCI in your patient presenting complex bifurcation lesions requiring two stents 14:00 – 15:30
Interactive case-based discussion on complex bifurcations 15:40 – 16:30
Incorporating bioresorbable vascular scaffolds in daily clinical practice: the time has come 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ABBOTT VASCULAR

 

[173] WEDNESDAY 22 MAY

Abstract & Case Corner
Left main treatment: dedicated stents, complex strategies and post-CABG situation 08:00 – 09:30
Left main PCI for left main disease intervention: outcome in 2013 09:45 – 10:45
Treatment of left main stem stenosis in high-risk patients 10:45 – 11:45
Fistula and haematoma during PCI 12:00 – 13:00
PCI challenges: just another day in the cathlab? 13:00 – 14:00
Retrieval techniques of lost ‘bits and pieces’ during PCI 14:10 – 15:40
Unusual causes of ACS 15:40 – 16:40
Stent deformation during PCI 16:45 – 18:15
Interactive Case Corner
Interactive case corner #4 08:00 – 09:30
Interactive case corner #5 09:45 – 11:15
Interactive case corner #6 12:00 – 13:30
Interactive case corner #7 14:10 – 15:40
Interactive case corner #8 16:45 – 18:15
Main arena
Complex cardiovascular interventions and new techniques – Master LIVE demonstrations by Jean Fajadet & Talib Majwal and expert panel discussion 08:00 – 11:45
Complex cardiovascular interventions and new techniques – Master LIVE demonstrations by Karl Heinz Kuck & Talib Majwal and expert panel discussion 14:10 – 16:45
Moderated Poster Area
Moderated posters 2 12:00 – 14:00
Moderated posters 3 16:45 – 18:15
Nurses and Technicians Corner
Moderated posters 12:00 – 13:00
PCR Sharing Centre
Do you want to become comfortable with pathophysiology? Practical example: hypertensive patients 08:00 – 09:00
Understand what you see with the iPad Atlas of OCT – Interactive OCT image interpretation 09:45 – 11:15
Do you want to become comfortable with health economics? Practical example: is renal denervation cost effective? 14:10 – 15:10
Do you want to become comfortable with data analysis? 15:40 – 16:40
Peripheral Abstract & Case Corner
Thoraco-abdominal aneurysm treatment 08:00 – 09:30
Endovascular aortic aneurysm repair: an evergrowing story 09:45 – 10:45
Aortic aneurysms: fundamentals to innovation 10:45 – 11:45
Renal artery stenting: challenging but rewarding cases 12:00 – 13:00
How to manage aorto-renal rupture and dissection 13:00 – 14:00
Aneurysm and false aneurysm management for superficial femoral artery and popliteal artery 14:10 – 15:40
Multilevel vascular interventions 15:40 – 16:40
Complications and great saves on carotid interventions 16:45 – 17:45
Room 241
Percutaneous mitral valve repair with the MitraClip system: determinants of outcome 08:00 – 09:30
Technical and approach issues in renal artery stenting 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Bulgarian Society of Cardiology, the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Macedonian Society of Cardiology and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Romanian Society of Cardiology
09:45 – 11:45
Chronic total occlusion and multivessel disease: can novel imaging help to reduce risks? 
With an unrestricted educational grant from PHILIPS and INFRAREDX
12:00 – 13:00
Cardioprotective strategies to reduce ischaemic injury during PCI 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MENARINI
13:05 – 14:05
How to avoid patient-prosthesis mismatch and aortic regurgitation after aortic valve interventions 14:10 – 15:40
Hot Line – First-in-man in valvular heart disease 15:40 – 16:40
New frontiers – Exploring reduced contrast volume and fluoroscopy time with the GPSCath balloon dilatation catheter for complex percutaneous transluminal angioplasty procedures 
With an unrestricted educational grant from TELEFLEX
16:45 – 18:15
Room 242AB
Innovative stents and scaffolds 08:00 – 09:40
Emerging technologies for transcatheter aortic valve therapies – Part II 09:45 – 11:45
Real-world considerations for selecting antiplatelet therapy in high-risk ACS patients: putting evidence into clinical practice 
This educational programme is accredited by EBAC for one hour of External CME credit – Programme supported by an unrestricted educational grant from ASTRAZENECA
12:00 – 13:30
Hot Line – Trial updates and registries 14:10 – 15:10
Managing patients with unprotected left main coronary artery disease 
With the collaboration of China Interventional Therapeutics (CIT)
15:10 – 16:40
Catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation – Building momentum with the next generation Vessix system 
With an unrestricted educational grant from BOSTON SCIENTIFIC
16:45 – 18:15
Room 243
Challenging coronary artery intervention in ACS 
Under the auspices of the Iranian Society of Interventional Cardiology (ISOIC) and the Russian Society of Interventional Cardioangiology (RSICA)
08:00 – 09:30
Hot Line – First-in-man & novel DES and scaffolds 09:45 – 11:45
Management of complex coronary disease in Asia Pacific 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC
12:00 – 13:30
Complex cardiovascular intervention in patients primarily reported as ACS 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Czech Society of Cardiology and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Slovak Society of Cardiology
14:10 – 15:40
How to improve the STEMI treatment in large territories like Russia? 15:40 – 16:40
Impact of thrombus aspiration device on the results of primary PCI 16:45 – 18:15
Room 251
Primary PCI in complex STEMI with cardiogenic shock 08:00 – 09:30
Learning FFR – Assisting for FFR measurement in the cathlab 09:45 – 11:15
Synchronising polymer absorption and drug elution with the Synergy stent. Implications for healing and dual antiplatelet therapy duration 
With an unrestricted educational grant from BOSTON SCIENTIFIC
12:00 – 13:00
The Direct Flow valve: innovation for improving outcomes in TAVI 
With an unrestricted educational grant from DIRECT FLOW MEDICAL
13:05 – 14:05
Assisting for PCI through radial approach 14:10 – 15:40
Pre-procedure risk assessment to prevent complications after/during PCI 15:40 – 16:40
Clinical value of anti-restenosis and pro-healing Combo stent 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ORBUSNEICH
16:45 – 18:15
Room 252AB
How to treat a patient with complex multivessel disease and/or left main disease 
Under the auspices of the Argentine College of Interventional Cardioangiologist (CACI) and the Atheroma Coronary and Interventional Cardiology Group (GACI)
08:00 – 09:30
GRCI@EuroPCR – Challenging cases in the catheterisation laboratory: international viewpoint Gestion de cas complexes en salle de cathétérisme: approche internationale 
Bilingual session in collaboration with the GRCI (Groupe de Réflexion sur la Cardiologie Interventionnelle) Session bilingue en collaboration avec le GRCI (Groupe de Réflexion sur la Cardiologie Interventionnelle)
09:45 – 11:15
Advancing innovations in catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation 
CORDIS, JOHNSON & JOHNSON
12:00 – 13:30
Device-based interventions in heart failure: targeting deleterious mechanisms of heart failure progression 14:10 – 15:40
Novel devices for acute or chronic heart failure 15:40 – 16:40
DES and dual antiplatelet therapy: customising treatment duration to your patient 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ABBOTT VASCULAR
16:45 – 18:15
Room 253
Transradial approach for complex coronary interventions in patients with ACS 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Hungarian Society of Cardiology and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Macedonian Society of Cardiology
08:00 – 09:30
How to write a scientific manuscript and get it published! 09:45 – 10:45
From bench to cathlab: clinical implication of stent design 10:45 – 11:45
Conduction disturbances after TAVI 12:00 – 13:00
Overcoming TAVI challenges 13:00 – 14:00
Planning is the key to avoiding TAVI complications 
Under the auspices of the Association of Cardiovascular Interventions (ACVI) of the Polish Cardiac Society and the South African Society of Cardiovascular Intervention (SASCI)
14:10 – 15:40
How to write a scientific abstract and get it accepted! 15:40 – 16:40
Use of DES in specific subsets of patients/lesions 16:45 – 18:15
Room 341
Tough calls in primary PCI: STEMI and multivessel disease 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Israeli Heart Society and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Slovenian Society of Cardiology
08:00 – 09:30
Antegrade or retrograde strategy for coronary chronic total occlusion recanalisation? 09:45 – 10:45
Complicated coronary chronic total occlusion recanalisation 10:45 – 11:45
Resistant hypertension and its treatment across the world 
With an unrestricted educational grant from TERUMO
12:00 – 13:00
Coronary intervention in the elderly population 13:00 – 14:00
PCI in the elderly: when to stop, when to intervene 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Dutch Society of Cardiology and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology (GTCI) of the Tunisian Society of Cardiology and Cardiovascular Surgery
14:10 – 15:40
Percutaneous revascularisation from coronary chronic total occlusion: results from registries 15:40 – 16:40
Single-guide catheter techniques for retrograde recanalisations for coronary chronic total occlusions 16:45 – 18:15
Room 342A
Intravascular diagnostics – Does it really change our treatment strategy? 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Danish Society of Cardiology and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Norwegian Society of Cardiology
08:00 – 09:30
Multivessel disease: “a tale of two cities” 
Under the auspices of the British Cardiovascular Intervention Society (BCIS) and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Cyprus Society of Cardiology
09:45 – 11:15
Self-expanding stents: a NEW solution for patients presenting with atypical coronary anatomy 
With an unrestricted educational grant from STENTYS
12:00 – 13:30
Complex primary PCI in high-risk STEMI patients 14:10 – 15:40
Non-left main bifurcation stenting: tips and tricks 15:40 – 16:40
Ischaemia-driven revascularisation: the evolution of FFR in daily practice 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
16:45 – 18:15
Room 342B
Unusual causes of STEMI in young women 08:00 – 09:30
Different approaches for thrombus removal during primary PCI 09:45 – 10:45
Primary PCI for STEMI when stent is not the solution 10:45 – 11:45
Revascularisation strategies for multivessel disease patients: stents, bypasses or both? 12:00 – 13:00
Complex PCI in patients with multivessel disease 13:00 – 14:00
Challenging cases from Turkey 
With the collaboration of the Turkish Society of Cardiology’s Association of Percutaneous Cardiovascular Interventions
14:10 – 15:10
Individualised antiplatelet therapy based on testing or genotyping: idea from the past or solution for the future 15:40 – 16:40
Real life use of bioabsorbable vascular scaffold in coronary disease 16:45 – 18:15
Room 343
Patent foramen ovale closure in patients with cryptogenic stroke – Timed out or role respected? 
Under the auspices of the British Cardiovascular Intervention Society (BCIS) and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Danish Society of Cardiology
08:00 – 09:30
Multislice computed tomography: emerging indication in interventional cardiology 09:45 – 10:45
The role of non-invasive imaging to guide percutaneous coronary revascularisation procedures 10:45 – 11:45
FFR in the real world 12:00 – 13:00
FFR are we working with the best threshold? 13:00 – 14:00
STEMI and multivessel disease 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Georgian Society of Cardiology and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Kazakhstanese Society of Cardiology
14:10 – 15:40
Coronary aneurysms and ACS 15:40 – 16:40
Left ventricular assistance devices in acute ischaemic heart failure 16:45 – 18:15
Room 351
All you need to know about TAVI 08:00 – 09:30
New devices for TAVI 09:45 – 10:45
Percutaneous valve implantation: new valves and new indications 10:45 – 11:45
Complex patients today and tomorrow: Medtronic DES solutions from Resolute Integrity to bioresorbable stents 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC
12:00 – 13:30
All you need to know about OCT 14:10 – 15:40
Use of OCT during PCI 15:40 – 16:40
The Medtronic transcatheter valve programmes – Recapturability, transapical technology and mitral solutions 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC
16:45 – 18:15
Room 352A
You are facing an elderly patient presenting with high risk NSTE-ACS: how do you successfully perform PCI? 08:00 – 09:30
Radial approach – Fundamental rules 09:45 – 10:40
Radial approach – Navigation from radial to brachial 10:50 – 11:45
Radial access: anything new? 12:00 – 13:00
When there is no access site, remember that the arteries lead to the heart 13:00 – 14:00
You are facing a patient presenting with an acute STEMI: how do you successfully perform PCI? 14:10 – 15:40
Radial approach – Navigation from brachial artery to ascending aorta 15:45 – 16:40
Radial access: a gold standard worldwide? 16:45 – 18:15
Room 352B
TAVI: typical and atypical complications 
Under the auspices of the Association of Cardiovascular Interventions (ACVI) of Polish Cardiac Society and the Saudi Arabia Cardiology Interventional Group (SACIG) of the Saudia Heart Association
08:00 – 09:30
AICT@EuroPCR – How Asia performs PCI of coronary chronic total occlusion 
With the collaboration of the Asian Interventional Cardiovascular Therapeutics (AICT)
09:45 – 11:15
Titanium-nitride-oxide bioactive stent: the evidence-based choice in STEMI and NSTEMI patients 
With an unrestricted educational grant from HEXACATH
12:00 – 13:30
TAVI and coronary artery disease: what is the best treatment strategy? 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Latvian Society of Cardiology and the Russian Society of Interventional Cardioangiology
14:10 – 15:40
TAVI and coronary artery disease 15:40 – 16:40
A new combination of factor Xa inhibition and standard antiplatelet therapy to prevent more recurrent cardiovascular events in ACS 
With an unrestricted educational grant from BAYER HEALTHCARE PHARMACEUTICALS
16:45 – 18:15
Room 353
Czech Republic shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Czech Society of Cardiology
08:00 – 08:45
India shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Cardiovascular Society of India
08:45 – 09:30
Hungary shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Hungarian Society of Cardiology
09:45 – 10:30
Saudi Arabia shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Saudi Arabia Cardiology Interventional Society (SACIS) of the Saudia Heart Association
10:30 – 11:15
South Africa shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the South African Society of Cardiovascular Intervention (SASCI)
11:15 – 12:00
Diabetes and coronary artery disease: a bad association! 12:00 – 13:00
Renal function and clinical outcome after PCI 13:00 – 14:00
Switzerland shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Working Goup on Interventional Cardiology and ACS of the Swiss Society of Cardiology
14:10 – 14:55
United Kingdom shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the British Cardiovascular Intervention Society (BCIS)
14:55 – 15:40
Serbia shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Serbian Society of Cardiology
15:40 – 16:25
Iran shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Iranian Society of Interventional Cardiology (ISOIC)
16:45 – 17:30
Germany shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology (AGIK) of the German Society of Cardiology (DGK)
17:30 – 18:15
Room Cordis
Training Village: Radial approach for coronary diagnostic and interventions – hands-on with the experts 
With an unrestricted educational grant from CORDIS CARDIAC & VASCULAR INSTITUTE
09:00 – 11:00
Training Village: Catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation: introduction to an irrigated technology 
With an unrestricted educational grant from CORDIS CARDIAC & VASCULAR INSTITUTE
14:00 – 15:00
Training Village: Advanced tips and tricks: vessel preparation and post dilation 
With an unrestricted educational grant from CORDIS CARDIAC & VASCULAR INSTITUTE
15:30 – 16:30
Room Maillot
Carotid LIVE session: the “state-of-the-art” of stroke prevention 08:00 – 09:55
Access is key for carotid artery stenting in complex aortic arches 10:00 – 10:50
Embolic protection devices for carotid artery stenting 10:50 – 11:45
Access is critical 
With an unrestricted educational grant from COOK MEDICAL
12:00 – 13:30
Visceral and renal artery interventions 14:10 – 15:40
Guest lectures: how I survived the peripheral endovascular battle? 15:40 – 16:40
The evolving evidence of IN.PACT drug-eluting balloon in claudication and critical limb ischaemia 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC
16:45 – 18:15
Room Medtronic Academia
Training Village: Hands-on introduction to the new Symplicity Spyral catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation system 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC ACADEMIA
09:00 – 10:30
Training Village: Hands-on introduction to the new Symplicity Spyral catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation system 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC ACADEMIA
10:30 – 12:00
Training Village: Hands-on introduction to the new Symplicity Spyral catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation system 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC ACADEMIA
12:30 – 14:00
Training Village: Hands-on introduction to the new Symplicity Spyral catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation system 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC ACADEMIA
14:15 – 15:45
Training Village: Hands-on introduction to the new Symplicity Spyral catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation system 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC ACADEMIA
16:00 – 17:30
Room St Jude Medical
Training Village: Left atrial appendage 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
09:00 – 10:30
Training Village: TAVI 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
10:15 – 11:15
Training Village: Left atrial appendage 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
10:45 – 12:15
Training Village: TAVI 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
11:30 – 12:30
Training Village: TAVI 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
14:00 – 15:00
Training Village: TAVI 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
15:15 – 16:15
Training Village: Left atrial appendage 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
15:45 – 17:15
Training Village: TAVI 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
16:30 – 17:30
Talk ‘LIVE’ Corner
Talk ‘LIVE’ 17:00 – 18:30
Theatre Bleu
Structured care pathways for NSTE-ACS: best practice examples 08:00 – 09:30
Complex bifurcation stenting: LIVE demonstration of emerging techniques 09:45 – 11:45
Do we really need dedicated stents to treat bifurcation lesions? 
With an unrestricted educational grant from BIOSENSORS INTERNATIONAL
12:00 – 14:00
Bioresorbable coronary scaffolds in practice 14:10 – 16:10
Acurate positioning of transapical and transfemoral aortic valves with self-seating and self-sealing design 
With an unrestricted educational grant from SYMETIS S.A.
16:45 – 18:45
Theatre Bordeaux
The best way to diagnose ischaemia in my patient? Convince me! Personal views from interventional cardiologists 08:00 – 09:30
Can left atrial appendage or patent foramen ovale closure prevent embolic stroke? 09:45 – 11:45
Optimising PCI outcomes using OCT and FFR in patients with stable and acute coronary artery disease 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
12:00 – 14:00
What to do with coronary artery disease in TAVI candidates? 14:10 – 16:10
The next frontier for catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation for patients with resistant hypertension 
With an unrestricted educational grant from COVIDIEN
16:45 – 18:45
Theatre Havane
Learning access for TAVI – Access options for TAVI 08:00 – 09:30
Learning transseptal puncture and mitral balloon valvuloplasty – Transseptal puncture and mitral balloon valvuloplasty made easy 10:15 – 11:45
An in-depth look into the BIOFLOW trials: a modern limus-eluting stent with bioabsorbable polymer 
With an unrestricted educational grant from BIOTRONIK
12:00 – 13:30
Learning atrial closure procedures – Patent foramen ovale and left atrial appendage closure made easy 14:10 – 15:40
Interactive case-based discussion – complications on atrial closure procedures 15:45 – 16:40
Interventional management of high-risk ACS and STEMI: don’t just do it… do it right! 
With an unrestricted educational grant from TERUMO and THE MEDICINES COMPANY
16:45 – 18:15

[172] THURSDAY 23 MAY

Abstract & Case Corner
FFR or IVUS to guide coronary revascularisation? Do you believe in morphology or function? 08:00 – 09:30
Role of imaging in in-stent restenosis 09:45 – 10:45
Diagnostics and management of stent fracture 10:45 – 11:45
PCI of totally occluded saphenous vein graft 12:00 – 13:00
Interventional management of unusual causes of angina 13:00 – 14:00
The role of drug-eluting balloons in contemporary coronary intervention 14:10 – 15:40
Management of late in-stent restenosis 15:40 – 16:40
Coronary perforation management 16:45 – 17:45
Interactive Case Corner
Interactive case corner #9 08:00 – 09:30
Interactive case corner #10 09:45 – 11:15
Interactive case corner #11 12:00 – 13:30
Interactive case corner #12 14:10 – 15:40
Interactive case corner #13 16:45 – 18:15
Main arena
Complex cardiovascular interventions and new techniques – Master LIVE demonstrations by Corrado Tamburino, Martyn Thomas & Simon Redwood and expert panel discussion 08:00 – 11:45
Complex cardiovascular interventions and new techniques – Master LIVE demonstrations by Christian Hamm & Corrado Tamburino and expert panel discussion 14:10 – 16:45
Moderated Poster Area
Moderated posters 4 12:00 – 14:00
Moderated posters 5 16:45 – 18:15
PCR Sharing Centre
Understand what you see with the iPad Atlas of OCT – Interactive OCT image interpretation 08:00 – 09:30
Do you want to be more confident when developing and delivering PowerPoint presentations? 14:10 – 15:10
Do you want to become comfortable with data analysis? 15:40 – 16:40
Peripheral Abstract & Case Corner
Tips and tricks in carotid artery stenting 08:00 – 09:30
Carotid artery stenting: clinical outcome 09:45 – 10:45
Acute procedural events in carotid artery stenting 10:45 – 11:45
Carotid artery stenting: novelties in risk assessment 12:00 – 13:00
Carotid artery stenting: challenging scenarios 13:00 – 14:00
Aorto-iliac angioplasty: what is new in 2013 14:10 – 15:40
Iliac angioplasty 15:40 – 16:40
Complex aortic interventions 
With the collaboration of the International Society of Endovascular Specialists
16:45 – 18:15
Room 241
How I treat complications after peripheral endovascular intervention 
Under the auspices of the Italian Society for Vascular and Endovascular Surgery (SICVE) and the Vascular Surgery Society of Southern Africa (VASSA)
08:00 – 09:30
Cardiovascular Innovation Pipeline – New valves and devices 09:45 – 10:45
Radiation safety during PCI 10:45 – 11:45
Innovating vascular restoration: paving the way for the DESolve scaffold platform 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ELIXIR MEDICAL
12:00 – 13:30
How to prevent and treat ilio-femoral complications of TAVI? 14:10 – 15:40
Emerging technologies for transcatheter mitral valve therapies 2013 – Part I: transcatheter mitral valve repair devices 15:40 – 16:40
Tryton growing clinical experience and data displacing provisional stenting? 
With an unrestricted educational grant from TRYTON MEDICAL
16:45 – 18:15
Room 242AB
Challenges in complex percutaneous valve treatment: the combination of aortic stenosis and significant functional mitral regurgitation 08:00 – 09:30
Preclinical studies of upcoming bioresorbable scaffolds 09:45 – 11:45
The Embolic Protection Stent – Beyond current techniques: a more effective solution in STEMI primary PCI 
With an unrestricted educational grant from INSPIRE MD
12:00 – 13:30
Effect of catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation: is there a role beyond resistant hypertension? 14:10 – 15:40
Contribution of renal denervation to the treatment of resistant hypertension: a health technology assessment perspective 15:40 – 16:40
Edwards TAVI: a predictable procedure with sustained clinical results 
With an unrestricted educational grant from EDWARDS LIFESCIENCES
16:45 – 18:15
Room 243
PCI of bifurcation lesions: results from registries and new dedicated stents 08:00 – 09:30
Non-left main bifurcation stenting: tips and tricks 09:45 – 10:45
Non-left main bifurcation lesions: tips and tricks 10:45 – 11:45
Stent thrombosis: management challenges 12:00 – 13:00
Very late stent thrombosis 13:00 – 14:00
Innovations in Cardiovascular Interventions@EuroPCR 2013 
With the collaboration of Innovations in Cardiovascular Interventions (ICI)
14:10 – 15:40
Intervention for prevention of stroke 15:40 – 16:40
Stent thrombosis: new evidence from clinical trials and registries 16:45 – 18:15
Room 251
Best clinical abstract presentations 08:00 – 09:30
Best nurse research abstract session 09:45 – 11:15
Nurses and Technicians best presentation award and closing ceremony 11:15 – 11:45
The Portico TAVI system – How new design translates into clinical results 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
12:00 – 13:00
Emerging clinical use of drug-eluting balloons in challenging atherosclerotic lesions 
With an unrestricted educational grant from BIOTRONIK
13:05 – 14:05
Challenging cases from Taiwan 
With the collaboration of the Taiwan Society of Cardiovascular Interventions
14:10 – 15:40
Left main dissection during PCI 15:40 – 16:40
Cre8: welcome back confidence in short dual antiplatelet therapy with effective DES 
With an unrestricted educational grant from CID
16:45 – 18:15
Room 252AB
All you need to know about catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation 08:00 – 09:30
Antiplatelet and antithrombotic therapy in PCI: a balancing act 09:45 – 11:15
Clinical update on EnligHTN, the original multi-electrode catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation system 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
12:00 – 13:30
Up-to-date primary PCI technique 14:10 – 15:40
GPIIbIII inhibitors : still useful in 2013? 15:40 – 16:40
What do YOU think? A case-based discussion on biodegradable versus durable polymer DES in complex patients 
With an unrestricted educational grant from BIOSENSORS INTERNATIONAL
16:45 – 18:15
Room 253
Restenosis after failure of CABG and PCI 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Danish Society of Cardiology and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Finnish Society of Cardiology
08:00 – 09:30
How to write a scientific manuscript and get it published! 09:45 – 10:45
ABC for biotechnology innovators@EuroPCR 
With the collaboration of Innovations in Cardiovascular Interventions (ICI)
10:45 – 11:45
Tools and techniques for PCI of coronary chronic total occlusion 12:00 – 13:00
How to treat coronary chronic total occlusion with limited resources and material? 13:00 – 14:00
New challenges for high-risk primary PCI in 2013 
Under the auspices of the Association of Cardiovascular Interventions (ACVI) of the Polish Cardiac Society and the Working Group of Acute Cardiology of the Slovenian Society of Cardiology
14:10 – 15:40
The unusual coronary chronic total occlusion: recanalisation in bypass patients, acute myocardial infarction and anomalous coronaries 15:40 – 16:40
New generation DES: comparison with older DES 16:45 – 18:15
Room 341
Prevention and management of complications after TAVI 
Under the auspices of the Portuguese Association for Interventional Cardiology (APIC) and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Spanish Society of Cardiology
08:00 – 09:30
Incidence and prevention of cerebrovascular events after TAVI 09:45 – 10:45
Challenges before, during and after TAVI 10:45 – 11:45
TAVI and bleeding complication 12:00 – 13:00
TAVI and kidney injury 13:00 – 14:00
TAVI with coronary artery disease 
Under the auspices of the Working Goup on Interventional Cardiology (EWGIC) of the Egyptian Society of Cardiology and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Lebanese Society of Cardiology
14:10 – 15:40
TAVI in unique clinical scenarios 15:40 – 16:40
TAVI technical issues 16:45 – 18:15
Room 342A
How to treat a patient with significant paravalvular leak after TAVI 
Under the auspices of the British Cardiovascular Intervention Society (BCIS) and the Atheroma Coronary and Interventional Cardiology Group (GACI)
08:00 – 09:30
Interventional treatment of acute ischaemic stroke: which role for STEMI networks? 09:45 – 11:45
Self-expanding stents: a NEW solution to optimise primary PCI beyond the open artery 
With an unrestricted educational grant from STENTYS
12:00 – 13:30
Cardiovascular Innovation Pipeline – Treatment of resistant hypertension 14:10 – 15:40
Hot Line – Registries and first-in-man for structural heart disease 15:40 – 16:40
Patient with STEMI: learn the best from East and West 
With an unrestricted educational grant from TERUMO
16:45 – 18:15
Room 342B
Determinants of outcome in STEMI patients 08:00 – 09:30
Resuscitated cardiac arrest – Burning interventional questions 09:45 – 11:45
Updates on contrast-induced nephropathy 12:00 – 13:00
Updates on myocardial revascularisation in patients with chronic kidney disease and haemodialysis 13:00 – 14:00
Unusual causes of STEMI 14:10 – 15:40
You cannot miss this great session on Rotablator! 15:40 – 16:40
Rotational atherectomy in complex coronary cases 16:45 – 18:15
Room 343
Challenges in acute myocardial infarction 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Austrian Society of Cardiology and the Working Goup on Interventional Cardiology and ACS of the Swiss Society of Cardiology
08:00 – 09:30
New methods for physiological assessment of coronary stenosis? 09:45 – 10:45
Complex PCI: which role for self-expanding stents? 10:45 – 11:45
Clinical value of IVUS during ACS: when you lose your way 12:00 – 13:00
Clinical value of IVUS: what others don’t tell 13:00 – 14:00
Challenging prosthetic mitral valve malfunction 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology (AGIK) of the German Cardiac Society (DGK) and the Working Group on Invasive Cardiology of the Italian Society of Invasive Cardiology (SICI-GISE)
14:10 – 15:40
Clinical value of IVUS during coronary chronic total occlusion PCI: with a little help from your friend 15:40 – 16:40
Room 351
All you need to know about bioresorbable scaffolds 08:00 – 09:30
Hot Line – Evolving procedural strategies 09:45 – 11:45
Treating complex lesions and patients with bioresorbable vascular scaffolds 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ABBOTT VASCULAR
12:00 – 13:30
Bioresorbable vascular scaffolds in chronic total occlusions and calcified lesions 14:10 – 15:40
Bioresorbable scaffolds: clinical results 15:40 – 16:40
Complex cases of mitral regurgitation: how far can you go with MitraClip? 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ABBOTT VASCULAR
16:45 – 18:15
Room 352A
You are a practitioner who wishes to successfully start a peripheral percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) programme 08:00 – 09:30
Radial approach – Cannulation of the targeted vessels ostia 09:45 – 10:40
Forum on radial approach 10:50 – 11:45
Difficult diagnosis and management of ACS 12:00 – 13:00
Acute heart failure due to ACS 13:00 – 14:00
Cardiovascular Innovation Pipeline – Novel interventional approaches for heart failure 15:40 – 16:40
Radial access: problem or solution? 16:45 – 18:15
Room 352B
All you need to know about treatment of coronary chronic total occlusion 08:00 – 09:30
Renal denervation: novel approaches and first-in-man results 09:45 – 10:45
Management of intra-coronary thrombus during primary PCI 10:45 – 11:45
Provisional treatment approach of a distal left main and true bifurcation lesion: combination of a dedicated stent in the main branch and drug-eluting balloon in the side branch 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MINVASYS
12:00 – 13:30
EuroIntervention / European Heart Journal@EuroPCR 14:10 – 15:40
Unusual presentation of coronary aneurysms 15:40 – 16:40
How to treat aorto-ostial coronary dissection 16:45 – 18:15
Room 353
Tunisia shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology (GTCI) of the Tunisian Society of Cardiology and Cardiovascular Surgery
08:00 – 08:45
Italy shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Invasive Cardiology of the Italian Society of Invasive Cardiology (SICI-GISE)
08:45 – 09:30
Egypt shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology (EWGIC) of the Egyptian Society of Cardiology
09:45 – 10:30
Kazakhstan shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Association of Cardiologists of Kazakhstan
11:15 – 12:00
Stent dislodgement during PCI 12:00 – 13:00
Aortic damage during percutaneous intervention 13:00 – 14:00
Spain shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Spanish Society of Cardiology
14:10 – 14:55
Sweden shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Swedish Society of Cardiology
14:55 – 15:40
Argentina shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Argentine College of Interventional Cardioangiologist (CACI)
15:40 – 16:25
Portugal shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Portuguese Association for Interventional Cardiology (APIC)
16:45 – 17:30
Greece shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Hellenic Cardiological Society
17:30 – 18:15
Room Cordis
Training Village: Endovascular complication management: renal access 
With an unrestricted educational grant from CORDIS CARDIAC & VASCULAR INSTITUTE
09:00 – 10:00
Training Village: Catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation: introduction to an irrigated technology 
With an unrestricted educational grant from CORDIS CARDIAC & VASCULAR INSTITUTE
10:30 – 11:30
Training Village: Radial approach for coronary diagnostic and interventions – hands-on with the experts 
With an unrestricted educational grant from CORDIS CARDIAC & VASCULAR INSTITUTE
13:00 – 15:00
Training Village: Advanced Exoseal: achieving haemostasis and managing access site complications 
With an unrestricted educational grant from CORDIS CARDIAC & VASCULAR INSTITUTE
15:30 – 16:30
Training Village: Importance of vessel pre- and post- dilatation for better patient outcomes 
With an unrestricted educational grant from CORDIS CARDIAC & VASCULAR INSTITUTE
16:45 – 18:00
Room Maillot
Solutions for complex abdominal aortic aneurysm 08:00 – 09:55
Therapeutic embolisation – Part I: tools and techniques for coronary and peripheral arteries 10:00 – 11:45
Left atrial appendage closure for stroke prevention: what every interventional cardiologist should know 
With an unrestricted educational grant from BOSTON SCIENTIFIC
12:00 – 13:00
New hopes for critical limb ischaemia 
With an unrestricted educational grant from TERUMO
13:05 – 14:05
Solutions for complex thoracic aortic disease 14:10 – 15:40
Therapeutic embolisation – Part II: clinical applications for coronary and peripheral arteries 15:40 – 16:40
Titanium-nitride-oxide active stent in ACS patients with or without bleeding risks 
With an unrestricted educational grant from HEXACATH
16:45 – 18:15
Room Medtronic Academia
Training Village: Hands-on introduction to the new Symplicity Spyral catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation system 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC ACADEMIA
09:00 – 10:30
Training Village: Hands-on introduction to the new Symplicity Spyral catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation system 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC ACADEMIA
10:30 – 12:00
Training Village: Hands-on introduction to the new Symplicity Spyral catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation system 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC ACADEMIA
12:30 – 14:00
Training Village: Hands-on introduction to the new Symplicity Spyral catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation system 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC ACADEMIA
14:15 – 15:45
Training Village: Hands-on introduction to the new Symplicity Spyral catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation system 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC ACADEMIA
16:00 – 17:30
Room St Jude Medical
Training Village: PCI optimisation – Focus on OCT 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
09:00 – 10:00
Training Village: PCI optimisation – Focus on OCT 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
10:15 – 11:15
Training Village: Left atrial appendage 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
10:45 – 12:15
Training Village: TAVI 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
11:30 – 12:30
Training Village: TAVI 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
14:00 – 15:00
Training Village: TAVI 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
15:15 – 16:15
Training Village: Left atrial appendage 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
15:45 – 17:15
Training Village: TAVI 
With an unrestricted educational grant from ST. JUDE MEDICAL
16:30 – 17:30
Talk ‘LIVE’ Corner
Talk ‘LIVE’ 17:00 – 18:30
Theatre Bleu
Revascularisation in a patient with ischaemic heart failure and reduced left ventricular function 08:00 – 09:30
Treatment of coronary chronic total occlusion: Japan meets Europe 
With the collaboration of Complex Cardiovascular Therapeutics (CCT)
09:45 – 11:45
Left main and complex bifurcation stenting 
With an unrestricted educational grant from TERUMO
12:00 – 14:00
Am I treating the right lesion? Angiography versus ischaemia-based coronary revascularisation in stable coronary artery disease patients 14:10 – 16:10
Catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation: introducing the new Symplicity Spyral and Flex systems 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC
16:45 – 18:45
Theatre Bordeaux
Enabling technologies for TAVI 08:00 – 09:30
Percutaneous treatment options for functional mitral regurgitation 09:45 – 11:45
Optimising TAVI procedures and patients outcomes: Medtronic’s new technologies and valve-in-valve procedure with Evolut 
With an unrestricted educational grant from MEDTRONIC
12:00 – 14:00
Valve-in-valve 14:10 – 16:10
Physiological stenosis assessment with FFR and instant wave-free ratio: we need both! 
With an unrestricted educational grant from VOLCANO
16:45 – 18:45
Theatre Havane
Optimal management of your NSTE-ACS patient with complex multivessel disease 08:00 – 09:30
Learning renal denervation – Critical appraisal on device-based therapies targeting the sympathetic system 09:45 – 11:45
Contemporary ACS antithrombotic therapy 
With an unrestricted educational grant from THE MEDICINES COMPANY
12:00 – 13:30
Learning ostial PCI – How to successfully perform PCI in a patient presenting ostial left main and ostial right coronary artery 14:10 – 15:40
Interactive case-based discussion – complications on ostial PCI 15:45 – 16:40
Contemporary coronary chronic total occlusion PCI: integrating the hybrid approach to your practice 
With an unrestricted educational grant from BOSTON SCIENTIFIC
16:45 – 18:15

 

 

 

[59] FRIDAY 24 MAY

Abstract & Case Corner
How to close paravalvular leak 09:00 – 10:30
Cases you have never seen 10:45 – 11:45
Unusual cases in the cathlab: diagnostic challenges 11:45 – 12:45
Interactive Case Corner
Interactive case corner #14 09:00 – 10:30
Interactive case corner #15 10:45 – 12:15
Main arena
Complex cardiovascular interventions and new techniques – Master LIVE demonstrations by Farrel Hellig, Martyn Thomas & Simon Redwood and expert panel discussion 09:00 – 13:00
PCR Sharing Centre
Do you want to be more confident when developing and delivering PowerPoint presentations? 09:00 – 10:00
Peripheral Abstract & Case Corner
Femoro-popliteal angioplasty : could new devices improve mid-term follow-up? 09:00 – 10:30
Chronic total occlusion revascularisation for superficial femoral artery 10:45 – 12:15
Room 241
Bioresorbable versus durable polymer coatings for DES 09:00 – 10:30
All you need to know about drug-coated balloons in coronary and peripheral vascular disease 10:45 – 12:15
Room 242A
Fully-absorbable jacket, in-stent restenosis and bypasses: new avenues for bioabsorbable vascular scaffolds? 09:00 – 10:30
Bioresorbable scaffolds: lessons learned from intracoronary imaging 10:45 – 11:45
Managing difficult stent cases 11:45 – 12:45
Room 242B
Challenging cases of saphenous vein graft interventions 09:00 – 10:30
Overcoming challenges during PCI 10:45 – 11:45
Helpful techniques during “extreme” PCI 11:45 – 12:45
Room 243
Predictors of in-stent restenosis and stent thrombosis after DES implantation 09:00 – 10:30
Stent thrombosis: overcoming challenging scenarios 10:45 – 12:15
Room 251
Emerging technologies for transcatheter mitral valve therapies 2013 – Part II: transcatheter replacement technologies 09:00 – 11:00
Novel catheter-based therapies of mitral regurgitation 11:00 – 12:00
Room 252A
Developments in percutaneous closure of the left atrial appendage 09:00 – 10:30
Percutaneous treatment of complex coronary aneurysms 10:45 – 11:45
Percutaneous management of complex coronary aneurysms 11:45 – 12:45
Room 252B
Primary PCI when the left main is the culprit 09:00 – 10:30
Primary PCI when the left main is the culprit 10:45 – 11:45
Left main dissection during PCI 11:45 – 12:45
Room 253
Below-the-knee angioplasty: risk stratification and DES benefits 09:00 – 10:00
Severe aortic stenosis combined with coronary artery disease in high-risk patient 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Hellenic Cardiological Society and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Israeli Heart Society
10:45 – 12:15
Room 341
Slow flow and no flow in PCI, not only in ACS: how to prevent and how to treat it? 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Danish Society of Cardiology and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Swedish Society of Cardiology
09:00 – 10:30
Renal denervation for resistant hypertension 10:45 – 12:15
Room 342A
Cardiogenic shock and intra-aortic balloon pump 
Under the auspices of the Luxembourg Society of Cardiology and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Norwegian Society of Cardiology
09:00 – 10:30
PCI of bifurcation lesions: impact of procedural techniques on clinical outcome 10:45 – 11:45
Bifurcation lesion: problems and solutions 11:45 – 12:45
Room 342B
TAVI or not TAVI: that is the question 
Under the auspices of the British Cardiovascular Intervention Society (BCIS) and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Spanish Society of Cardiology
09:00 – 10:30
Unfrequent indications for TAVI 10:45 – 11:45
TAVI in patients with previous cardiac valve operations 11:45 – 12:45
Room 343
Insights from OCT 09:00 – 10:30
Importance of OCT during PCI today 10:45 – 12:15
Room 351
Primary PCI for STEMI 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology (BWGIC) of the Belgium Society of Cardiology and the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Scottish Cardiac Society
09:00 – 10:30
All you need to know about radial approach for PCI 10:45 – 12:15
Room 352A
Learning rotablator – How to easily and successfully use rotational atherectomy 09:00 – 10:30
Novel techniques using rotational atherectomy 10:45 – 12:15
Room 352B
All you need to know about antiplatelet and antithrombotic pharmacology for PCI: NSTEMI and STEMI 09:00 – 10:30
Management of acute coronary artery occlusion during PCI 10:45 – 11:45
Retrieval of ‘things’ left behind during PCI 11:45 – 12:45
Room 353
Israel shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Israeli Heart Society
09:00 – 09:45
Macedonia shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Macedonian Society of Cardiology
09:45 – 10:30
Cyprus shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Cyprus Society of Cardiology
10:45 – 11:30
Austria shares its most educational cases 
Under the auspices of the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the Austrian Society of Cardiology
11:30 – 12:15
Room Maillot
Hybrid angio suite 09:00 – 10:30
Large size percutaneous access for endoaortic procedures 10:45 – 12:45
Theatre Bleu
Coronary perforation: management and implications 09:00 – 10:30
Device-based left ventricular cavity reduction in heart failure 10:45 – 12:15
Theatre Bordeaux
SOLACI@EuroPCR 
With the collaboration of the Sociedad Latino Americana de Cardiologia Intervencionista (SOLACI)
09:00 – 10:30
Tips and tricks for a successful catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation in difficult anatomies 10:45 – 12:45
Theatre Havane
Optimal management of your patient with coronary chronic total occlusion 09:00 – 10:30
The ‘undefeatable’ coronary chronic total occlusion: warriors at work 10:45 – 11:45
Challenging retrograde recanalisations of coronary chronic total occlusion 11:45 – 12:45
 SOURCE:

 

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Svelte Medical Systems’ Drug-Eluting Stent: 0% Clinically-Driven Events Through 12-Months in First-In-Man Study

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

Svelte Drug-Eluting Stent Utilizing New Class of Bioabsorbable Drug Coating Attains 0% Clinically-Driven Events Through 12-Months in First-In-Man Study

NEW PROVIDENCE, N.J.–(May 23, 2013)–Final 6 and 12-month results of the DIRECT first-in-man clinical study were presented by study principal investigator Dr. Mark Webster at the late-breaking clinical trials session of the EuroPCR meeting yesterday in Paris, France. No patients experienced clinically-driven TLR, TVR or MACE at 6 months, with results sustained through 12 months. It is believed the Svelte drug-eluting stent is the first ever to achieve 0% clinically-driven MACE through 12 months in a independent core-lab and DSMB adjudicated clinical study.

The Svelte drug-eluting stent utilizes a new class of drug coating composed of a fully bioabsorbable, amino acid-based drug carrier mixed with the well-known anti-proliferative compound sirolimus. Amino acids occur naturally in the human body, providing a non-inflammatory and inherently bio-friendly drug-eluting platform. Unlike current-generation bioabsorbable coatings relying on hydrolysis for absorption, amino acids undergo gradual enzyme-based surface erosion with no bulk degradation or pH change activating an inflammatory response.

Invasive imaging at 6 months in the DIRECT study corroborates these clinical outcomes, revealing stent volume obstruction of 2.7%, approximately one-half that observed in current-generation, market-leading drug-eluting stent first-in-man studies. Optical coherence tomography revealed 98% of stent struts were fully covered, indicative of low inflammation and consistent vessel healing.

The DIRECT (Direct Implantation of Rapamycin-eluting stent with bio-Eroding Carrier Technology) study evaluated the Svelte drug-eluting stent mounted on a fixed-wire Integrated Delivery System (IDS) in 30 patients at 4 sites in New Zealand. Providing the lowest crimped stent profile on the market, the Svelte system facilitates use of the transradial approach and general downsizing of the access site, while allowing access to more difficult to cross and distal lesions. The IDS also incorporates proprietary Balloon Control Band (BCB) technology providing uniform and controlled balloon growth, even at high pressures, to safely perform direct stenting as well as high-pressure post-dilatation, thereby minimizing procedure time and cost. This balloon technology will also be available with a rapid-exchange delivery system at commercial launch.

Approximately one-fifth of patients in the study were diabetic, while one-half presented with Type B2 or C lesions. Procedural success was 100% and device success was 97%. Study results are published in the current issue of EuroIntervention, the official journal of EuroPCR and the European Association of Percutaneous Cardiovascular Interventions (EAPCI).

The Svelte drug-eluting stent is currently under evaluation in the DIRECT II study. DIRECT II is a prospective, randomized, multi-center clinical study comparing the safety and efficacy of the Svelte drug-eluting coronary stent mounted on the IDS to Medtronic’s Resolute Integrity™ drug-eluting stent. The DIRECT II study will enroll 159 patients at up to 20 clinical sites in Europe and Brazil to assess the

  • primary endpoints of target vessel failure (TVF) and
  • in-stent late loss (LL).

All patients are scheduled to receive 6-month clinical and angiographic follow-up, with clinical follow-up through 5 years. A subset of patients will receive optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging at 6 months.

Headquartered in New Providence, New Jersey, Svelte Medical Systems (www.sveltemedical.com) is a privately-held company engaged in the development of highly deliverable balloon expandable stents.

http://www.cathlabdigest.com/Svelte-Drug-Eluting-Stent-Utilizing-New-Class-Bioabsorbable-Drug-Coating-Attains-0-Clinically-Driven

RELATED SOURCES:

Bioabsorbable Drug Coating Scaffolds, Stents and Dual Antiplatelet Therapy

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=13686&action=edit&message=6&postpost=v2

Full Program for May 21 to May 24, 2013 is presented, below

EUROPCR 2013, Paris 5/21-5/24, 2013 Conference for Cardiolovascular Intervention and Interventional Medicine

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/05/29/europcr-2013-paris-521-524-2013-conference-for-cardiolovascular-intervention-and-interventional-medicine/

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Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

In this Journal Stent technology was researched thoroughly, the reader is advised to enrich his/hers knowledge on Re-vascularization technology by reviewing the following articles and the bibliography in each of them:

Coronary Artery Disease – Medical Devices Solutions: From First-In-Man Stent Implantation, via Medical Ethical Dilemmas to Drug Eluting Stents

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 8/13/2012

Drug Eluting Stents: On MIT’s Edelman Lab’s Contributions to Vascular Biology and its Pioneering Research on DES

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, Author and  Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN, Curator 4/25/2013

Vascular Repair: Stents and Biologically Active Implants

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, Author and  Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN, Curator 5/4/2013

Biomaterials Technology: Models of Tissue Engineering for Reperfusion and Implantable Devices for Revascularization 5/5/2013

Revascularization: PCI, Prior History of PCI vs CABG

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 4/25/2013

To Stent or Not? A Critical Decision

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 10/23/2012

New Drug-Eluting Stent Works Well in STEMI

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 8/22/2012

OrbusNeich seizes Boston Scientific stents in Germany as part of patent infringement proceedings

May 21, 2013

OrbusNeich seizes Boston Scientific stents in Germany as part of patent infringement proceedings

WIESBADEN, Germany, May 21, 2013 /PRNewswire/ — Medical device manufacturer OrbusNeich Medical Inc. and its subsidiary, OrbusNeich Medical GmbH (collectively “OrbusNeich”) today announced that it has enforced the seizure of over 190 stent systems from Boston Scientific Corporation (NYSE: BSX) in connection with its patent infringement proceedings in the Dusseldorf Regional Court. The products were found on May 15, 2013, at the premises of Boston Scientific Medizintechnik GmbH in Ratingen (Germany), the German subsidiary of Boston Scientific Corporation (collectively “Boston Scientific”).

In violation of the Court’s April 30, 2013 Preliminary Injunction, Boston Scientific initially denied access to search its premises – the court’s decision grants OrbusNeich the right to seize stents in the possession of Boston Scientific that have been commercially distributed but not yet used. Boston Scientific claimed that none of the concerned stent systems were in its possession at the location in Ratingen. Only after the Police were called did Boston Scientific allow the bailiff to search the building and seize the products.

The April 30, 2013, ruling, which Boston Scientific has appealed, allows OrbusNeich to prevent Boston Scientific from marketing and selling the affected stent lines in Germany, which include the Small Vessel, Small Workhorse and Workhorse Stents of Boston Scientific’s PROMUS Element™, PROMUS Element Plus™, OMEGA™, TAXUS Element™, SYNERGY™ and Promus PREMIER™ product lines. In this decision, the Regional Court found that the geometric pattern of these stents infringe OrbusNeich’s patent EP 1 341 482.

On May 13, 2013, OrbusNeich obtained a second Preliminary Injunction against Boston Scientific following Boston Scientific’s attempt to circumvent the first Injunction by transferring the German distribution of the affected products to Boston Scientific (UK) Ltd. and Boston Scientific Ltd. Boston Scientific may appeal this decision.

In addition to the Preliminary Injunctions, OrbusNeich’s principal patent infringement proceedings are also before the Dusseldorf Regional Court. In these proceedings, OrbusNeich is seeking damages, a permanent injunction and other relief for alleged infringement of the German parts of the EP 1 341 412 and ‘482 patents by the affected stent lines. A hearing in this main proceeding is scheduled for May 2014.

Similar infringement proceedings have also been filed in The Netherlands and Ireland.

The proceedings follow a favorable ruling for OrbusNeich by the European Patent Office (EPO) on February 11, 2013, in connection with the ‘482 patent. The EPO decision, which has been appealed, upheld the claim of the ‘482 patent, as amended, against an opposition by Boston Scientific and Terumo, claiming the patent was invalid.

About OrbusNeich

OrbusNeich is a global company that designs, develops, manufactures and markets innovative medical devices for the treatment of vascular diseases. Current products are the world’s first pro-healing stent, the Genous™ Stent, as well as other stents and balloons marketed under the names of Azule™, R stent™, Scoreflex™, Sapphire™, Sapphire II™ and Sapphire NC™. Development stage products include the COMBO Dual Therapy Stent™, the world’s first dual therapy stent. OrbusNeich is headquartered in Hong Kong and has operations in Shenzhen, China; Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Hoevelaken, The Netherlands; and Tokyo, Japan. OrbusNeich supplies medical devices to interventional cardiologists in more than 60 countries. For more information, visit http://www.OrbusNeich.com.

Media Contact:
Jed Repko – Bryan Darrow – Taylor Ingraham
Joele Frank , Wilkinson Brimmer Katcher
212-355-4449

SOURCE: OrbusNeich Medical Inc.

Read more: OrbusNeich seizes Boston Scientific stents in Germany as part of patent infringement proceedings – FierceMedicalDevices http://www.fiercemedicaldevices.com/press-releases/orbusneich-seizes-boston-scientific-stents-germany-part-patent-infringement#ixzz2TwxCAgth

http://www.fiercemedicaldevices.com/press-releases/orbusneich-seizes-boston-scientific-stents-germany-part-patent-infringement?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal

 

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Vascular Repair: Stents and Biologically Active Implants

Author and Curator: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP
and
Curator: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

This is the second article of a three part series recognizing the immense contribution of Elazer Edelman, MD, PhD, and his laboratory group at MIT to vascular biology, cardiovascular disease studies, and the bioengineering, development, and use of stenting technology for drug delivery, vascular repair, and limitation of vessel damage caused by stent placement.

The first article, published on this Open Access Online Scientific Journal
was concerned with vascular biology, and largely on both the impact of drug delivery design and placement on the endothelium of the vessel wall, and on the kinetics of drug delivery based on the location of stent placement versus intravascular injection as well as the metabolic events taking place in the arterial endothelium, intima, and muscularis.
This second article, is concerned with stents and drug delivery as it has evolved since the last decade of the 20th century based on biomaterials development and vascular biology principles to minimize inherent injury risk over this period.
The third. will be concerned with the lessons from biomaterials and stent mechanics going forward.
Heart care is in the midst of a transformation. Patients who once required heart surgery are treated with a stent, catheters for repair of valves, rhythm abnormalities, and a growing number of heart or vascular distrbances.
The catheters are threaded in through the femoral artery, and sometimes through the radial artery. The American College of Cardiology annual meeting highlights research on these devices.  The procedure allows patients to leave the hospital after a day or two post-implant, but the initial cost of the novel devices is high.  Not everyone qualifies for the treatment, and it will take a few years to compare the long term results with the benefits from surgery. But these procedures have allowed many patients treatment alternatives to surgery, and they offer an option for people who cannot be successfully managed by conservative medical therapy.

The effects of stent placement on vascular injury and the initiation of an inflammatory response

Leukocytes are recruited early and abundantly to experimentally injured vessels,

  • in direct proportion to cell proliferation and intimal growth.
Activated circulating leukocytes and Mac-1 (CD11 by CD18, aMb2) (monocytic) expression are
  • markers of restenosis risk in patients undergoing angioplasty.
Angioplastied vessels lack endothelium but have extensive fibrin(ogen) and platelet deposition.  Consequently, Mac-1-dependent adhesion to fibrin(ogen)  would be expected to
  • signal leukocyte recruitment and function, thereby
  • promote intimal growth
In this study
  • M1/70, an anti-CD11b blocking mAb, was  administered to rabbits before, and every 48 hr for 3, 6, or 14 days after iliac artery balloon denudation.
  • M1/70 was bound to isolated rabbit monocytes.

The result was

  • Mac-1-mediated dose-dependent
  • inhibition of fibrinogen binding in vitro, thereby,
  • reducing by half leukocyte recruitment at 3, 6, and 14 days after injury.
Neointimal growth 14 days after injury was markedly attenuated by treatment with M1/70 –
intimal area after balloon injury, 0.12+0.09 mm2, compared with
  •  0.32+0.08 mm2 in vehicle treated controls, P<0.01, and
  •  0.38+0.08mm2 in IgG-treated controls, P<0.005;
intimal area after stent injury, 0.56+0.16 mm2, compared with
  •  0.84+ 0.13 mm2 in vehicle-treated controls, P <0.05, and
  •  0.90+0.15 mm2 in IgG-treated controls, P <0.02).
Mac-1 blockade reduces experimental neointimal thickening. These findings suggest that
  • leukocyte recruitment to and
  • infiltration of injured arteries

may be a valid target for preventing intimal hyperplasia. (1) Emerging data indicate that the inflammatory response after mechanical arterial injury

  • correlates with the severity of neointimal hyperplasia in animal models
  • and post angioplasty restenosis in humans.
The present study was designed to examine whether a nonspecific
  • stimulation of the innate immune system,
  • induced in close temporal proximity to the vascular injury,
  • would modulate the results of the procedure.
A LPS dose was chosen to be sufficient to induce systemic inflammation but not septic shock. Key markers of inflammation increased after LPS administration were:
  • serum interleukin-1 levels, and
  • monocytic stimulation (CD14 levels on monocytes)
Arterial macrophage infiltration at 7 days after injury was
  • 1.7+1.2% of total cells in controls and
  • 4.2+1.8% in LPS-treated rabbits (n=4, P<0.05).
The injured arteries 4 weeks after injury had significantly increased
  • luminal stenosis:   38+4.2% versus 23+2.6%, mean+SEM; n=8, P<0.05; and
  • neointima-to-media ratio:  1.26+0.21 versus 0.66+0.09, P<0.05 in LPS-treated animals compared with controls.
This effect was abolished by anti-CD14 Ab administration. Serum Il-1 levels and monocyte CD14 expression were significantly increased
  • in correlation with the severity of intimal hyperplasia.
  • LPS treatment increased neointimal area after stenting
    • from 0.57+0.07 to 0.77+0.1 mm2, and
  • stenosis from 9+1% to 13+1.7% (n=5, P<0.05).
Nonspecific systemic stimulation of the innate immune system
  • concurrently with arterial vascular injury
  • facilitates neointimal formation, and conditions associated with
  • increased inflammation may increase restenosis.(2)
Millions of patients worldwide have received drug-eluting stents
  • to reduce their risk for in-stent restenosis.
The efficacy and toxicity of these local therapeutics depend upon
  • arterial drug deposition,
  • distribution, and
  • retention.
To examine how administered dose and drug release kinetics control arterial drug uptake, a model was created using principles of
  • computational fluid dynamics and
  • transient drug diffusion–convection.
The modeling predictions for drug elution were validated using
  • empiric data from stented porcine coronary arteries.
Inefficient, minimal arterial drug deposition was predicted when a bolus of drug was released and depleted within seconds.
Month-long stent-based drug release
  • efficiently delivered nearly continuous drug levels, but
  • the slow rate of drug presentation limited arterial drug uptake.
Uptake was only maximized when
  • the rates of drug release and absorption matched,
  • which occurred for hour-long drug release.
Of the two possible means for increasing the amount of drug on the stent,
  • modulation of drug concentration potently impacts
  • the magnitude of arterial drug deposition,
  • while changes in coating drug mass affect duration of release.
We demonstrate the importance of drug release kinetics and administered drug dose
  • in governing arterial drug uptake and suggest
  • novel drug delivery strategies for controlling spatio-temporal arterial drug distribution.(3)
Arterial drug concentrations determine local toxicity. Therefore, the emergent safety concerns surrounding drug-eluting stents mandate an investigation of the factors contributing to fluctuations in arterial drug uptake.
  • Drug-eluting stents were implanted into porcine coronary arteries, arterial drug uptake was followed and modeled using 2-dimensional computational drug transport.
Arterial drug uptake in vivo occurred faster than predicted by free drug diffusion, thus
  • an alternate, mechanism for rapid transport has been proposed involving carrier-mediated transport.
Though there was minimal variation in vivo in release kinetics from stent to stent,
  • arterial drug deposition varied by up to 114% two weeks after stent implantation.
  • extent of adherent mural thrombus fluctuated by 113% within 3 days.
The computational drug transport model predicted that focal and diffuse thrombi
  • elevate arterial drug deposition in proportion to the thrombus size
  • by reducing drug washout subsequently increasing local drug availability.
Variable peristrut thrombus can explain fluctuations in arterial drug uptake even in the face of a narrow range of drug release from the stent. The mural thrombus effects on arterial drug deposition may be circumvented by forcing slow rate limiting arterial transport, that cannot be further hindered by mural thrombus. (4)
1.  A mAb to the b2-leukocyte integrin Mac-1 (CD11byCD18) Reduces Intimal Thickening after Angioplasty or Stent Implantation in Rabbits. C Rogers, ER Edelman, and DI Simon. PNAS Aug 1998; 95: 10134–10139.
2.  Formation After Balloon and Stent Injury in Rabbits Systemic Inflammation Induced by Lipopolysaccharide increases Neointimal Formation After Balloon and Stent Injury in Rabbits. HD Danenberg, FGP Welt, M Walker, III, P Seifert, et al. Circulation 2002;105;2917-2922; http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/01.CIR.0000018168.15904.BB
3.  Intravascular drug release kinetics dictate arterial drug deposition, retention, and distribution.
B Balakrishnan, JF Dooley, G Kopia, ER Edelman. J Controlled Release  2007;123:100–108.
http://dx. doi.org/10.1016/j.jconrel.2007.06.025.
4.  Thrombus causes fluctuations in arterial drug delivery from intravascular stents. B Balakrishnan, J Dooley, G Kopia, ER Edelman. J Control Release 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jconrel.2008.07.027

Perivascular Graft Repair

Heparin remains the gold-standard inhibitor of the processes involved in the vascular response to injury. Though this compound has profound and wide-reaching effects on vascular cells, its clinical utility is unclear. It is clear that the mode of heparin delivery is critical to its potential and it may well be that
  • routine forms of administration are insufficient
  • to observe benefit given the heparin’s short half-life and complex pharmacokinetics.
When ingested orally, heparin is degraded to inactive oligomer fragments while systemic administration
  • is complicated by the need for continuous infusion
  • and the potential for uncontrolled hemorrhage.
Thus alternative heparin delivery systems have been proposed to maximize regional effects while limiting systemic toxicity. Yet, as heparin is such a potent antithrombotic compound and since existing local delivery systems lack the ability to
  • precisely regulate release kinetics,
  • even site-specific therapy is prone to bleeding.
Authors now describe the design and development of a novel biodegradable system for the perivascular delivery of heparin to the blood vessel wall with well-defined release kinetics.
This system consists of heparin-encapsulated
  • poly(DL lactide-co-glycolide) (pLGA) microspheres sequestered in an alginate gel.
Controlled release of heparin from this heterogeneous system is obtained for a period of 25 days.
The experimental variables affecting heparin release from these matrices were investigated by
  • gel permeation chromatography (GPC) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM)
  • to monitor the degradation process and correlated well with the release kinetics.
Heparin-releasing gels inhibited growth in tissue culture of
  • bovine vascular smooth muscle cells in a dose-dependent manner.
  • and also controlled vascular injury in denuding and
  • interposition vascular graft animal models of disease even when uncontrolled bleeding was evident with standard matrix-type release.
This system provided an effective means of examining
  • the effects of various compounds in
  • the control of smooth muscle cell proliferation in accelerated arteriopathies and also
  • shed light on the biologic nature of these processes.(1)
Soft tissue adhesives are employed to repair and seal many different organs that range in both
  • tissue surface chemistry and
  • mechanical effects during organ function.
This complexity motivates the development of tunable adhesive materials with
  • high resistance to uniaxial or multiaxial loads
  • dictated by a specific organ environment.
Co-polymeric hydrogels comprising
  • aminated star polyethylene glycol and
  • dextran aldehyde (PEG:dextran)
are materials exhibiting physico-chemical properties that can be modified
Here we report that resistance to failure
  • under specific loading conditions, as well as
  • tissue response at the adhesive material–tissue interface, can be modulated through regulation of
  • the number and density of adhesive aldehyde groups.
Author found that atomic force microscopy (AFM) can
  • characterize the material aldehyde density available for tissue interaction,
  • facilitating rapid, informed material choice.

Further, the correlation between AFM quantification of nanoscale unbinding forces

  • with macroscale measurements of adhesion strength
  • by uniaxial tension or multiaxial burst pressure allows the design of materials with specific cohesion and adhesion strengths.
However, failure strength alone does not predict optimal in vivo reactivity. The development of adhesive materials is significantly enabled when
  • experiments are integrated along length scales to consider
  • organ chemistry and mechanical loading states concurrently
  • with adhesive material properties and tissue response. (2)
Cell culture and animal data support the role of endothelial cells and endothelial-based compounds in regulating vascular repair after injury.
Authors describe a long-term study in pigs in which the biological and immunological
  • responses to endothelial cell implants were investigated 3 months after angioplasty,
  • approximately 2 months after the implants have degraded.
Confluent porcine or bovine endothelial cells grown in polymer matrices were implanted adjacent to 28 injured porcine carotid arteries.
Porcine and bovine endothelial cell implants significantly
  • reduced experimental restenosis compared to control by 56 and 31%, respectively.
Host humoral responses were investigated by detection of an increase in serum antibodies that bind to the bovine or porcine cell strains used for implantation.
A significant increase in titer of circulating antibodies to the bovine cells was observed
  • after 4 days in all animals implanted with xenogeneic cells.
Detected antibodies returned to presurgery levels after Day 40.
No significant increase in titer of antibodies to the porcine cells was observed during the experiment in animals implanted with porcine endothelial cells.
No implanted cells, Gelfoam, or focal inflammatory reaction could be detected
  • histologically at any of the implant sites at 90 days.

Suggesting that tissue engineered endothelial cell implants

  • may provide long term control of vascular repair after injury,
  • rather than simply delaying lesion formation and that
  • allogeneic implants are able to provide a greater benefit than xenogeneic implants. (3)
Vascular access complications are a major problem in hemodialysis patients. Native arteriovenous fistulae, historically the preferred mode of access, have a patency rate of only 60% at 1 year.
The most common mode of failure is due to progressive stenosis at the anastomotic site.
Authors have previously demonstrated that perivascular endothelial cell implants
  • inhibit intimal thickening following acute balloon injury in pigs, and now seek to determine if these
  • implants provide a similar benefit in the chronic and more complex injury model of arteriovenous anastomoses.
Side-to-side femoral artery-femoral vein anastomoses were created in 24 domestic swine.
  • toxicological,
  • biological and
  • immunological responses

were investigated 3 days and 1 and 2 months postoperatively to allogeneic endothelial cell implants . The anastomoses were wrapped with polymer matrices containing

  • confluent porcine aortic endothelial cells (PAE; n = 14) or
  • control matrices without cells (n = 10).
PAE implants significantly reduced intimal hyperplasia at the anastomotic sites
  • compared to controls by 68% (p ! 0.05) at 2 months.
The beneficial effects of the PAE implants were not due to
  • differences in the rates of reendothelialization between the groups.
No significant immunological response to the allogeneic endothelial cells that impacted on efficacy was detected in any of the pigs.
No apparent toxicity was observed in any of the animals treated with endothelial implants.
These data suggest that perivascular endothelial cell implants
  • are safe and reduce early intimal hyperplasia in a porcine model of arteriovenous anastomoses. (4)
1.  Perivascular graft heparin delivery using biodegradable polymer wraps. ER Edelman, A Nathan,
M Katada, J Gates, MJ Karnovsky. Biomaterials 2000; 21:2279 -2286.
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/anie.200461360/full
2.  Tuning adhesion failure strength for tissue-specific applications. N Artzi, A Zeiger, F Boehning,
A bon Ramos, K Van Vliet, ER Edelman.  Acta Biomateriala 2010.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2010.07.008.
3. Endothelial Implants Provide Long-Term Control of Vascular Repair in a Porcine Model of Arterial Injury. HM Nugent, ER Edelman. J Surg Res 2001; 99:228–234.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/jsre.2001.6198
4.  Perivascular Endothelial Implants Inhibit Intimal Hyperplasia in a Model of Arteriovenous Fistulae: A Safety and Efficacy Study in the Pig. HM Nugent, A Groothuis, P Seifert, et al. J Vasc Res 2002;39:524–533.

Luminal Flow and Arterial Drug Delivery

Endovascular stents reside in a dynamic flow environment and yet the impact of flow
  • on arterial drug deposition after stent-based delivery is only now emerging.
Authors employed computational fluid dynamic modeling tools to investigate
  • the influence of luminal flow patterns on arterial drug deposition and distribution.
Flow imposes recirculation zones distal and proximal to the stent strut that extend
  • the coverage of tissue absorption of eluted drug and
  • induce asymmetry in tissue drug distribution.
Our analysis now explains how the disparity in
  • sizes of the two recirculation zones and
  • the asymmetry in drug distribution are determined by a complex interplay of local flow and strut geometry.
When temporal periodicity was introduced as a model of
  • pulsatile flow,
  • the net luminal flow served as an index of flow-mediated spatiotemporal tissue drug uptake.
Dynamically changing luminal flow patterns are intrinsic to the coronary arterial tree. Coronary drug-eluting stents should be appropriately considered where
  • luminal flow,
  • strut design and
  • pulsatility
have direct effects on tissue drug uptake after local delivery.(1)
The efficacy of drug-eluting stents (DES) requires delivery of potent compounds directly to the underlying arterial tissue.
The commercially available DES drugs rapamycin and paclitaxel bind specifically to
  • their respective therapeutic targets, FKBP12 and polymerized microtubules,
  • while also associating in a more general manner with other tissue elements.
As it is binding that provides biological effect, the question arises as to whether other
  • locally released or systemically circulating drugs can
  • displace DES drugs from their tissue binding domains.
Specific and general binding sites for both drugs are distributed across the media and adventitia with higher specific binding associated with the binding site densities in the media.
The ability of rapamycin and paclitaxel to compete for specific protein binding and general tissue deposition
  • was assessed for both compounds simultaneously and
  • in the presence of other commonly administered cardiac drugs.
Drugs classically used to treat standard cardiovascular diseases, such as hypertension and hypercoaguability,
  • displace rapamycin and paclitaxel from general binding sites, possibly
  • decreasing tissue reserve capacity for locally delivered drugs.
Paclitaxel and rapamycin do not affect the other’s binding
  • to their biologically relevant specific protein targets, but
  • can  displace each other from tissue at three log order molar excess,
  • decreasing arterial loads by greater than 50%.
Local competitive binding therefore should not limit the placement of rapamycin and paclitaxel eluting stents in close proximity.(2)
Stent thrombosis is a lethal complication of endovascular intervention. There is concern about the inherent risk associated with specific stent designs and drug-eluting coatings
Authored examined whether drug-eluting coatings are inherently thrombogenic and whether the response to these materials was determined to any degree
  • by stent design and
  • stent deployment with custom-built stents.
Drug/polymer coatings uniformly reduce rather than increase thrombogenicity relative to matched bare metal counterparts (0.65-fold; P 0.011).
Thick-strutted (162 m) stents were 1.5-fold more thrombogenic than otherwise
  • identical thin-strutted (81 m) devices in ex vivo flow loops (P< 0.001),
commensurate with 1.6-fold greater thrombus coverage
  • 3 days after implantation in porcine coronary arteries (P 0.004).
When bare metal stents were deployed in
  • malapposed or overlapping configurations, thrombogenicity increased compared with apposed, length-matched controls (1.58-fold, P < 0.001; and 2.32-fold, P <0.001).
The thrombogenicity of polymer-coated stents with thin struts was
  • lowest in all configurations and remained insensitive to incomplete deployment.
Computational modeling– based
  • predictions of stent-induced flow derangements
  • correlated with spatial distribution of formed clots.
Drug/polymer coatings do not inherently increase acute stent clotting;
  • they reduce thrombosis.
However, strut dimensions and positioning relative to the vessel wall
  • are critical factors in modulating stent thrombogenicity.
Optimal stent geometries and surfaces, as demonstrated with thin stent struts,
  • help reduce the potential for thrombosis
  • despite complex stent configurations and variability in deployment. (Circulation. 2011;123:1400-1409.) (3)
1. Luminal flow patterns dictate arterial drug deposition in stent-based delivery.
VB Kolachalama, AR Tzafriri, DY Arifin, ER Edelman. J Control Release 2009; 133:24–30.
2. Local and systemic drug competition in drug-eluting stent tissue deposition properties.
AD Levin, M Jonas, Chao-Wei Hwang, ER Edelman.  J Control Release 2005; 109:236-243.
3. Stent Thrombogenicity Early in High-Risk Interventional Settings Is Driven by
Stent Design and Deployment and Protected by Polymer-Drug Coatings
Kumaran Kolandaivelu, Rajesh Swaminathan, William J. Gibson,.. ER Edelman

Management of Obstructive Coronary Artery Disease

Multiple studies have shown that diabetes mellitus (DM) can affect the
  • efficacy of revascularization therapies and subsequent clinical outcomes.
Selecting the appropriate myocardial revascularization strategy is critically important
  • in the setting of multivessel coronary disease.
Optimal medical therapy is an appropriate first-line strategy in patients with DM and mild symptoms. When medical therapy does not adequately control symptoms,
  • revascularization with either PCI or CABG may be used.
In patients with treated DM, moderate to severe symptoms and complex multivessel coronary disease,
  • coronary artery bypass graft surgery provides better survival,
  • fewer recurrent infarctions and
  • greater freedom from re-intervention.
Decisions regarding revascularization in patients with DM must take into account multiple factors and as such require a multidisciplinary team approach (‘heart team’). (1)
An incomplete understanding of the transport forces and local tissue structures
  • that modulate drug distribution has hampered
  • local pharmacotherapies in many organ systems.
These issues are especially relevant to arteries, where stent-based delivery allows fine control of locally directed drug release.
Local delivery produces tremendous drug concentration gradients
  • these are in part derived from transport forces,
  • differences in deposition from tissue to tissue

This suggests that tissue ultrastructure also plays an important role.

Authors measured the equilibrium drug uptake and the penetration and diffusivity of
  • dextrans (a model hydrophilic drug similar to heparin) and albumin
  • in orthogonal planes in arteries explanted from different vascular beds.
Authors found significant variations in drug distribution with
  • geometric orientation and
  • arterial connective tissue content.
Drug diffusivities parallel to the connective tissue sheaths were
  • one to two orders of magnitude greater than across these sheaths.
This diffusivity difference remained relatively constant for drugs up to 70 kDa
  • before decreasing for larger drugs.
Drugs also distributed better into elastic arteries, especially at lower molecular weights,
  • with almost 66% greater transfer into the thoracic aorta
  • than into the carotid artery.
Arterial drug transport is thus highly anisotropic and
  • dependent on arterial tissue content.
The role of the local composition and geometric organization of arterial tissue
  • in influencing vascular pharmacokinetics
is likely to become a critical consideration for local vascular drug delivery (2)
Radiolabeled drug-eluting stents have been proposed
  • to potentially reduce restenosis in coronary arteries.
A P-32 labeled oligonucleotide (ODN) loaded on a polymer coated stent
  • is slowly released in the arterial wall to deliver a therapeutic dose to the target tissue.
A relatively low proportion of drugs is transferred to the arterial wall (< 2%– 5% typically). This raises questions about the degree to which radiolabeled drugs eluted from the stent
  • can contribute to the total radiation dose delivered to tissues.
A three-dimensional diffusion-convection transport model is used
  • to model the transport of a hydrophilic drug released
  • from the surface of a stent to the arterial media.
Large drug concentration gradients are observed
  • near the stent struts giving rise to a
  • non-uniform radiation activity distribution for the drug
  • in the tissues as a function of time.
A voxel-based kernel convolution method is used to calculate the radiation dose rate
  • resulting from this activity build-up in the arterial wall
  • based on the medical internal radiation dose formalism.
Measured residence time for the P-32 ODN in the arterial wall and
  • at the stent surface obtained from animal studies
  • are used to normalize the results in terms of absolute dose to tissue.
The results indicate radiation due to drug eluted from the stent
  • contributes only a small fraction of the total radiation delivered to the arterial wall,
  • the main contribution comes from the activity embedded in the stent coating.
For hydrophilic compounds with rapid transit times in arterial tissue and minimal binding interactions,
  • the activity build-up in the arterial wall contributes only a small fraction
  • to the total dose delivered by the P-32 ODN stent.
For these compounds, it is concluded that radiolabeled drug-eluting stent
  • would not improve the performance of radioactive stents in treating restenosis.
Also, variability in the efficacy of drug delivery devices
  • makes accurate dosimetry difficult and
  • the drug washout in the systemic circulatory system
may yield an unnecessary activity build-up and dose to healthy organs. (3)
The first compounds considered for stent-based delivery,
  • such as heparin have failed to stop restenosis clinically.
More recent compounds, such as paclitaxel, are of a different sort.
They are hydrophobic, and their effects after local release seem far more profound.
This dichotomy raises the question of whether drugs that have an effect when released from a stent do so because of
  • differences in biology or differences in physicochemical properties and targeting.
Authored applied continuum pharmacokinetics to examine the effects of
  • transport forces and device geometry on
the distribution of stent-delivered hydrophilic and hydrophobic drugs.
Stent-based delivery leads to large concentration gradients.
Drug concentrations range from nil to several times the
  • mean tissue concentration over a few micrometers.
Concentration variations were a function of the Peclet number (Pe),
  • the ratio of convective to diffusive forces.
Although hydrophobic drugs exhibit greater variability than hydrophilic drugs,
  • they achieve higher mean concentrations and
  • they remain closer to the intima.
Inhomogeneous strut placement influences hydrophilic drugs
  • more negatively than hydrophobic drugs, and notably
  • affect local concentrations without changing mean concentrations.
Local concentrations and gradients are inextricably linked to biological effect. Therefore,
  • these results provide a potential explanation for the variable success of stent-based delivery.
Authors conclude that mere proximity of delivery devices to tissues
  • does not ensure adequate targeting,
  • because physiological transport forces cause
  • local concentrations to deviate significantly from mean concentrations. (4)
1.  Role of CABG in the management of obstructive coronary arterial disease in patients with diabetes mellitus. D Aronson, ER Edelman.  Curr Opin Pharmacol 2012, 12:134–141. Issue on Cardiovascular and renal. [Eds: JY Jeremy, K Zacharowski, N Shukla, S Wan].  http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.coph.2012.01.011
2.  Arterial Ultrastructure Influences Transport of Locally Delivered Drugs. Chao-Wei Hwang, ER Edelman. Circ Res. 2002; 90:826-832. http://www.circresaha.org/dx.doi.org/10.1161/01.RES.0000016672.26000.9E
3.  Dose model for stent-based delivery of a radioactive compound for the treatment of restenosis in coronary arteries. C Janickia, Chao-Wei Hwang, ER Edelman.  Med Phys 2003; 30(10), 2622-7.    http://dx.doi.org/10.1118/1.1607506
4.  Physiological Transport Forces Govern Drug Distribution for Stent-Based Delivery. Chao-Wei Hwang, D Wu, ER Edelman. Circulation. 2001;104(5) :600-605; e14 – e9010.     http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/hc3101.09221
Stent-Versus-Stent Equivalency Trials. Are Some Stents More Equal Than Others? Elazer R. Edelman, Campbell Rogers Circulation. 1999; 100(9): 896-898; e47 – e47.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/01.CIR.100.9.896
New endovascular stent designs are displacing tried and-true devices for use in an ever-broader array of lesions. There is disagreement as to which device is most advantageous and whether design determines outcome. Preclinical research says that this should be the case. Clinical trials have failed to validate design dependence. Can the divergent results be reconciled? More than 50 different stent configurations are available. The processes of industrial development and federal regulatory evaluation support the importance of design.
Stents are made from
  • a spectrum of materials
  • a range of manufacturing techniques, and have
    • variable surfaces,
    • dimensions,
    • surface coverage, and
    • strut configurations.
The number of parameters involved may doom the number of subsets to approach the number of designs. Moreover, each device seems to have a unique optimal mode of placement.  Differences have been reported in
  • flexibility,
  • tracking ability,
  • expansion,
  • radiovisibility,
  • side-branch access, and
  • resistance to compression and recoil for different devices.
Regulatory approval includes standards for safety:
  • toxicity,
  • biocompatibility,
  • structural and material analysis, and
  • fatigue testing
It has been suggested that
  • hoop strength,
  • surface cracking,
  • uniformity of expansion, and
  • other features become standardized as well.
Four different direct comparisons of first-generation Palmaz-Schatz slotted-tube stents and
second-generation stents have been made. In several studies there were no significant differences
in restenosis at follow-up, including
  • minimal luminal diameter (MLD),
  • percent diameter stenosis,
  • late loss, or
  •  binary restenosis rate.
In the fourth study, restenosis was far greater for the Gianturco-Roubin II (GR-II) stent (Cook) than
  • the Palmaz-Schatz stent (Cordis-Johnson & Johnson).
The data for all stents bunch across trials: with the exception of the GR-II stent,
variability between the test stent groups was no greater than
  • the variability between the Palmaz-Schatz stent groups in the different trials.
Three distinct possibilities exist to explain the absence of clinical evidence that different designs behave differently:
(1) no differences in clinical outcomes exist between devices;
(2) differences exist but are so slight as to be clinically meaningless; and
(3) differences exist that may be clinically meaningful, but trials performed to date were not designed to detect them.
Schematic representation of device performance plotting outcome against indication indicates that
  • complication rates rise as lesion complexity increases.
When 2 devices are clinically different, their curves are displaced, and when they are indistinguishable, their curves overlap.
Clinical trials that restrict the test population to lesions low on the complexity scale
  • ensure safety for all patients but are not the ideal venues in which to detect differences between devices.
Thus, although stents 1 and 2 may have different clinical outcomes, in a restricted-criteria equivalency trial with low complexity, they appear identical. It is only when the test device performs worse than the standard, that differences can be appreciated.
In contrast, an open registry will not only show when a test stent is worse than the standard stent but also when it is better.

Equivalency Trials

Stent-versus-stent trials are equivalency trials, designed to show that a test device performs “as well as” a standard, currently acceptable device.  This is a valid regulatory threshold but
  • not the means to evaluate the full potential of a device.
Equivalency trials must by definition commence with a patient population for whom the standard device is safe. Trials with currently approved devices as the standard necessitate that
  • patient entry and lesion selection be determined by
  • limitations of the standard, not the device.
to observe a difference in such a trial
  •  the test device performs worse
For the test device to perform better, both the test and the standard must be challenged.
This was not the case for the trials in which
  • the average reference vessel size was 3.0+0.05 mm and
  • American College of Cardiology type B2 and C lesions accounted for only ~65% of lesions.
These lesions are those for which the Palmaz-Schatz stent is approved and technically suited, but
  • they represent only a minority of those lesions now receiving stents

Complexity, Equivalence, and Better

In truth, it may be most appropriate to think about parameters of device success and safety as a continuum, describing a correlation between events such as
  • thrombosis or restenosis and
  • a continuous measure of indication,
  • vessel dimension, or lesion complexity (Figure).
A given device may be represented by a characteristic response over a range of indications.
When there is a lateral offset to the curves,
  • differences in potential performance are anticipated.
Curves might even cross, rather than run parallel, indicating that devices might be matched
to lesions and indications. Open trials would consider the entire range of the curves.
  • equivalency trials are limited to a small region of the curve.
The first-generation stents were a major innovation in interventional cardiology, and their place in medical history and biotechnology is unassailable.
Demonstration that new stents are better than old will require that evaluations be
  • performed in lesions for which current devices have marginal or limited application.
Complex or acutely unstable lesions, small arteries, and diseased bypass grafts are
  • the next great challenges of interventional cardiology.
Perhaps in these settings, future stent trials will provide firm evidence that
  • the manner in which blood vessels are manipulated dictates biological sequelae.
Proof that stent design can alter clinical outcomes may then unleash the potential
  • to change the way in which we consider design, approval, and use of new devices.
REFERENCES

Menichelli, M. (2006). Sirolimus Stent vs. Bare Stent in Acute Myocardial Infarction Trial. Presented at The European Paris Course on Revascularization (EuroPCR), May 16-19, 2006, Paris, France Paris, France.http://www.medscape.com/viewprogram/5505?rss

Pfisterer, P.E. (2006). Basel Stent Cost-effectiveness Trial-Late Thrombotic events (BASKET LATE) Trial. Presented at American College of Cardiology 55th Annual Scientific Session, March 11 – 14, 2006, Atlanta, Georgia.http://www.medscape.com/viewprogram/5185 

Rogers, C. Edelman E.R. (2006). Pushing drug-eluting stents into uncharted territory, Simpler then you think – more complex than you imagine. Circulation,113, 2262-2265.

Shirota, T., Yasui, H., Shimokawa, H. & Matsuda, T. (2003). Fabrication of endothelial progenitor cell (EPC)-seeded intravascular stent devices and in vitro endothelialization on hybrid vascular tissue. Biomaterials 24(13), 2295–2302.

Simonton, C. (2006). The STENT Registry: A real-world look at Sirolimus- and Pacitaxel-Eluting Stents. Cath Lab Digest, 14 (1), 1-10.

Turco, M. (2006). TAXUS ATLAS Trial – 9-Month results: Evaluation of TAXUS Liberte vs. TAXUS Express. Presented at The European Paris Course on Revascularization (EuroPCR), May 16-19, 2006, Paris, France Paris, France.http://www.medscape.com/viewprogram/5505?rss

Verma, S. and Marsden, P.A. (2005). Nitric Oxide-Eluting Polyurethanes – Vascular Grafts of the Future? New England Journal Medicine, 353 (7), 730-731.

Wood, S. (2006). Guidant suspends release of Xience V everolimus-eluting stent due to manufacturing standards http://www.theheart.org/article/679851.do 

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Heart Renewal by pre-existing Cardiomyocytes: Source of New Heart Cell Growth Discovered

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 12/23/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/23/heart-renewal-by-pre-existing-cardiomyocytes-source-of-new-heart-cell-growth-discovered/

Cardiovascular Risk Inflammatory Marker: Risk Assessment for Coronary Heart Disease and Ischemic Stroke – Atherosclerosis.

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 10/30/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/30/cardiovascular-risk-inflammatory-marker-risk-assessment-for-coronary-heart-disease-and-ischemic-stroke-atherosclerosis/

To Stent or Not? A Critical Decision

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 10/23/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/23/to-stent-or-not-a-critical-decision/

New Definition of MI Unveiled, Fractional Flow Reserve (FFR)CT for Tagging Ischemia

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 8/27/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/27/new-definition-of-mi-unveiled-fractional-flow-reserve-ffrct-for-tagging-ischemia/

Ethical Considerations in Studying Drug Safety — The Institute of Medicine Report

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 8/23/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/23/ethical-considerations-in-studying-drug-safety-the-institute-of-medicine-report/

New Drug-Eluting Stent Works Well in STEMI

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 8/22/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/22/new-drug-eluting-stent-works-well-in-stemi/

Expected New Trends in Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medical Devices

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 8/17/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/17/expected-new-trends-in-cardiology-and-cardiovascular-medical-devices/

Coronary Artery Disease – Medical Devices Solutions: From First-In-Man Stent Implantation, via Medical Ethical Dilemmas to Drug Eluting Stents

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 8/13/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/13/coronary-artery-disease-medical-devices-solutions-from-first-in-man-stent-implantation-via-medical-ethical-dilemmas-to-drug-eluting-stents/

Percutaneous Endocardial Ablation of Scar-Related Ventricular Tachycardia

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 7/18/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/18/percutaneous-endocardial-ablation-of-scar-related-ventricular-tachycardia/

Competition in the Ecosystem of Medical Devices in Cardiac and Vascular Repair: Heart Valves, Stents, Catheterization Tools and Kits for Open Heart and Minimally Invasive Surgery (MIS)

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 6/22/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/06/22/competition-in-the-ecosystem-of-medical-devices-in-cardiac-and-vascular-repair-heart-valves-stents-catheterization-tools-and-kits-for-open-heart-and-minimally-invasive-surgery-mis/

Global Supplier Strategy for Market Penetration & Partnership Options (Niche Suppliers vs. National Leaders) in the Massachusetts Cardiology & Vascular Surgery Tools and Devices Market for Cardiac Operating Rooms and Angioplasty Suites

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 6/22/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/06/22/global-supplier-strategy-for-market-penetration-partnership-options-niche-suppliers-vs-national-leaders-in-the-massachusetts-cardiology-vascular-surgery-tools-and-devices-market-for-car/

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Texas Heart Institute: 50 Years of Accomplishments

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

Texas Heart Institute’s Overachieving President and Medical Director Dr. James T Willerson Profiles THI’s 50 Years Of Accomplishments


Posted Thursday , April 25,2013

The Texas Heart Institute is a not-for-profit cardiology and heart surgery center located at the Texas Medical Center in Houston. Founded in 1962 by Dr. Denton A. Cooley, the mission of the Texas Heart Institute has been to reduce the devastating toll of cardiovascular disease through innovative programs in research, education and improved patient care. Over the past 51 years the Institute has been involved in training cardiologists, heart surgeons, imaging specialists in cardiovascular medicine and cardiac electrophysiology, and pathologists, and educated hundreds of cardiovascular specialists.

texasheart

A nonprofit organization in the truest sense, and unlike most institutions that have a source of operating revenue, the Texas Heart Institute relies solely on government grants, research contracts and, above all, philanthropy, with donations from grateful patients, foundations, corporations, physicians, and the general public account for more than half of the Institute’s annual operating budget. The Institute’s location in and affiliations with St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital and Texas Children’s Hospital have assured that all age groups will be treated, and has freed the Institute of the burden of financing a health care facility.

The Texas Heart Institute (THI) and its clinical partner, St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital, have become one of America’s largest cardiovascular centers, whose 160-member professional staff have reportedly performed more than 100,000 open heart operations, 200,000 cardiac catheterizations, and 1,000 heart transplants.

In its 2010 annual survey of “America’s Best Hospitals,” U.S. News & World Report ranked the Texas Heart Institute at St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital number four in the United States for heart care, marking this its 20th consecutive year of inclusion as one of the top 10 heart centers in the country.

willersonIn an interview with the European science news journal Research Media, THI President and Medical Director, Dr. James T Willerson, says that when he originally came to the Institute in 2004, then still President Dr Cooley wanted him to be Medical Director of Cardiovascular Research, and upon Dr. Cooley’s resignation in 2008, he asked Dr. Willerston to succeed him in that position.

In the interview, Dr. Willerston, a native Texan, profiles the THI’s achievements and shares his thoughts on reducing the heavy burdens of Cardiovascular disease, which is estimated to cost the economy $449 billion annually.

Accounting for over a quarter of all deaths in the U.S. each year, cardiovascular disease is obviously a major health concern, but mortality from coronary heart disease (CHD) has substantially decreased in recent decades. Dr. Willerston attributes the decrease to research discoveries that have provided insights into mechanisms responsible for thrombosis in injured coronary and cerebral arteries, and led to improved treatment.

He cites as an example that increased understanding of ‘bad’ low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol in patients to values well below 100 mg/dl has been a very important contribution, as has the development of statins to lower LDL has also been crucial, the use of low-dose aspirin and other medications to control blood pressure, avoidance of smoking and use of recreational drugs, control of blood sugar in patients who are diabetic, emphasis on diet and exercise, and improved imaging techniques for blood vessels and the cardiovascular system, as factors that have played a role in protecting CHD patients and decreasing mortality risk.

However, he notes that the greatest GHD risk factor is a genetic one, and a remaining priority must be to identify genes that contribute to this risk; ultimately silencing the most dangerous ones using microRNA methodology. Dr. Willerston says numerous clinical studies in patients with cardiovascular disease using a variety of stem cell types, including mesenchymal stem cells taken from the bone marrow or adipose tissue have been conducted, and that through the pioneering work of Dr Doris Taylor, scientists are now able to deplete human hearts of their cellular structure and then restore that same heart to normal function by the infusion of stem cells. With continued success, these efforts could fill a great unmet need and pave the way to a new area of transplant medicine.

Dr. Willerston maintains that prevention would be the single most effective means of reducing healthcare costs, and should be the main concern initiated at very young ages and continue throughout adulthood.

Dr. James T. Willerson, born in Lampasas, Texas, is President of The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston where he is the Alkek-Williams Distinguished Professor and holds the Edward Randall III Chair in Internal Medicine. In October 2004, Dr. Willerson was named President-Elect of the Texas Heart Institute in Houston, Texas. He holds the Dunn Chair in Cardiology Research and the John O’Quinn Chair named the “James T. Willerson Distinguished Chair in Cardiovascular Research,” both at the Texas Heart Institute, Houston, Texas. From 1989 through 2000, he was the Chairman of the Department of Internal Medicine at The University of Texas Medical School at Houston where an Annual Lectureship has been established in his name. During this same period, he served as the Chief of Medical Services at Memorial Hermann Hospital. He is also the Medical Director, Director of Cardiovascular Research, and Co-Director of the Cullen Cardiovascular Research Laboratories at the Texas Heart Institute. He is an Adjunct Professor of Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine and at The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.

Dr. Willerson also founded TexGen Research, a collaboration which brings together all of the institutions in the Texas Medical Center to collect blood samples necessary for the discovery of those genes and proteins that play a key role in causing major diseases. With TexGen, each Texas Medical Center institution obtains blood samples from patients who have a personal or family history of cardiovascular disease, stroke, dementia, or selected cancers and who are admitted to their hospitals. Great progress is being made by this collaborative biomedical research effort.

A graduate of the Texas Military Institute in San Antonio, Texas, where he was the Battalion Commander, President of the Senior Class, Editor of the school newspaper, and a state swimming champion, Dr. Willerston attended The University of Texas at Austin, graduating as a Phi Beta Kappa, member of the Texas Cowboys, and where he lettered for three years in varsity swimming. Upon graduating as a member of Alpha Omega Alpha from Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas, he completed his medical and cardiology training as an intern, resident, and research and clinical fellow at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, and as a Clinical Associate at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland.

He is the former Chairman of the National American Heart Association Research Committee and of the Cardiovascular and Renal Study Section of the National Institutes of Health. He has received the Award of Merit from the American Heart Association and has served as a member of the Board of Directors and Steering Committee of the National American Heart Association. Before coming to The University of Texas Medical School at Houston, Dr. Willerson was Professor of Medicine and Director of the Cardiology Division at The University of Texas Southwestern Medical School in Dallas, Texas, and Director and Principal Investigator of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute’s Specialized Center of Research under a major grant from the NIH. Upon his departure, the “James T. Willerson, M.D. Distinguished Chair in Cardiovascular Diseases” was established at The University of Texas Southwestern Medical School.

Dr. Willerson has served as visiting professor and invited lecturer at more than 220 institutions worldwide, and has received numerous national and international awards, as well as having served on editorial boards for many professional publications including: The New England Journal of Medicine, Journal of Clinical Investigation, Circulation, Circulation Research, Arteriosclerosis and Thrombosis, American Journal of Medicine, Journal of the American College of Cardiology, American Journal of Cardiology, American Heart Journal, and Cardiovascular Medicine. From 1993 to 2004, he was the longest-serving Editor of Circulation, the major publication of the American Heart Association. In 1998, the monthly journal was converted to a weekly publication and attained the highest Impact Factor of any cardiology journal in the world. He has edited or co-edited twenty-four textbooks, including the Third Edition of Cardiovascular Medicine which was released in February of 2007. Additionally, he has published more than 850 scientific articles.

Dr. Willerson has been elected to membership in numerous professional societies, including the American Society of Clinical Investigation, the Association of American Physicians, the Association of Professors of Medicine, and the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences. He was named a Distinguished Alumnus by the Baylor College of Medicine in 1998 and a Distinguished Alumnus of The University of Texas at Austin in 1999.

SOURCE:

http://bionews-tx.com/news/2013/04/25/texas-heart-institutes-overachieving-president-and-medical-director-dr-james-t-willerson-profiles-this-50-years-of-accomplishments/

Comment of Note

Dr. Lev-Ari, was a visitor at Texas Heart Institute, Perfusion Program, and shadowed Open Heart Surgery in 8/2005.

The museum on the First floor of the building represents a Historical exhibit of Images of Cardiac Procedures. On display is a complete array of surgical tools used in Cardiac Repair during the last 50 years of unprecedented development in Cardiac Medical Devices and Procedures. A duplicate of the exhibit is available at the Smithsonian Museum at WashDC.

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Drug Eluting Stents: On MIT’s Edelman Lab’s Contributions to Vascular Biology and its Pioneering Research on DES

Drug Eluting Stents: On MIT‘s Edelman Lab’s Contributions to Vascular Biology and its Pioneering Research on DES

Author: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP

and 

Curator: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN
http://PharmaceuticalIntelligence.com/2013/04/25/Contributions
-to-vascular-biology/

This is the first of a three part series on the evolution of vascular biology and the studies of the effects of biomaterials in vascular reconstruction and on drug delivery, which has embraced a collaboration of cardiologists at Harvard Medical School , Affiliated Hospitals, and MIT,
requiring cardiovascular scientists at the PhD and MD level, physicists, and computational biologists working in concert, and
an exploration of the depth of the contributions by a distinguished physician, scientist, and thinker.

The first part – Vascular Biology and Disease – will cover the advances in the research on

  • vascular biology,
  • signaling pathways,
  • drug diffusion across the endothelium and
  • the interactions with the underlying muscularis (media),
  • with additional considerations for type 2 diabetes mellitus.

The second part – Stents and Drug Delivery – will cover the

  • purposes,
  • properties and
  • evolution of stent technology with
  • the acquired knowledge of the pharmacodynamics of drug interactions and drug distribution.

The third part – Problems and Promise of Biomaterials Technology – will cover the shortcomings of the cardiovascular devices, and opportunities for improvement

Vascular Biology and Cardiovascular Disease

Early work on endothelial injury and drug release principles

The insertion of a catheter for the administration of heparin is not an innocuous procedure. Heparin is infused to block coagulation, lowering the risk of a dangerous

  • clot formation and
  • dissemination.

It was shown experimentally that the continuous infusion of heparin

  • suppresses smooth muscle proliferation after endothelial injury. It may lead to
  • hemorrhage as a primary effect.

The anticoagulant property of heparin was removed by chemical modification without loss of the anti-proliferative effect.

In this study, MIT researches placed ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymer matrices containing standard and modified heparin adjacent to rat carotid arteries at the time of balloon deendothelialization.

Matrix delivery of both heparin compounds effectively diminished this proliferation in comparison to controls without producing systemic anticoagulation or side effects.

This mode of therapy appeared more effective than administering the agents by either

  • intravenous pumps or
  • heparin/polymer matrices placed in a subcutaneous site distant from the injured carotid artery

This indicated that the site of placement at the site of injury is a factor in the microenvironment, and is a preference for avoiding restenosis after angioplasty and other interventions.

This raised the question of why the proliferation of vascular muscle occurs in the first place.
 Edelman, Nugent and Karnovsky  (1) showed that the proliferation required first the denudation of vascular surface endothelium. This exposed the underlayer to the effect of basic fibroblast growth factor, which stimulates mitogenesis of the exposed cell, explained by the endothelium as a barrier from circulating bFGF.

To answer this question, they compared the effect of

  • 125I-labelled bFGF intravenously given with perivascular controlled bFGF release.
  • Polymeric controlled release devices delivered bFGF to the extravascular space without transendothelial transport. 
Deposition within the blood vessel wall was rapidly distributed circumferentially and was substantially greater than that observed following intravenous injection.

The amount of bFGF deposited in arteries adjacent to the release devices was 40 times that deposited in similar arteries in animals who received a single intravenous bolus of bFGF.

The presence of intimal hyperplasia increased deposition of perivascularly released bFGF 2.4-fold but decreased the deposition of intravenously injected bFGF by 67%.

  • bFGF was 5- to 30-fold more abundant in solid organs after intravenous injection than it was following perivascular release, and
  • bFGF deposition was greatest in the kidney, liver, and spleen and was substantially lower in the heart and lung.

This result indicated that vascular deposition of bFGF is independent of endothelium, and

  • bFGF delivery is effectively perivascular. (2)

Drug activity studies have to be done in well controlled and representative conditions.
 Edelsman’s Lab researchers studied the

  • dose response of injured arteries to exogenous heparin in vivo by providing steady and predictable arterial levels of drug.
  • Controlled-release devices were fabricated to direct heparin uniformly and at a steady rate to the adventitial surface of balloon-injured rat carotid arteries.

Researchers predicted the distribution of heparin throughout the arterial wall using computational simulations and correlated these concentrations with the biologic response of the tissues.

Researchers determined from this process that an in vivo arterial concentration of 0.3 mg/ml of heparin is required to maximallyinhibit intimal hyperplasia after injury.

This estimation of the required tissue concentration of a drug is

  • independent of the route of administration and
  • applies to all forms of drug release.

In this way the Team was able to

  • evaluate the potential of  widely disparate forms of drug release and, to finally
  • create some rigorous criteria by which to guide the development of particular delivery strategies for local diseases. (3)

Chiefly, the following three effects:

(1) Effect of controlled adventitial heparin delivery on smooth muscle cell proliferation following endothelial injury. ER Edelman, DH Adams, and MJ Karnovsky. PNAS May 1990; 87: 3773-3777.


(2) Perivascular and intravenous administration of basic fibroblast growth factor: Vascular and solid organ deposition. ER Edelman, MA Nugent, and MJ Karnovsky. PNAS Feb 1993; 90: 1513-1517.


(3) Tissue concentration of heparin, not administered dose, correlates with the biological response of injured arteries in vivo. MA Lovich and ER Edelman. PNAS Sep 1999; 96: 11111–11116.

Vascular Injury and Repair

Perlecan is a heparin-sulfate proteoglycan that might be critical for regulation of vascular repair by inhibiting the binding and mitogenic activity of basic fibroblast growth factor-2 (bFGF-2) in vascular smooth muscle cells .

The Team generated

  • Clones of endothelial cells expressing an antisense vector targeting domain III of perlecan. The transfected cells produced significantly less perlecan than parent cells, and they had reduced bFGF in vascular smooth muscle cells.
  • Endothelial cells were seeded onto three-dimensional polymeric matrices and implanted adjacent to porcine carotid arteries subjected to deep injury.
  • The parent endothelial cells prevented thrombosis, but perlecan deficient cells were ineffective.

The ability of endothelial cells to inhibit intimal hyperplasia, however, was only in part suppressed by perlecan. The differential regulation by perlecan of these aspects of vascular repair may clarify why control of clinical clot formation does not lead to full control of intimal hyperplasia.

The use of genetically modified tissue engineered cells provides a new approach for dissecting the role of specific factors within the blood vessel wall.(1) Successful implementation of local arterial drug delivery requires transmural distribution of drug. The physicochemical properties of the applied compound govern its transport and tissue binding.

  • Hydrophilic compounds are cleared rapidly.
  • Hydrophobic drugs bind to fixed tissue elements, potentially prolonging tissue residence and biological effect.

Local vascular drug delivery provides

  • elevated concentrations of drug in the target tissue while
  • minimizing systemic side effects.

To better characterize local pharmacokinetics the Team examined the arterial transport of locally applied dextran and dextran derivatives in vivo.

Using a two-compartment pharmacokinetic model to correct

  • The measured transmural flux of these compounds for systemic
  • Redistribution and elimination as delivered from a photo-polymerizable hydrogel.
  • The diffusivities and the transendothelial permeabilities were strongly dependent on molecular weight and charge
  • For neutral dextrans, the diffusive resistance increased with molecular weightapproximately 4.1-fold between the molecular weights of 10 and 282 kDa.
  • Endothelial resistance increased 28-fold over the same molecular weight range.
  • The effective medial diffusive resistance was unaffected by cationic charge as such molecules moved identically to neutral compounds, but increased approximately 40% when dextrans were negatively charged.

Transendothelial resistance was 20-fold lower for the cationic dextrans, and 11-fold higher for the anionic dextrans, when both were compared to neutral counterparts.

These results suggest that, while

  • low molecular weight drugs will rapidly traverse the arterial wall with the endothelium posing a minimal barrier,
  • the reverse is true for high molecular weight agents.

The deposition and distribution of locally released vascular therapeutic compounds might be predicted based upon chemical properties, such as molecular weight and charge. (2)

Paclitaxel is hydrophobic and has therapeutic potential against proliferative vascular disease.
 The favorable preclinical data with this compound may, in part, result from preferential tissue binding.
 The complexity of Paclitaxel pharmacokinetics required in-depth investigation if this drug is to reach its full clinical potential in proliferative vascular diseases.

Equilibrium distribution of Paclitaxel reveals partitioning above and beyond perfusate concentration and a spatial gradient of drug across the arterial wall.

The effective diffusivity (Deff) was estimated from the Paclitaxel distribution data to

  • facilitate comparison of transport of Paclitaxel through arterial parenchyma with that of other vasoactive agents and to
  • characterize the disparity between endovascular and perivascular application of drug.

This transport parameter described the motion of drug in tissues given an applied concentration gradient and includes, in addition to diffusion,

  • the impact of steric hindrance within the arterial interstitium;
  • nonspecific binding to arterial elements; and, in the preparation used here,
  • convective effects from the applied transmural pressure gradient.

At all times, the effective diffusivity for endovascular delivery exceeded that of perivascular delivery. The arterial transport of Paclitaxel was quantified through application ex vivo and measurement of the subsequent transmural distribution.

  • Arterial Paclitaxel deposition at equilibrium varied across the arterial wall.
  • Permeation into the wall increased with time, from 15 minutes to 4 hours, and
  • varied with the origin of delivery.

In contrast to hydrophilic compounds, the concentration in tissue exceeded the applied concentration and the rate of transport was markedly slower. Furthermore, endovascular and perivascular Paclitaxel application led to differences in deposition across the blood vessel wall.

This leads to a conclusion that Paclitaxel interacts with arterial tissue elements  as it moves under the forces of

  • diffusion and
  • convection and
  • can establish substantial partitioning and spatial gradients across the tissue. (3)

Endovascular drug-eluting stents have changed the practice of  cardiovascular vascularization, and yet it is unclear how they so dramatically reduce restenosis

We don’t know how to distinguish between the different formulations available.
 Researchers are now questioning whether individual properties of different drugs beyond lipid avidity effect arterial transport and distribution.

In bovine internal carotid segments, tissue-loading profiles for

  • Hydrophobic Paclitaxel and Rapamycin are indistinguishable, reaching load steady state after 2 days.
  • Hydrophilic dextran reaches equilibrium in hours.

Paclitaxel and Rapamycin bind to the artery at 30–40 times bulk concentration, and bind to specific tissue elements.

Transmural drug distribution profiles are markedly different for the two compounds.

  • Rapamycin binds specifically to FKBP12 binding protein and it distributes evenly through the artery,
  • Paclitaxel binds specifically to microtubules, and remains primarily in the subintimal space.

The binding of Rapamycin and Paclitaxel to specific intracellular proteins plays an essential role in

  • determining arterial transport and distribution and in
  • distinguishing one compound from another.

These results offer further insight into the

  • mechanism of local drug delivery and the
  • specific use of existing drug-eluting stent formulations. (4)

The Role of Amyloid beta (A) in Creation of Vascular Toxic Plaque

Amyloid beta (A) is a peptide family produced and deposited in neurons and endothelial cells (EC).
It is found at subnanomolar concentrations in the plasma of healthy individuals.
 Simple conformational changes produce a form of A-beta , A-beta 42, which creates toxic plaque in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients.

Oxidative stress induced blood brain barrier degeneration has been proposed as a key factor for A-beta 42 toxicity.

This cannot account for lack of injury from the same peptide in healthy tissues.
Researchers hypothesized that cell state mediates A-beta’s effect.
 They examined the viability in the presence of A-beta secreted from transfected
Chinese hamster ovary cells (CHO) of

  • aortic Endothelial Cells (EC),
  • vascular smooth muscle cells (SMC) and
  • epithelial cells (EPI) in different states

A-beta was more toxic to all cell types when they were subconfluent.
 Subconfluent EC sprouted and SMC and EPI were inhibited by A-beta.
Confluent EC were virtually resistant to A-beta and suppressed A-beta production by A-beta +CHO.

Products of subconfluent EC overcame this resistant state, stimulating the production and toxicity of A-beta 42. Confluent EC overgrew >35% beyond their quiescent state in the presence of A-beta conditioned in media from subconfluent EC.

These findings imply that A-beta 42 may well be even more cytotoxic to cells in injured or growth states and potentially explain the variable and potent effects of this protein.

One may now need to consider tissue and cell state in addition to local concentration of and exposure duration to A-beta.

The specific interactions of A-beta and EC in a state-dependent fashion may help understand further the common and divergent forms of vascular and cerebral toxicity of A-beta and the spectrum of AD. (5)

(1) Perlecan is required to inhibit thrombosis after deep vascular injury and contributes
to endothelial cell-mediated inhibition of intimal hyperplasia. MA Nugent, HM Nugent,
RV Iozzoi, K Sanchack, and ER Edelman. PNAS Jun 2000; 97(12): 6722-6727


(2) Correlation of transarterial transport of various dextrans with their physicochemical properties.
O Elmalak, MA Lovich, E Edelman. Biomaterials 2000; 21: 2263-2272


(3) Arterial Paclitaxel Distribution and Deposition. CJ Creel, MA Lovich, ER Edelman. Circ Res. 2000;86:879-884


(4) Specific binding to intracellular proteins determines arterial transport properties for rapamycin and Paclitaxel.
AD Levin, N Vukmirovic, Chao-Wei Hwang, and ER Edelman. PNAS Jun 2004; 101(25): 9463–9467.
www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.0400918101

(5) Amyloid beta toxicity dependent upon endothelial cell state. M Balcells, JS Wallins, ER Edelman.
Neuroscience Letters 441 (2008) 319–322

Endothelial Damage as an Inflammatory State

Autoimmunity may drive vascular disease through anti-endothelial cell (EC) antibodies. This raises a question about whether an increased morbidity of cardiovascular diseases in concert with systemic illnesses may involve these antibodies.

Matrix-embedded ECs act as powerful regulators of vascular repair accompanied by significant reduction in expected systemic and local inflammation.

The Lab researchers compared the immune response against free and matrix-embedded ECs in naive mice and mice with heightened EC immune reactivity. Mice were presensitized to EC with repeated subcutaneous injections of saline-suspended porcine EC (PAE) (5*10^5 cells).

On day 42, both naive mice (controls) and mice with heightened EC immune reactivity received 5*10^5 matrix-embedded or free PAEs. Circulating PAE-specific antibodies and effector T-cells were analyzed 90 days after implantation for –

  • PAE-specific antibody-titers,
  • frequency of CD4+-effector cells, and
  • xenoreactive splenocytes

These were 2- to 4-fold lower (P<0.0001) when naıve mice were injected with matrix-embedded instead of saline-suspended PAEs.

Though basal levels of circulating antibodies were significantly elevated after serial PAE injections (2210+341 mean fluorescence intensity, day 42) and almost doubled again 90 days after injection of a fourth set of free PAEs, antibody levels declined by half in recipients of matrix-embedded PAEs at day 42 (P<0.0001), as did levels of CD4+-effector cells and xenoreactive splenocytes.

A significant immune response to implantation of free PAE is elicited in naıve mice, that is even more pronounced in mice with pre-developed anti-endothelial immunity.

Matrix-embedding protects xenogeneic ECs against immune reaction in naive mice and in mice with heightened immune reactivity.

Matrix-embedded EC might offer a promising approach for treatment of advanced cardiovascular disease. (1)

Researchers examined the molecular mechanisms through which

mechanical force and hypertension modulate

endothelial cell regulation of vascular homeostasis.

Exposure to mechanical strain increased the paracrine inhibition of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) by endothelial cells.

Mechanical strain stimulated the production by endothelial cells of perlecan and heparan-sulfate glycosaminoglycans. By inhibiting the expression of perlecan with an antisense vector researchers demonstrated that perlecan was essential to the strain-mediated effects on endothelial cell growth control.

Mechanical regulation of perlecan expression in endothelial cells was

  • governed by a mechano-transduction pathway
  • requiring transforming growth factor (TGF-β) signaling and
  • intracellular signaling through the ERK pathway.

Immunohistochemical staining of the aortae of spontaneously hypertensive rats
demonstrated strong correlations between

  • endothelial TGF-β,
  • phosphorylated signaling intermediates, and
  • arterial thickening.

Studies on ex vivo arteries exposed to varying levels of pressure demonstrated that

ERK and TGF-beta signaling were required for pressure-induced upregulation of endothelial HSPG.

The Team’s findings suggest a novel feedback control mechanism in which

  • net arterial remodeling to hemodynamic forces is controlled by a dynamic interplay between growth stimulatory signals from vSMCs and
  • growth inhibitory signals from endothelial cells. (2)

Heparan-sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) are potent regulators of vascular remodeling and repair.
 The major enzyme capable of degrading HSPGs is heparanase, which led us to examine
the role of heparanase in controlling

  • arterial structure,
  • mechanics, and
  • remodeling.

In vitro studies suggested heparanase expression in endothelial cells serves as a negative regulator of endothelial inhibition of vascular smooth muscle cell (vSMC) proliferation.

ECs inhibit vSMC proliferation through the interplay between

  • growth stimulatory signals from vSMCs and
  • growth inhibitory signals from ECs.

This would be expected if ECs had HSPGs that are degraded by heparanase.
Arterial structure and remodeling to injury is modified by heparanase expression.
Transgenic mice overexpressing heparanase had

  • increased arterial thickness,
  • cellular density, and
  • mechanical compliance.

Endovascular stenting studies in Zucker rats demonstrated increased heparanase expression in the neointima of obese, hyperlipidemic rats in comparison to lean rats.

The extent of heparanase expression within the neointima strongly correlated with the neointimal thickness following injury. To test the effects of heparanase overexpression on arterial repair, researchers developed a novel murine model of stent injury using small diameter self-expanding stents.

Using this model, researchers found that increased

  • neointimal formation and
  • macrophage recruitment occurs in transgenic mice overexpressing heparanase.
  • Taken together, these results support a role for heparanase in the regulation of arterial structure, mechanics, and repair. (3)

The first host–donor reaction in transplantation occurs at the blood–tissue interface.
When the primary component of the implant (donor) is the endothelial cells, it incites an immunologic reaction. Injections of free endothelial cell implants elicit a profound major histocompatibility complex (MHC) II dominated immune response.

Endothelial cells embedded within three-dimensional matrices behave like quiescent endothelial cells.

Perivascular implants of such embedded ECs cells are the most potent inhibitor of intimal hyperplasia and thrombosis following controlled vascular injury, but without any immune reactivity.

Allo- and even exenogenic endothelial cells evoke no significant humoral or
cellular immune response in immune-competent hosts when embedded within matrices.
 Moreover,  endothelial implants are immune-modulatory, reducing the extent of the memory response to previous free cell implants.

Attenuated immunogenicity results in muted activation of adaptive and innate immune cells. These findings point toward a pivotal role of matrix–cell-interconnectivity for

  • the cellular immune phenotype and might therefore assist in the design  of
  • extracellular matrix components for successful tissue engineering. (4)

Because changes in subendothelial matrix composition are associated with alterations of the endothelial immune phenotype, researchers sought to understand if

  • cytokine-induced NF-κB activity and
  • downstream effects depend on substrate adherence of endothelial cells (EC).

The team compared the upstream

  • phosphorylation cascade,
  • activation of NF-ĸβ, and
  • expression/secretion

of downstream effects of EC grown on tissue culture polystyrene plates (TCPS) with EC embedded within collagen-based matrices (MEEC).

Adhesion of natural killer (NK) cells was quantified in vitro and in vivo.

  • NF-κβ subunit p65 nuclear levels were significantly lower and
  • p50 significantly higher in cytokine-stimulated MEEC than in EC-TCPS.

Despite similar surface expression of TNF-α receptors, MEEC had significantly decreased secretion and expression of IL-6, IL-8, MCP-1, VCAM-1, and ICAM-1.

Attenuated fractalkine expression and secretion in MEEC (two to threefold lower than in EC-TCPS; p < 0.0002) correlated with 3.7-fold lower NK cell adhesion to EC (6,335 ± 420 vs. 1,735 ± 135 cpm; p < 0.0002).

Furthermore, NK cell infiltration into sites of EC implantation in vivo was significantly reduced when EC were embedded within matrix.

Matrix embedding enables control of EC substratum interaction.

This in turn regulates chemokine and surface molecule expression and secretion, in particular – of those compounds within NF-κβ pathways,

  • chemoattraction of NK cells,
  • local inflammation, and
  • tissue repair. (5)

Monocyte recruitment and interaction with the endothelium is imperative to vascular recovery.

Tie2 plays a key role in endothelial health and vascular remodeling.
Researchers studied monocyte-mediated Tie2/angiopoietin signaling following interaction of primary monocytes with endothelial cells and its role in endothelial cell survival.

The direct interaction of primary monocytes with subconfluent endothelial cells

resulted in transient secretion of angiopoietin-1 from monocytes and

the activation of endothelial Tie2. This effect was abolished by preactivation of monocytes with tumor necrosis factor-α (TNFα).

Although primary monocytes contained high levels of

  • both angiopoietin 1 and 2,
  • endothelial cells contained primarily angiopoietin 2.

Seeding of monocytes on serum-starved endothelial cells reduced caspase-3 activity by 46+5.1%, and 52+5.8% after TNFα treatment, and it decreased single-stranded DNA levels by 41+4.2% and 40+ 3.5%, respectively.

This protective effect of monocytes on endothelial cells was reversed by Tie2 silencing with specific short interfering RNA.

The antiapoptotic effect of monocytes was further supported by the

  • activation of cell survival signaling pathways involving phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase,
  • STAT3, and
  • AKT.

Monocytes and endothelial cells form a unique Tie2/angiopoietin-1 signaling system that affects endothelial cell survival and may play critical a role in vascular remodeling and homeostasis. (6)

(1) Cell–Matrix Contact Prevents Recognition and Damage of Endothelial Cells in States of Heightened Immunity.
H Methe, ER Edelman. Circulation. 2006;114[suppl I]:I-233–I-238.
http://www.circulationaha.org/DOI/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.000687

(2) Endothelial Cells Provide Feedback Control for Vascular Remodeling Through a Mechanosensitive Autocrine
TGFβ Signaling Pathway. AB Baker, DS Ettenson, M Jonas, MA Nugent, RV Iozzo, ER Edelman.
Circ. Res. 2008;103;289-297   http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.108.179465http://circres.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/full/103/3/289

(3) Heparanase Alters Arterial Structure, Mechanics, and Repair Following Endovascular Stenting in Mice.
AB Baker, A Groothuis, M Jonas, DS Ettenson…ER Edelman.   Circ. Res. 2009;104;380-387;
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.108.180695  http://circres.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/full/104/3/380

(4) The effect of three-dimensional matrix-embedding of endothelial cells on the humoral and cellular immune response.
H Methe, S Hess, ER Edelman. Seminars in Immunology 20 (2008) 117–122. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.smim.2007.12.005

(5) NF-kB Activity in Endothelial Cells Is Modulated by Cell Substratum Inter-actions and Influences Chemokine-Mediated
Adhesion of Natural Killer Cells.  S Hess, H Methe, Jong-Oh Kim, ER Edelman.
Cell Transplantation 2009; 18: 261–273


(6) Primary Monocytes Regulate Endothelial Cell Survival Through Secretion of Angiopoietin-1 and Activation of Endothelial Tie2.
SY Schubert, A Benarroch, J Monter-Solans and ER Edelman. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 2011;31;870-875
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/ATVBAHA.110.218255

Neointimal Formation, Shear Stress, and Remodelling with Reference to Diabetes

Innate immunity is of major importance in vascular repair. The present study evaluated whether

  • systemic and transient depletion of monocytes and macrophages with
  • liposome-encapsulated bisphosphonates inhibits experimental in-stent neointimal formation.

The Experiment

Rabbits fed on a hypercholesterolemic diet underwent bilateral iliac artery balloon denudation and stent deployment.

Liposomal alendronate (3 or 6 mg/kg) was given concurrently with stenting.

  • Monocyte counts were reduced by 90% 24 to 48 hours aftera single injection of liposomal alendronate, returning to basal levels at 6 days.

This treatment significantly reduced

  • intimal area at 28 days, from 3.88+0.93 to 2.08+0.58 and 2.16 +0.62 mm2.
  • Lumen area was increased from 2.87+0.44 to 3.57­+0.65 and 3.45+0.58 mm2, and
  • arterial stenosis was reduced from 58 11% to 37 8% and 38 7% in controls, in rabbits treated with 3 mg/kg, and with 6 mg/kg, respectively (mean+SD, n=8 rabbits/group, P< 0.01 for all 3 parameters).

No drug-related adverse effects were observed.
Reduction in neointimal formation was associated with

  • reduced arterial macrophage infiltration and proliferation at 6 days and with an
  • equal reduction in intimal macrophage and smooth muscle cell content at 28 days after injury.

Conversely, drug regimens ineffective in reducing monocyte levels did not inhibit neointimal formation.
Researchers have shown that a

  • single liposomal bisphosphonates injection concurrent with injury reduces in-stent neointimal formation and
  • arterial stenosis in hypercholesterolemic rabbits, accompanied by systemic transient depletion of monocytes and macrophages. (1)

Diabetes and insulin resistance are associated with increased disease risk and poor outcomes from cardiovascular interventions.

Even drug-eluting stents exhibit reduced efficacy in patients with diabetes.
Researchers reported the first study of vascular response to stent injury in insulin-resistant and diabetic animal models.

Endovascular stents were expanded in the aortae of

  • obese insulin-resistant and
  • type 2 diabetic Zucker rats,
  • in streptozotocin-induced type 1 diabetic Sprague-Dawley rats, and
  • in matched controls.

Insulin-resistant rats developed thicker neointima (0.46+0.08 versus 0.37+0.06 mm2, P 0.05), with  decreased lumen area (2.95+0.26 versus 3.29+0.15 mm2, P 0.03) 14 days after stenting compared with controls, but without increased vascular inflammation (tissue macrophages).

Insulin-resistant and diabetic rat vessels did exhibit markedly altered signaling pathway activation 1 and 2 weeks after stenting, with up to a 98% increase in p-ERK (anti-phospho ERK) and a 54% reduction in p-Akt (anti-phospho Akt) stained cells. Western blotting confirmed a profound effect of insulin resistance and diabetes on Akt and ERK signaling in stented segments. p-ERK/p-Akt ratio in stented segments uniquely correlated with neointimal response (R2 = 0.888, P< 0.04) , but not in lean controls.

Transfemoral aortic stenting in rats provides insight into vascular responses in insulin resistance and diabetes.

Shifts in ERK and Akt signaling related to insulin resistance may reflect altered tissue repair in diabetes accompanied by a

  • shift in metabolic : proliferative balance.

These findings may help explain the increased vascular morbidity in diabetes and suggest specific therapies for patients with insulin resistance and diabetes. (2)

Researchers investigated the role of Valsartan (V) alone or in combination with Simvastatin (S) on coronary atherosclerosis and vascular remodeling, and tested the hypothesis that V or V/S attenuate the pro-inflammatory effect of low endothelial shear stress (ESS).

Twenty-four diabetic, hyperlipidemic swine were allocated into Early (n = 12) and Late (n=12) groups.
Diabetic swine in each group were treated with Placebo (n=4), V (n = 4) and V/S (n = 4) and  followed for 8 weeks in the Early group and 30 weeks in the Late group.

Blood pressure, serum cholesterol and glucose were similar across the treatment subgroups.
ESS was calculated in plaque-free subsegments of interest (n = 109) in the Late group at week 23.
Coronary arteries of this group were harvested at week 30, and the subsegments of interest were identified, and analyzed histopathologically.

Intravascular geometrically correct 3-dimensional reconstruction of the coronary arteries of 12 swine was performed 23 weeks after initiation of diabetes mellitus and a hyperlipidemic diet. Local endothelial shear stress was calculated

  • in plaque-free subsegments of interest (n=142) with computational fluid dynamics, and
  • the coronary arteries (n=31) were harvested and the same subsegments were identified at 30 weeks.

V alone or with S

  • reduced the severity of inflammation in high-risk plaques.
Both regimens attenuated the severity of enzymatic degradation of the arterial wall, reducing the severity of expansive remodeling.
  • attenuated the pro-inflammatory effect of low ESS.
V alone or with S
  • exerts a beneficial effect of reducing and stabilizing high-risk plaque characteristics independent of a blood pressure- and lipid-lowering effect. (3)

This study tested the hypothesis that low endothelial shear stress  augments the

  • expression of matrix-degrading proteases, promoting the
  • formation of thin-capped atheromata.

Researchers assessed the messenger RNA and protein expression, and elastolytic activity of selected elastases and their endogenous inhibitors.

Subsegments with low endothelial shear stress at week 23 showed

  • reduced endothelial coverage,
  • enhanced lipid accumulation, and
  • intense infiltration of activated inflammatory cells at week 30.

These lesions showed increased expression of messenger RNAs encoding

  • matrix metalloproteinase-2, -9, and -12, and cathepsins K and S
  • relative to their endogenous inhibitors and
  • increased elastolytic activity.

Expression of these enzymes correlated positively with the severity of internal elastic lamina fragmentation.

Thin-capped atheromata in regions with

  • lower preceding endothelial shear stress had
  • reduced endothelial coverage,
  • intense lipid and inflammatory cell accumulation,
  • enhanced messenger RNA expression and
  • elastolytic activity of MMPs and cathepsins with
  • severe internal elastic lamina fragmentation.

Low endothelial shear stress induces endothelial discontinuity and

  • accumulation of activated inflammatory cells, thereby
  • augmenting the expression and activity of elastases in the intima and
  • shifting the balance with their inhibitors toward matrix breakdown.

Team’s results provide new insight into the mechanisms of regional formation of plaques with thin fibrous caps. (4)

Elevated CRP levels predict increased incidence of cardiovascular events and poor outcomes following interventions. There is the suggestion that CRP is also a mediator of vascular injury.

Transgenic mice carrying the human CRP gene (CRPtg) are predisposed to arterial thrombosis post-injury.

Researchers examined whether CRP similarly modulates the proliferative and hyperplastic phases of vascular repair in CRPtg when thrombosis is controlled with daily aspirin and heparin at the time of trans-femoral arterial wire-injury.

Complete thrombotic arterial occlusion at 28 days was comparable for wild-type and CRPtg mice (14 and 19%, respectively). Neointimal area at 28d was 2.5 fold lower in CRPtg (4190±3134 m2, n = 12) compared to wild-types (10,157±8890 m2, n = 11, p < 0.05).

Likewise, neointimal/media area ratio was 1.10±0.87 in wild-types and 0.45±0.24 in CRPtg (p < 0.05).

  • Seven days post-injury, cellular proliferation and apoptotic cell number in the intima were both less pronounced in CRPtg than wild-type.
  • No differences were seen in leukocyte infiltration or endothelial coverage.
CRPtg mice had significantly reduced p38 MAPK signaling pathway activation following injury.

The pro-thrombotic phenotype of CRPtg mice was suppressed by aspirin/heparin, revealing CRP’s influence on neointimal growth after trans-femoral arterial wire-injury.

  • Signaling pathway activation,
  • cellular proliferation, and
  • neointimal formation

were all reduced in CRPtg following vascular injury.
 Increasingly the Team was aware of CRP multipotent effects.
 Once considered only a risk factor, and recently a harmful agent, CRP is a far more complex regulator of vascular biology. (5)

(1) Liposomal Alendronate Inhibits Systemic Innate Immunity and Reduces In-Stent Neointimal
Hyperplasia in Rabbits. HD Danenberg, G Golomb, A Groothuis, J Gao…, ER Edelman.
Circulation. 2003;108:2798-2804


(2) Vascular Neointimal Formation and Signaling Pathway Activation in Response to Stent Injury
in Insulin-Resistant and Diabetic Animals. M Jonas, ER Edelman, A Groothuis, AB Baker, P Seifert, C Rogers.
Circ. Res. 2005;97;725-733.        http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/01.RES.0000183730.52908.C6
http://circres.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/full/97/7/725

(3) Attenuation of inflammation and expansive remodeling by Valsartan alone or in combination with
Simvastatin in high-risk coronary atherosclerotic plaques. YS Chatzizisis, M Jonas, R Beigel, AU Coskun…
ER Edelman, CL Feldman, PH Stone.  Atherosclerosis 203 (2009) 387–394


(4) Augmented Expression and Activity of Extracellular Matrix-Degrading Enzymes in Regions of Low
Endothelial Shear Stress Colocalize With Coronary Atheromata With Thin Fibrous Caps in Pigs.
YS Chatzizisis, AB Baker, GK Sukhova,…P Libby, CL Feldman, ER Edelman, PH Stone
Circulation 2011;123;621-630     http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.110.970038
http://circ.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/full/123/6/621


(5) Neointimal formation is reduced after arterial injury in human crp transgenic mice
HD Danenberg, E Grad, RV Swaminathan, Z Chenc,…ER Edelman
Atherosclerosis 201 (2008) 85–91

A Rattle Bag of Science and the Art of Translation

Science Translational Medicine – A rattle bag of science and the art of translation
E. R. Edelman, G. A. FitzGerald.
Sci.Transl. Med. 3, 104ed3 (2011). http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.3002131

Elazer R. Edelman is the Thomas D. and Virginia W. Cabot Professor of Health Sciences and Technology at MIT,
Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, a coronary care unit cardiologist at the Brigham and Women’s
Hospital, and Director of the Harvard-MIT Biomedical Engineering Center. E-mail: ere@mit.edu

Garret A. FitzGerald is the McNeil Professor in Translational Medicine and Therapeutics, Chair of the Department of
Pharmacology, and Director of the Institute for Translational Medicine & Therapeutics, University of Pennsylvania.
E-mail: garret@upenn.edu

In 2011, the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)  founded Science Translational Medicine (STM)
to disseminate interdisciplinary science integrating basic and clinical research that defines and fosters new therapeutics, devices, and diagnostics.

Conceived and nourished under the creative vision of Elias Zerhouni and Katrina Kelner, the journal has attracted widespread attention.
Now, as we assume the mantle of co-chief scientific advisors, we look back on the journal’s early accomplishments, restate our mission, and make clear the kinds of manuscripts we seek and accept for publication.

STM’s mission, as articulated by Elias and Katrina, was to

“promote human health by providing a forum for communication and cross-fertilization among basic, translational, and clinical research practitioners and trainees from all relevant established and emerging disciplines.”

This statement remains relevant and accurate today.
 With this mission on our masthead, STM now receives ~25 manuscripts (full-length research articles) per week and publishes ~10% of them. Roughly half of the submissions are deemed inappropriate for the journal and are returned without review within 8 to 10 days of receipt.

Of those papers that undergo full peer review,

decisions to reject are made within 48 days and

the mean time to acceptance (including the revision period) is 125 days.

There is now an average wait of only 24 days between acceptance and publication.

Defining TRANSLATIONAL Medicine

In accord with the journal’s broad readership, the ideal manuscript meets five criteria: It
(i) reports a discovery of translational relevance with high-impact potential;
(ii) has a conceptual focus with interdisciplinary appeal;
(iii) elucidates a biological mechanism;
(iv) is innovative and novel; and
(v) is presented in clear, broadly accessible language.
 STM seeks to publish research that describes

  • how innovative concepts drive the creative biomedical science
  • that ultimately improves the quality of people’s lives—

This is the broadest of our journal’s criteria but is the one that sets us apart as well.
Translational relevance does not require demonstration of benefit in humans but does require the evident potential to advance clinical medicine, thus impacting the direction of our culture and the welfare of our communities. Conceptual focus and mechanistic emphasis discriminate our papers from those that contain observational descriptions of technical findings for which value is restricted to a specific discipline.

However, innovation and novelty may apply to a fundamental scientific discovery or to the nature of its application and relevance to the translational process. Criteria enable the journal to consider versatile technological advances that apply new and creative thinking but may not necessarily offer fresh insights into biological mechanisms. Finally, while the subsequent additional efforts of the STM editorial staff are not to be discounted, the clarity of writing and coherence of argument presented within a submitted manuscript are likely to facilitate its progress through the challenge of peer review.

On Causes – Hippocrates, Aristotle, Robert Koch, and the Dread Pirate Roberts

Elazer R. Edelman
Circulation 2001;104:2509-2512

The idea of risk factors for vascular disease has evolved

  • from a dichotomous to continuous hazard analysis and
  • from the consideration of a few factors to
  • mechanistic investigation of many interrelated risks.

However, confusion still abounds regarding issues of association and causation. Originally, the simple presence of

  • tobacco abuse, hypertension, and/or hypercholesterolemia were tallied, and
  • the cumulative score was predictive of subsequent coronary artery disease.

Since then, dose responses have been defined for these and other factors and it has been suggested that almost 300 factors place patients at risk; these factors include elevations in plasma homocysteine.
 Recent studies shed interesting light on the mechanism of this potentially causal relationship, which was first noted in 1969.

Aside from putative effects on vessel wall dynamics, there is now direct evidence that homocysteine is atherogenic. Twenty-fold increases in plasma homocysteine achieved by dietary manipulation of apoE–/– mice increased aortic root lesion size 2-fold and produced a prolonged chronic inflammatory mural response accompanied by elevations in vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM) and tumor necrosis factor-a (TNF-a).

In long term followup, homocysteine levels elevated by

  • dietary supplementation with methionine or homocysteine
  • promoted lesion size and plaque fibrosis in these
  • atherosclerosis-prone mice early in life, but without influencing ultimate plaque burden as the animals aged.

A number of mechanisms were proposed by which homocysteine achieved this effect, including

  • promotion of inflammation,
  • regulation of lipoprotein metabolism, and
  • modification of critical biochemical pathways and
  • metabolites including nitric oxide (NO).

See p 2569
In the present issue of Circulation,

Stühlinger et al 7 advance these mechanistic insights one critical step further by defining homocysteine’s effects at an enzymatic level.

The group led by Lentz published an association between levels of the

  • endogenous inhibitor of Nirtic Oxide synthase,
  • asymmetric dimethyl arginine (ADMA), and
  • homocysteine in cultured endothelial cells and in the serum of cynomolgus monkeys.

Such an association is interesting because the L-arginine–NO synthase pathway seems to be a critical component in the full range of endothelial cell biology and vascular dysfunction.

Stühlinger et al 7  now show that increased cultured endothelial cell elaboration of ADMA by homocysteine and its precursor L-methionine is associated with a dose-dependent impairment of the activity of endothelial dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase (DDAH), the enzyme that degrades ADMA. Homocysteine directly inhibited DDAH activity in a cell-free system by targeting a critical sulfhydryl group on this enzyme.

Thus, one could envision that the balance of cardiovascular health and disease could well be determined by the ability of an intact Nirtic Oxide synthase system to overcome environmental, dietary, and even genetic factors.

In patients with altered enzymatic defense systems,

  • elevated homocysteine,
  • oxidized lipoproteins,
  • inflammation, and other
  • vasotoxins

may dominate even the most potent defense mechanisms.
These studies raise a number of issues.
Do we need to add to our list of established cardiovascular risk factors to accommodate new findings and associations?
Is there a final common pathway for all risk factors or perhaps even a unified factor theory into which all potential risks can be grouped?
And, as always, should we consider Nirtic Oxide at the core of this universality?
Finally, should we change our focus altogether and speak not of risk factors but of

  • genetic predisposition,
  • extent of biochemical aberration, and
  • degree of physical damage?

Some would view these remarkable success stories and the repeated association of hyperhomocyst(e)inemia with coronary, cerebral, and peripheral vascular disease and simply advocate for increased folic acid intake for all.

Indeed, this intervention of negligible cost and

  • insignificant side effect is already partially in place;
  • many foods are fortified with folate to prevent congenital neural tube defects.

This reader considers the seminal work by Vernon Young and Yves Ingenbleek on the relationship between

  • S8 and regions distant from lava flows in Asia and Indian subcontinents,
  • where they have determined hyperhomocysteinemia and the consequence associated with:
  • veganism (not voluntary)
  • impaired methyl donor reactions and transsulfuration pathways (not corrected by B12, folate)
  • loss of lean body mass due to the constant relationship of S:N (insufficient from plant sources)

What happens, when we fail to continue to pursue causality,

  • the linkage of biological significance or scientific plausibility with
  • epidemiologically or statistically significant association?

In medicine, risk becomes the likelihood that people without a disease will acquire the disease through contact with factors thought to increase disease risk.

All of these risk factors are then, by nature, imprecise and nonspecific.
 They are stochastic measures of what will happen to normal people who fall into particular measures of these parameters.

The daring may be willing to accept these risks, citing friend and foe who live well beyond or for far lesser times than anticipated by risk alone. Such concerns may well become moot if we can simultaneously identify patients at risk

  • by linking phenotype with genotype,
  • gene expression with protein elaboration, and
  • environmental exposures with the biochemical consequences and
  • direct anatomic aberrations they induce.

This kind of characterization may well replace a family history of arterial disease as a rough estimate of

  • genotype,
  • serum cholesterol as an indirect measure of the health of lipoprotein metabolism,
  • serum glucose as a crude determinant of the ravages of diabetes mellitus,
  • blood pressure measurement as a marker of long-standing endogenous exposure to altered flow, and
  • tobacco abuse as a maker of long-standing exposure to exogenous toxins.

Rather than identifying patients on the basis of their serum cholesterol, we will have a direct measure of their

  • LDL receptor number,
  • internalization rate,
  • macrophage content in the blood vessel wall,
  • metalloproteinase activity, etc.
  • insulin receptor metabolism,
  • oxidative state, and
  • glycated burden.
  • Serum glucose will similarly give way to these tests

Evaluating a new way to open clogged arteries: Computational model offers insight into mechanisms of drug-coated balloons.

A new study from MIT analyzes the potential usefulness of a new treatment that combines the benefits of angioplasty balloons and drug-releasing stents, but may pose fewer risks. With this new approach, a balloon is inflated in the artery for only a brief period, during which it releases a drug that prevents cells from accumulating and clogging the arteries over time.
While approved for limited use in Europe, these drug-coated balloons are still in development in the United States and have not received FDA approval. The MIT study, which models the behavior of the balloons, should help scientists optimize their performance and aid regulators in evaluating their effectiveness and safety.
“Until now, people who evaluate such technology could not distinguish hype from promise,” says Elazer Edelman, the Thomas D. and Virginia W. Cabot Professor of Health Sciences and Technology and senior author of the paper describing the study, which appeared online recently in the journal Circulation.
Lead author of the paper is Vijaya Kolachalama, a former MIT postdoc who is now a principal member of the technical staff at the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory.
Edelman’s lab is investigating a possible alternative to the current treatments: drug-coated balloons. “We’re trying to understand how and when this therapy could work and identify the conditions in which it may not,” Kolachalama says. “It has its merits; it has some disadvantages.”

Modeling drug release

The drug-coated balloons are delivered by a catheter and inflated at the narrowed artery for about 30 seconds, sometimes longer. During that time, the balloon coating, containing a drug such as Zotarolimus, is released from the balloon. The properties of the coating allow the drug to be absorbed in the body’s tissues. Once the drug is released, the balloon is removed.
In their new study, Kolachalama, Edelman and colleagues set out to rigorously characterize the properties of the drug-coated balloons. After performing experiments in tissue grown in the lab and in pigs, they developed a computer model that explains the dynamics of drug release and distribution. They found that factors such as the size of the balloon, the duration of delivery time, and the composition of the drug coating all influence how long the drug stays at the injury site and how effectively it clears the arteries.
One significant finding is that when the drug is released, some of it sticks to the lining of the blood vessels. Over time, that drug is slowly released back into the tissue, which explains why the drug’s effects last much longer than the initial 30-second release period.
“This is the first time we can explain the reasons why drug-coated balloons can work,” Kolachalama says. “The study also offers areas where people can consider thinking about optimizing drug transfer and delivery.”

http://circ.ahajournals.org/content/127/20/2047.short  
http://www.mit.edu/people/vbk/Circulation_2013.pdf 
http://www.sciencedaily.com/…13/05/130521121513.ht…    
Circulation, 2013; 127 (20): 2047 – 2055
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.113.002051;

 

Conclusion

MIT’s Edelman’s Lab conducted the pioneering work in Vascular biology, animal models of drug eluting stents and was at the forefront of Empirical Molecular Cardiology in its studies in vascular physiology, biology and biomaterials for medical devices.

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http://books.google.com/books?id=iYLbuZFxEt8C&pg=PR20&dq=New+York+Times+homocysteine+and+Cholesterol&hl=en&sa=X&ei=_0F7UfDRA8zB4APozIHQAQ&ved=0CEMQ6AEwAg

 

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High-Density Lipoprotein (HDL): An Independent Predictor of Endothelial Function & Atherosclerosis, A Modulator, An Agonist, A Biomarker for Cardiovascular Risk

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 3/31/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/31/high-density-lipoprotein-hdl-an-independent-predictor-of-endothelial-function-artherosclerosis-a-modulator-an-agonist-a-biomarker-for-cardiovascular-risk/

Acute Chest Pain/ER Admission: Three Emerging Alternatives to Angiography and PCI

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 3/10/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/10/acute-chest-painer-admission-three-emerging-alternatives-to-angiography-and-pci/

Genomics & Genetics of Cardiovascular Disease Diagnoses: A Literature Survey of AHA’s Circulation Cardiovascular Genetics, 3/2010 – 3/2013

Lev-Ari, A. and L H Bernstein 3/7/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/07/genomics-genetics-of-cardiovascular-disease-diagnoses-a-literature-survey-of-ahas-circulation-cardiovascular-genetics-32010-32013/

The Heart: Vasculature Protection – A Concept-based Pharmacological Therapy including THYMOSIN

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 2/28/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/02/28/the-heart-vasculature-protection-a-concept-based-pharmacological-therapy-including-thymosin/

Arteriogenesis and Cardiac Repair: Two Biomaterials – Injectable Thymosin beta4 and Myocardial Matrix Hydrogel

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 2/27/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/02/27/arteriogenesis-and-cardiac-repair-two-biomaterials-injectable-thymosin-beta4-and-myocardial-matrix-hydrogel/

Coronary artery disease in symptomatic patients referred for coronary angiography: Predicted by Serum Protein Profiles

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 12/29/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/29/coronary-artery-disease-in-symptomatic-patients-referred-for-coronary-angiography-predicted-by-serum-protein-profiles/

Special Considerations in Blood Lipoproteins, Viscosity, Assessment and Treatment

Bernstein, HL and Lev-Ari, A. 11/28/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/28/special-considerations-in-blood-lipoproteins-viscosity-assessment-and-treatment/

Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR-gamma) Receptors Activation: PPARγ transrepression for Angiogenesis in Cardiovascular Disease and PPARγ transactivation for Treatment of Diabetes

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 11/13/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/13/peroxisome-proliferator-activated-receptor-ppar-gamma-receptors-activation-pparγ-transrepression-for-angiogenesis-in-cardiovascular-disease-and-pparγ-transactivation-for-treatment-of-dia/

Clinical Trials Results for Endothelin System: Pathophysiological role in Chronic Heart Failure, Acute Coronary Syndromes and MI – Marker of Disease Severity or Genetic Determination?

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 10/19/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/19/clinical-trials-results-for-endothelin-system-pathophysiological-role-in-chronic-heart-failure-acute-coronary-syndromes-and-mi-marker-of-disease-severity-or-genetic-determination/

Endothelin Receptors in Cardiovascular Diseases: The Role of eNOS Stimulation

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 10/4/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/04/endothelin-receptors-in-cardiovascular-diseases-the-role-of-enos-stimulation/

Inhibition of ET-1, ETA and ETA-ETB, Induction of NO production, stimulation of eNOS and Treatment Regime with PPAR-gamma agonists (TZD): cEPCs Endogenous Augmentation for Cardiovascular Risk Reduction – A Bibliography

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 10/4/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/04/inhibition-of-et-1-eta-and-eta-etb-induction-of-no-production-and-stimulation-of-enos-and-treatment-regime-with-ppar-gamma-agonists-tzd-cepcs-endogenous-augmentation-for-cardiovascular-risk-reduc/

Positioning a Therapeutic Concept for Endogenous Augmentation of cEPCs — Therapeutic Indications for Macrovascular Disease: Coronary, Cerebrovascular and Peripheral

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 8/29/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/29/positioning-a-therapeutic-concept-for-endogenous-augmentation-of-cepcs-therapeutic-indications-for-macrovascular-disease-coronary-cerebrovascular-and-peripheral/

Cardiovascular Outcomes: Function of circulating Endothelial Progenitor Cells (cEPCs): Exploring Pharmaco-therapy targeted at Endogenous Augmentation of cEPCs

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 8/28/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/28/cardiovascular-outcomes-function-of-circulating-endothelial-progenitor-cells-cepcs-exploring-pharmaco-therapy-targeted-at-endogenous-augmentation-of-cepcs/

Endothelial Dysfunction, Diminished Availability of cEPCs, Increasing CVD Risk for Macrovascular Disease – Therapeutic Potential of cEPCs

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, R N 8/27/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/27/endothelial-dysfunction-diminished-availability-of-cepcs-increasing-cvd-risk-for-macrovascular-disease-therapeutic-potential-of-cepcs/

Vascular Medicine and Biology: CLASSIFICATION OF FAST ACTING THERAPY FOR PATIENTS AT HIGH RISK FOR MACROVASCULAR EVENTS Macrovascular Disease – Therapeutic Potential of cEPCs

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 8/24/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/24/vascular-medicine-and-biology-classification-of-fast-acting-therapy-for-patients-at-high-risk-for-macrovascular-events-macrovascular-disease-therapeutic-potential-of-cepcs/

Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) and the Role of agent alternatives in endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase (eNOS) Activation and Nitric Oxide Production

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 7/19/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/19/cardiovascular-disease-cvd-and-the-role-of-agent-alternatives-in-endothelial-nitric-oxide-synthase-enos-activation-and-nitric-oxide-production/

Resident-cell-based Therapy in Human Ischaemic Heart Disease: Evolution in the PROMISE of Thymosin beta4 for Cardiac Repair

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 4/30/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/04/30/93/

Triple Antihypertensive Combination Therapy Significantly Lowers Blood Pressure in Hard-to-Treat Patients with Hypertension and Diabetes

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 5/29/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/05/29/445/

Macrovascular Disease – Therapeutic Potential of cEPCs: Reduction Methods for CV Risk

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 7/2/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/02/macrovascular-disease-therapeutic-potential-of-cepcs-reduction-methods-for-cv-risk/

Mitochondria Dysfunction and Cardiovascular Disease – Mitochondria: More than just the “powerhouse of the cell”

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 7/9/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/09/mitochondria-more-than-just-the-powerhouse-of-the-cell/

Bystolic’s generic Nebivolol – positive effect on circulating Endothelial Proginetor Cells endogenous augmentation

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 7/16/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/16/bystolics-generic-nebivolol-positive-effect-on-circulating-endothilial-progrnetor-cells-endogenous-augmentation/

Arteriogenesis and Cardiac Repair: Two Biomaterials – Injectable Thymosin beta4 and Myocardial Matrix Hydrogel

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 2/27/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/02/27/arteriogenesis-and-cardiac-repair-two-biomaterials-injectable-thymosin-beta4-and-myocardial-matrix-hydrogel/

Cardiac Surgery Theatre in China vs. in the US: Cardiac Repair Procedures, Medical Devices in Use, Technology in Hospitals, Surgeons’ Training and Cardiac Disease Severity”

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 1/8/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/08/cardiac-surgery-theatre-in-china-vs-in-the-us-cardiac-repair-procedures-medical-devices-in-use-technology-in-hospitals-surgeons-training-and-cardiac-disease-severity/

Heart Remodeling by Design – Implantable Synchronized Cardiac Assist Device: Abiomed’s Symphony

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 7/23/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/23/heart-remodeling-by-design-implantable-synchronized-cardiac-assist-device-abiomeds-symphony/

Acute Chest Pain/ER Admission: Three Emerging Alternatives to Angiography and PCI

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 3/10/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/10/acute-chest-painer-admission-three-emerging-alternatives-to-angiography-and-pci/

Dilated Cardiomyopathy: Decisions on implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs) using left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) and Midwall Fibrosis: Decisions on Replacement using late gadolinium enhancement cardiovascular MR (LGE-CMR)

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 3/10/2013
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/10/dilated-cardiomyopathy-decisions-on-implantable-cardioverter-defibrillators-icds-using-left-ventricular-ejection-fraction-lvef-and-midwall-fibrosis-decisions-on-replacement-using-late-gadolinium/

The Heart: Vasculature Protection – A Concept-based Pharmacological Therapy including THYMOSIN

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 2/28/2013
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/02/28/the-heart-vasculature-protection-a-concept-based-pharmacological-therapy-including-thymosin/

FDA Pending 510(k) for The Latest Cardiovascular Imaging Technology

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 1/28/2013
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/28/fda-pending-510k-for-the-latest-cardiovascular-imaging-technology/

PCI Outcomes, Increased Ischemic Risk associated with Elevated Plasma Fibrinogen not Platelet Reactivity

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 1/10/2013
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/10/pci-outcomes-increased-ischemic-risk-associated-with-elevated-plasma-fibrinogen-not-platelet-reactivity/

The ACUITY-PCI score: Will it Replace Four Established Risk Scores — TIMI, GRACE, SYNTAX, and Clinical SYNTAX

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/03/the-acuity-pci-score-will-it-replace-four-established-risk-scores-timi-grace-syntax-and-clinical-syntax/

Coronary artery disease in symptomatic patients referred for coronary angiography: Predicted by Serum Protein Profiles

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/29/coronary-artery-disease-in-symptomatic-patients-referred-for-coronary-angiography-predicted-by-serum-protein-profiles/

Heart Renewal by pre-existing Cardiomyocytes: Source of New Heart Cell Growth Discovered

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 12/23/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/23/heart-renewal-by-pre-existing-cardiomyocytes-source-of-new-heart-cell-growth-discovered/

Cardiovascular Risk Inflammatory Marker: Risk Assessment for Coronary Heart Disease and Ischemic Stroke – Atherosclerosis.

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 10/30/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/30/cardiovascular-risk-inflammatory-marker-risk-assessment-for-coronary-heart-disease-and-ischemic-stroke-atherosclerosis/

To Stent or Not? A Critical Decision

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 10/23/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/23/to-stent-or-not-a-critical-decision/

New Definition of MI Unveiled, Fractional Flow Reserve (FFR)CT for Tagging Ischemia

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 8/27/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/27/new-definition-of-mi-unveiled-fractional-flow-reserve-ffrct-for-tagging-ischemia/

Ethical Considerations in Studying Drug Safety — The Institute of Medicine Report

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 8/23/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/23/ethical-considerations-in-studying-drug-safety-the-institute-of-medicine-report/

New Drug-Eluting Stent Works Well in STEMI

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 8/22/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/22/new-drug-eluting-stent-works-well-in-stemi/

Expected New Trends in Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medical Devices

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 8/17/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/17/expected-new-trends-in-cardiology-and-cardiovascular-medical-devices/

Coronary Artery Disease – Medical Devices Solutions: From First-In-Man Stent Implantation, via Medical Ethical Dilemmas to Drug Eluting Stents

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 8/13/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/13/coronary-artery-disease-medical-devices-solutions-from-first-in-man-stent-implantation-via-medical-ethical-dilemmas-to-drug-eluting-stents/

Percutaneous Endocardial Ablation of Scar-Related Ventricular Tachycardia

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 7/18/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/18/percutaneous-endocardial-ablation-of-scar-related-ventricular-tachycardia/

Competition in the Ecosystem of Medical Devices in Cardiac and Vascular Repair: Heart Valves, Stents, Catheterization Tools and Kits for Open Heart and Minimally Invasive Surgery (MIS)

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 6/22/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/06/22/competition-in-the-ecosystem-of-medical-devices-in-cardiac-and-vascular-repair-heart-valves-stents-catheterization-tools-and-kits-for-open-heart-and-minimally-invasive-surgery-mis/

Global Supplier Strategy for Market Penetration & Partnership Options (Niche Suppliers vs. National Leaders) in the Massachusetts Cardiology & Vascular Surgery Tools and Devices Market for Cardiac Operating Rooms and Angioplasty Suites

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 6/22/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/06/22/global-supplier-strategy-for-market-penetration-partnership-options-niche-suppliers-vs-national-leaders-in-the-massachusetts-cardiology-vascular-surgery-tools-and-devices-market-for-car/

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Revascularization: PCI, Prior History of PCI vs CABG

Curator: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

UPDATED 9/25/2013

Table. Comparison of Surgical Therapy and Coronary Angioplasty (Open Table in a new window)

Endpoint Pocock et al* Pocock et al BARI Study
CABG(N=358) PTCA(N=374) CABG(N=1303) PTCA(N=1336) CABG(N=914) PTCA(N=915)
Death (%) 0.3 1.9 2.8 3.1 10.7 13.7
Death or MI 4.5 7.2 8.5 8.1 11.7 10.9
Repeat CABG 1.4 16.0§ 0.8 18.3§ 0.7 20.5§
Repeat CABG or PTCA 3.6 30.5§ 3.2 34.5§ 8.0 54.0§
More than mild angina 6.5 14.6§ 12.1 17.8§
*Meta-analysis of results of 3 trials at 1 year. Patients with single-vessel disease were studied.[22] †Meta-analysis of results of 3 trials at 1 year. Patients with multivessel disease were studied.[22] 

‡Reported results are for 5-year follow-up. Patients with multivessel disease were studied.[21] 

§ P < .05.

BARI = Bypass Angioplasty Revascularization Investigation; CABG = coronary artery bypass grafting; MI = myocardial infarction; PTCA = percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty.

SOURCE

http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/161446-overview#aw2aab6b2b5

Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), also known as coronary angioplasty, is a nonsurgical technique for treating multiple conditions, including unstable angina, acute myocardial infarction (MI), and multivessel coronary artery disease (CAD).

Essential update: Cangrelor decreases periprocedural complications of PCI

According to a pooled analysis of 3 CHAMPION trials—CHAMPION-PCI , CHAMPION-PLATFORM , and CHAMPION-PHOENIX—cangrelor can reduce the risk of periprocedural thrombotic complications of PCI.[1, 2, 3] The 3 trials included patients with ST-elevation MI (STEMI), non-STEMI, and stable CAD who were randomly assigned to receive either cangrelor or control therapy consisting of either clopidogrel or placebo.

The primary outcome in this analysis was a composite of death, MI, ischemia-driven revascularization, or stent thrombosis at 48 hours.[2] The frequency of this outcome was significantly lower in cangrelor-treated patients than in control subjects (absolute difference, 1.9%; relative risk reduction [RRR], 19%). Stent thrombosis was also reduced in the cangrelor-treated group (absolute difference, 0.3%; RRR, 41%). Primary safety outcomes were comparable in the 2 groups, but cangrelor-treated patients had a higher rate of mild bleeding.

Indications and contraindications

Clinical indications for PCI include the following:

In an asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic patient, objective evidence of a moderate-sized to large area of viable myocardium or moderate to severe ischemia on noninvasive testing is an indication for PCI. Angiographic indications include hemodynamically significant lesions in vessels serving viable myocardium (vessel diameter >1.5 mm).

Clinical contraindications for PCI include the presence of any significant comorbid conditions (this is a relative contraindication). Angiographic contraindications include the following:

  • Left main stenosis in a patient who is a surgical candidate (except in carefully selected patients[4] )
  • Diffusely diseased small-caliber artery or vein graft
  • Other coronary anatomy not amenable to PCI

In patients with stable angina, medical therapy is recommended as first-line therapy unless one or more of the following indications for cardiac catheterization and PCI or CABG are present:

  • A change in symptom severity
  • Failed medical therapy
  • High-risk coronary anatomy
  • Worsening left ventricular (LV) dysfunction

American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association (ACCF/AHA) guidelines on the management of unstable angina/non-STEMI recommend that an early invasive approach (angiography and revascularization within 24 hours) should be used to treat patients presenting with the following high-risk features[5] :

  • Recurrent angina at rest or low level of activity
  • Elevated cardiac biomarkers
  • PCI in the past 6 months or prior CABG
  • New ST-segment depression
  • Elevated cardiac biomarkers
  • High-risk findings on noninvasive testing
  • Signs or symptoms of heart failure or new or worsening mitral regurgitation
  • Hemodynamic instability
  • Sustained ventricular tachycardia
  • LV systolic function < 40%
  • High risk score (eg, Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction [TIMI] score >2) (see the TIMI Score for Unstable Angina Non ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction calculator)

See Overview for more detail.

Equipment

Balloon catheters for PCI have the following features:

  • A steerable guide wire precedes the balloon into the artery and permits navigation through the coronary tree
  • Inflation of the balloon compresses and axially redistributes atheromatous plaque and stretches the vessel wall
  • The balloon catheter also serves as an adjunctive device for many other interventional therapies

Atherectomy devices have the following features:

  • These devices are designed to physically remove coronary atheroma, calcium, and excess cellular material
  • Rotational atherectomy, which relies on plaque abrasion and pulverization, is used mostly for fibrotic or heavily calcified lesions that can be wired but not crossed or dilated by a balloon catheter
  • Atherectomy devices may be used to facilitate stent delivery in complex lesions
  • Directional coronary atherectomy (DCA) has been used to debulk coronary plaques
  • Laser atherectomy is not widely used at present
  • Atherectomy is typically followed by balloon dilation and stenting

Intracoronary stents have the following features:

  • Stents differ with respect to composition (eg, stainless steel, cobalt chromium, or nickel chromium), architectural design, and delivery system
  • Drug-eluting stents have demonstrated significant reductions in restenosis and target-lesion revascularization rates
  • In the United States, stents are available that elute the following drugs: sirolimus (Cypher), paclitaxel (Taxus), zotarolimus (Endeavor), and everolimus (Xience V)
  • Stents are conventionally placed after balloon predilation, but in selected coronary lesions, direct stenting may lead to better outcomes

Other devices used for PCI include the following:

  • Thrombus aspiration limits the adverse effects that prolonged time to treatment has on myocardial reperfusion[6]
  • Distal embolic protection during saphenous vein graft intervention has become the standard of care

See Periprocedural Care and Devices for more detail.

Technique

Intravascular ultrasonography (IVUS) is used in PCI as follows:

  • Provide information about the plaque, the vessel wall, and the degree of luminal narrowing
  • Assessment of indeterminate lesions
  • Evaluation of adequate stent deployment

Intracoronary Doppler pressure wires are used in PCI as follows:

  • To characterize coronary lesion physiology and estimate lesion severity
  • Comparison of pressure distal to a lesion with aortic pressure enables determination of fractional flow reserve (FFR)
  • An FFR measurement below 0.75-0.80 during maximal hyperemia (induced via administration of adenosine) is consistent with a hemodynamically significant lesion

Antithrombotic therapy

  • Aspirin and heparin have been the traditional adjunctive medical therapies
  • Direct thrombin inhibitors (ie, hirudin, bivalirudin) are slightly better than heparin in preventing ischemic complications during balloon angioplasty but do not affect restenosis rates
  • Low-molecular-weight heparins (LMWHs) are substituted for standard heparin at some centers

Antiplatelet therapy

Patients receiving stents are treated with a combination of aspirin and clopidogrel. Duration of therapy is as follows:

  • Bare-metal stents: A minimum of 4 weeks
  • Drug-eluting stents: A minimum of 12 months

Use of proton pump inhibitors is appropriate in patients with multiple risk factors for GI bleeding who require antiplatelet therapy.

Glycoprotein inhibitor therapy

  • Abciximab, tirofiban, and eptifibatide have all been shown to reduce ischemic complications in patients undergoing balloon angioplasty and coronary stenting
  • In primary PCI, GPIIb/IIIa receptor inhibitors have also been shown to improve flow and perfusion and to reduce adverse events
  • Abciximab may improve outcomes in patients when given before arrival in the catheterization lab for primary PCI[7]

See Technique and Medication for more detail.

SOURCE & References for the UPDATE, in

http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/161446-overview#aw2aab6b2b5

Outcomes comparison between PCI and CABG was explored in the past by authors on this Open Access Online Scientific Journal, in the following articles:

CABG or PCI: Patients with Diabetes – CABG Rein Supreme

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/05/cabg-or-pci-patients-with-diabetes-cabg-rein-supreme/

To Stent or Not? A Critical Decision

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/23/to-stent-or-not-a-critical-decision/

PCI Outcomes, Increased Ischemic Risk associated with Elevated Plasma Fibrinogen not Platelet Reactivity

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/10/pci-outcomes-increased-ischemic-risk-associated-with-elevated-plasma-fibrinogen-not-platelet-reactivity/

New Definition of MI Unveiled, Fractional Flow Reserve (FFR)CT for Tagging Ischemia

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/27/new-definition-of-mi-unveiled-fractional-flow-reserve-ffrct-for-tagging-ischemia/

Age-Dependent Depression in Circulating Endothelial Progenitor Cells in Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting Patients

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/17/age-dependent-depression-in-circulating-endothelial-progenitor-cells-in-coronary-artery-bypass-grafting-patients/

Now we are reporting  an Original Contribution on this subject which includes also Prior History of PCI, a factor NOT included in the other studies. The major conclusions are the following three:

  1. In a contemporary cohort of STEMI patients undergoing primary PCI, a history of prior CABG was found to be an independent predictor of in-hospital mortality.
  2. In contrast, despite more comorbidities at the time of STEMI, patients with prior PCI had no significant difference in the rates of death, stroke, or periprocedural MI when compared to a STEMI population without prior coronary revascularization.
  3. Thus, only prior surgical — and not percutaneousrevascularization should be considered a significant risk factor in the setting of primary PCI.

Number 1, above is related to patient medical history of cardiovascular disease SEVERITY prior to CABG

Number 2, above indicates that patients can tolerate and benefit several cycles of PCI and stent implantation rather than PCI being a determinant predictor of future prognosis

Number 3, above is as well related to patient medical history of cardiovascular disease SEVERITY prior to CABG

The Original Contribution on this subject is present, below.

The Impact of Previous Revascularization on Clinical Outcomes in Patients Undergoing Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention

Travis J. Bench, MD1, Puja B. Parikh, MD1, Allen Jeremias, MD1, Sorin J. Brener, MD2, Srihari S. Naidu, MD3,

Richard A. Shlofmitz, MD4, Thomas Pappas, MD4, Kevin P. Marzo, MD3, Luis Gruberg, MD1

Authors Affiliations:

1Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Stony Brook University Medical Center, Stony Brook, New York,

2Department of Cardiology, Methodist Hospital, Brooklyn, New York,

3Division of Cardiology, Winthrop University Hospital, Mineola,

New York, and

4The Heart Center, St Francis Hospital, Roslyn, New York.

The authors report no conflicts of interest regarding the content herein.

Manuscript submitted October 10, 2012, provisional acceptance given October 20, 2012, final version accepted November 28, 2012.

Address for correspondence: 

Luis Gruberg, MD, FACC, Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, Health Sciences Center, T16-080, Stony Brook, NY 11794- 8160. Email: luis.gruberg@stonybrook.edu

 

Abstract : While the impact of prior coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG) on in-hospital outcomes in patients with STelevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) has been described, data are limited on patients with prior percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) undergoing primary PCI in the setting of an STEMI. The aim of the present study was to assess the effect of previous revascularization on in-hospital outcomes in STEMI patients undergoing primary PCI. Between January 2004 and December 2007, a total of 1649 patients underwent primary PCI for STEMI at four New York State hospitals. Baseline clinical and angiographic characteristics and in-hospital outcomes were prospectively collected as part of the New York State PCI Reporting System (PCIRS). Patients with prior surgical or percutaneous coronary revascularization were compared to those without prior coronary revascularization. Of the 1649 patients presenting with STEMI, a total of 93 (5.6%) had prior CABG, 258 (15.7%) had prior PCI, and 1298 (78.7%) had no history of prior coronary revascularization. Patients with prior CABG were significantly older and had higher rates of peripheral vascular disease, diabetes mellitus, congestive heart failure, and prior stroke. Additionally, compared with those patients with a history of prior PCI as well as those without prior coronary revascularization, patients with previous CABG had more left main interventions (24% vs 2% and 2%; P<.001), but were less often treated with drug-eluting stents (47% vs 61% and 72%; P<.001).

Despite a low incidence of adverse in-hospital events, prior CABG was associated with higher all-cause in-hospital mortality (6.5% vs 2.2%; P=.012), and as a result, higher overall MACE (6.5% vs 2.7%; P=.039). By multivariate analysis, prior CABG (odds ratio, 3.40; 95% confidence interval, 1.15-10.00) was independently associated with in-hospital mortality. In contrast, patients with prior PCI had similar rates of MACE (4.3% vs 2.7%; P=.18) and inhospital mortality (3.1% vs 2.2%; P=.4) when compared to the de novo population. Patients with a prior history of CABG, but not prior PCI, undergoing primary PCI in the setting of STEMI have significantly worse in-hospital outcomes when compared with patients who had no prior history of coronary artery revascularization. Thus, only prior surgical — and not percutaneous — revascularization should be considered a significant risk factor in the setting of primary PCI.

J INVASIVE CARDIOL 2013;25(4):166-169

Key words: PCI risk factor, CABG

Demographics and Angiographic Characteristics

Between 2004 and 2007, a total of 25,025 patients underwent PCI at these medical institutions, and their data were prospectively collected and submitted as required by the New York State Department of Health. Of these patients, a total of 1649 underwent primary PCI in the setting of an STEMI and constituted our study population. In this group, a total

No Prior Revascularization (n = 1298)

Prior PCI (n = 258)

Prior CABG (n = 93)

Demographics

Age (years) 61 ± 13 62 ± 12 67 ± 12 <.001

Male gender 956 (73.6%) 194 (75.2%) 76 (81.7%) .21

White 1165 (89.8%) 231 (89.5%) 87 (93.5%) .51

African-American 78 (6%) 18 (7%) 1 (1.1%) .51

Hispanic 91 (7%) 11 (4.3%) 4 (4.3%) .51

Medical history

Ejection fraction (%) 43 ± 12 44 ± 13 45 ± 11 .079

Diabetes mellitus 196 (15.1%) 69 (26.7%) 27 (29%) <.001

Peripheral vascular disease 53 (4.1%) 25 (9.7%) 12 (12.9%) <.001

Chronic lung disease 47 (3.6%) 17 (6.6%) 4 (4.3%) .09

Congestive heart failure 74 (5.7%) 25 (9.7%) 10 (10.8%) .02

Prior myocardial infarction 3 (0.2%) 1 (0.4%) 1 (1.1%) .35

Prior cerebrovascular event 56 (4.3%) 9 (3.5%) 10 (11%) .01

Chronic dialysis 6 (0.5%) 6 (2.3%) 0 (0%) .004

Creatinine (mg/dL) 1.1 ± 0.8 1.3 ± 1.4 1.3 ± 1.1 .002

Glomerular filtration rate (mL/min/1.73 m2) 79 ± 26 75 ± 28 71 ± 27 .002

Angiographic characteristics

Left main 19 (1.5%) 5 (1.9%) 22 (23.7%) <.001

Left anterior descending 942 (72.6%) 178 (69%) 69 (74.2%) .45

Left circumflex 579 (44.6%) 122 (47.3%) 70 (75.3%) <.001

Right coronary 806 (62.1%) 187 (72.5%) 67 (72%) .002

Graft (arterial or venous) n/a n/a 20 (21.5%)

Stent type

Bare-metal stent 241 (18.6%) 52 (20.2%) 23 (24.7%) .31

Drug-eluting stent 928 (71.5%) 158 (61.2%) 44 (47.3%) <.001

of 1298 patients (78.7%) had no prior history of revascularization,

while 93 patients (5.6%) had a history of previous

CABG and 258 (15.7%) had a history of previous PCI. Considerable

differences in baseline clinical and procedural characteristics were noted among these groups (Table 1).

Discussion

While STEMI patients with prior CABG are well known to have worse clinical outcomes than those without prior revascularization, a direct comparison between patients who underwent primary PCI in the setting of prior CABG or prior PCI has not yet been reported. The principal findings from the present analysis suggest that in a contemporary, unrestricted patient population presenting with STEMI and undergoing primary PCI, patients with a prior history of CABG are:

(1) usually older and have multiple comorbidities, including peripheral vascular disease, diabetes, and chronic obstructive lung disease;

(2) are more likely to undergo intervention on a native vessel and not a bypass graft;

(3) are more likely to be treated with bare-metal stents; and (4) have higher rates of in-hospital mortality without a significant increase in stroke or MI rates, when compared with patients with a prior history of PCI or patients with no previous history of coronary artery revascularization. Interestingly, these outcomes did not apply to patients with a history of prior PCI in this analysis. Instead, this cohort of patients had no significant difference in the rate of death, stroke, or periprocedural infarction when compared to a STEMI population without prior coronary revascularization, despite a significantly higher burden of comorbidities than those with no prior revascularization.

Our findings concur with previous studies that have shown higher mortality rates among patients with prior surgical bypass presenting with acute MI.7,9,14 Despite changes in revascularization strategies over the past 30 years, invasive therapies to treat acute coronary syndromes in patients with prior bypass surgery appear to have yielded less robust results than in other populations. In fact, Stone and colleagues already described in the Primary Angioplasty in Myocardial Infarction (PAMI-2) study that patients with a previous CABG undergoing primary PCI in the setting of an acute MI had significantly greater in-hospital mortality than patients without previous CABG, especially if the infarct-related vessel was a bypass conduit. However, by logistic regression analysis, only advanced age (P=.004), triple-vessel disease (P=.004), and Killip class ≥2 (P=.02) were independent predictors of in-hospital mortality in that study.13 In a more contemporary study of 128 STEMI patients with prior CABG, who were enrolled in the Assessment of PEXelizumab in Acute

Figure 1. In-hospital major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events (MACCE), mortality, and stroke rates for patients without prior history of coronary revascularization (light grey bars), prior percutaneous coronary revascularization (PCI) (dark grey bars), and prior coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) (black bars). Vol. 25, No. 4, April 2013 169

STEMI and Prior Revascularization Myocardial Infarction (APEX-AMI) trial, Welsh and colleagues reported that post-CABG patients are less likely to undergo acute reperfusion (only 79% underwent primary PCI), have worse angiographic outcomes following primary PCI, and have higher 90-day mortality rates (19.0% vs 5.7%; P=.05). This difference was even more apparent when the infarct-related artery was a bypass graft that was not successfully reperfused (23.1% vs 8.5%; P=.03).3 These results are similar to our current analysis, where in-hospital mortality rates for patients who underwent primary PCI of a graft were numerically roughly 4 times as high as those undergoing PCI of a native vessel. Likewise, Gurfinkel et al reported a significant reduction in hard endpoints, such as all-cause death and MI at 6 months in patients treated with an invasive approach in the Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events (GRACE).15 In this large, multinational, observational study of 3853 patients with prior bypass surgery presenting with an acute coronary syndrome, only 497 (12.9%) were managed invasively and the rest were treated medically.

Despite significant differences in baseline characteristics, including a higher rate of STEMI in patients treated invasively (14% vs 27%; P<.001), in-hospital mortality was similar in both groups (3.4% vs 3.2%; P=.86). However, at 6-month follow-up, mortality was significantly higher in those patients treated medically (6.5% vs 3.4%; P<.02) as was the combined endpoint of death or MI (11% vs 5.8%; P<.01).

Whether these results apply to patients with a prior history of PCI has not been well defined. By the nature of vascular disease, patients with prior PCI are more likely to have more comorbidities than those without prior revascularization, a finding confirmed in our study. Despite considerable differences in baseline characteristics, however, these differences did not translate into a differential risk after STEMI. In fact, the cohort of patients presenting with STEMI who had a history of prior PCI had no statistically significant difference in in-hospital mortality or overall MACCE when compared to a population of patients presenting with STEMI in the absence of any prior revascularization.

Study limitations. The database utilized was derived from four New York State teaching hospitals and was designed to track quality of care and clinical outcomes. As all studies involving multicenter databases and registries, there is potential error in data entry and availability. Potential confounding comorbidities, including smoking status and family history of coronary artery disease, were not collected in this database, and information regarding long-term follow-up is not available, all of which are important limitations of this analysis. As such, deficiencies such as these limit the conclusions that can be drawn from our multivariate analysis. Additionally, there is no audit of data quality, and the low overall event rates limit effective statistical comparison.

Conclusions

In a contemporary cohort of STEMI patients undergoing primary PCI, a history of prior CABG was found to be an independent predictor of in-hospital mortality. In contrast, despite more comorbidities at the time of STEMI, patients with prior PCI had no significant difference in the rates of death, stroke, or periprocedural MI when compared to a STEMI population without prior coronary revascularization. Thus, only prior surgical — and not percutaneous — revascularization should be considered a significant risk factor in the setting of primary PCI.

REFERENCES

1. Kushner FG, Hand M, Smith SC Jr, et al. 2009 focused updates: ACC/AHA guidelines for the management of patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (updating the 2004 guideline and 2007 focused update) and ACC/AHA/SCAI guidelines on percutaneous coronary intervention (updating the 2005 guideline and 2007 focused update): a report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines. Catheter Cardiovasc Interv. 2009;74(7):E25-E68.

2. Keeley EC, Boura JA, Grines CL. Primary angioplasty versus intravenous thrombolytic therapy for acute myocardial infarction: a quantitative review of 23 randomised trials. Lancet. 2003;361(9351):13-20.

3. Welsh RC, Granger CB, Westerhout CM, et al. Prior coronary artery bypass graft patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction treated with primary percutaneous coronary intervention. JACC Cardiovasc Interv. 2010;3(3):343-351.

4. Mathew V, Gersh B, Barron H, et al. In-hospital outcome of acute myocardial infarction in patients with prior coronary artery bypass surgery. Am Heart J. 2002;144(3):463-469.

5. Lee KL, Woodlief LH, Topol EJ, et al. Predictors of 30-day mortality in the era of reperfusion for acute myocardial infarction. Results from an international trial of 41,021 patients. GUSTO-I Investigators. Circulation. 1995;91(6):1659-1668.

6. Dittrich HC, Gilpin E, Nicod P, et al. Outcome after acute myocardial infarction in patients with prior coronary artery bypass surgery. Am J Cardiol. 1993;72(7):507-513.

7. Berry C, Pieper KS, White HD, et al. Patients with prior coronary artery bypass grafting have a poor outcome after myocardial infarction: an analysis of the VALsartan in acute myocardial iNfarcTion trial (VALIANT). Eur Heart J. 2009;30(12):1450-1456.

8. Grines CL, Booth DC, Nissen SE, et al. Mechanism of acute myocardial infarction in patients with prior coronary artery bypass grafting and therapeutic implications. Am J Cardiol. 1990;65(20):1292-1296.

9. Labinaz M, Sketch MH Jr, Ellis SG, et al. Outcome of acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction in patients with prior coronary artery bypass surgery receiving thrombolytic therapy. Am Heart J. 2001;141(3):469-477.

10. Peterson LR, Chandra NC, French WJ, Rogers WJ, Weaver WD, Tiefenbrunn AJ. Reperfusion therapy in patients with acute myocardial infarction and prior coronary artery bypass graft surgery (National Registry of Myocardial Infarction-2). Am J Cardiol. 1999;84(11):1287-1291.

11. Nguyen TT, O’Neill WW, Grines CL, et al. One-year survival in patients with acute myocardial infarction and a saphenous vein graft culprit treated with primary angioplasty. Am J Cardiol. 2003;91(10):1250-1254.

12. Al Suwaidi J, Velianou JL, Berger PB, et al. Primary percutaneous coronary interventions in patients with acute myocardial infarction and prior coronary artery bypass grafting, Am Heart J. 2001;142(3):452-459.

13. Stone GW, Brodie BR, Griffin JJ, et al. Clinical and angiographic outcomes in patients with previous coronary artery bypass graft surgery treated with primary balloon angioplasty for acute myocardial infarction. Second Primary Angioplasty in Myocardial Infarction Trial (PAMI-2) Investigators. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2000;35(3):605-611.

14. Labinaz M, Kilaru R, Pieper K, et al. Outcomes of patients with acute coronary syndromes and prior coronary artery bypass grafting: results from the platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa in unstable angina: receptor suppression using integrilin therapy (PURSUIT) trial. Circulation. 2002;105(3):322-327.

15. Gurfinkel EP, Perez de la Hoz R, Brito VM, et al. Invasive vs non-invasive treatment in acute coronary syndromes and prior bypass surgery. Int J Cardiol. 2007;119(1):65-72.

 

Other related studies on this subject published on this Open Access Online Scientific Journal include the following:

Lev-Ari, A. 2/12/2013 Clinical Trials on transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) to be conducted by American College of Cardiology and the Society of Thoracic Surgeons

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/02/12/american-college-of-cardiologys-and-the-society-of-thoracic-surgeons-entrance-into-clinical-trials-is-noteworthy-read-more-two-medical-societies-jump-into-clinical-trial-effort-for-tavr-tech-f/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 12/31/2012 Renal Sympathetic Denervation: Updates on the State of Medicine

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/31/renal-sympathetic-denervation-updates-on-the-state-of-medicine/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 9/2/2012 Imbalance of Autonomic Tone: The Promise of Intravascular Stimulation of Autonomics

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/02/imbalance-of-autonomic-tone-the-promise-of-intravascular-stimulation-of-autonomics/

Lev-Ari, A. 8/13/2012 Coronary Artery Disease – Medical Devices Solutions: From First-In-Man Stent Implantation, via Medical Ethical Dilemmas to Drug Eluting Stents http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/13/coronary-artery-disease-medical-devices-solutions-from-first-in-man-stent-implantation-via-medical-ethical-dilemmas-to-drug-eluting-stents/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 7/18/2012 Percutaneous Endocardial Ablation of Scar-Related Ventricular Tachycardia

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/18/percutaneous-endocardial-ablation-of-scar-related-ventricular-tachycardia/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 6/13/2012 Treatment of Refractory Hypertension via Percutaneous Renal Denervation

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/06/13/treatment-of-refractory-hypertension-via-percutaneous-renal-denervation/

Lev-Ari, A. 6/22/2012 Competition in the Ecosystem of Medical Devices in Cardiac and Vascular Repair: Heart Valves, Stents, Catheterization Tools and Kits for Open Heart and Minimally Invasive Surgery (MIS)

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/06/22/competition-in-the-ecosystem-of-medical-devices-in-cardiac-and-vascular-repair-heart-valves-stents-catheterization-tools-and-kits-for-open-heart-and-minimally-invasive-surgery-mis/

Lev-Ari, A. 6/19/2012 Executive Compensation and Comparator Group Definition in the Cardiac and Vascular Medical Devices Sector: A Bright Future for Edwards Lifesciences Corporation in the Transcatheter Heart Valve Replacement Market

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/06/19/executive-compensation-and-comparator-group-definition-in-the-cardiac-and-vascular-medical-devices-sector-a-bright-future-for-edwards-lifesciences-corporation-in-the-transcatheter-heart-valve-replace/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 6/22/2012 Global Supplier Strategy for Market Penetration & Partnership Options (Niche Suppliers vs. National Leaders) in the Massachusetts Cardiology & Vascular Surgery Tools and Devices Market for Cardiac Operating Rooms and Angioplasty Suites

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/06/22/global-supplier-strategy-for-market-penetration-partnership-options-niche-suppliers-vs-national-leaders-in-the-massachusetts-cardiology-vascular-surgery-tools-and-devices-market-for-car/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 7/23/2012 Heart Remodeling by Design: Implantable Synchronized Cardiac Assist Device: Abiomed’s Symphony

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/23/heart-remodeling-by-design-implantable-synchronized-cardiac-assist-device-abiomeds-symphony/

 

Lev-Ari, A. (2006b). First-In-Man Stent Implantation Clinical Trials & Medical Ethical Dilemmas. Bouve College of Health Sciences, Northeastern University, Boston, MA 02115

 

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Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

BIOMEDevice Boston Conference 2013
April 10-11 2013, Boston, MA

 

New conference format for 2013…

Don’t miss out on 2013’s new and improved BIOMEDevice Boston Conference.

Choose from six seminar sessions across the two day conference that will deliver crucial insights and guidance on biomedical regulations, design engineering, new biomaterial innovations and product development for the medical device industry.

Six Solution Packed Seminars

April 10, 2013 April 11, 2013
10:00-11:45am Seminar 1
Advanced Technology and Device Innovation
Seminar 4
Accelerating Speed to Market 
1:00-2:45pm Seminar 2
Intelligent Design for Implantable Devices
Seminar 5
FDA Regulatory Guidance and Updates
3:15-5:00pm Seminar 3
New Innovations in Drug Device Combination Products
Seminar 6
Human Factors: Enhancing Usability and Managing Risk

Conference Speakers



Jay Crowley, Senior Advisor Patient Safety, FDA

Jay Crowley is Senior Advisor for Patient Safety, in FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health. He is interested in developing and implementing new methods and techniques for identifying and resolving problems with the use of medical devices. Jay has held variety of positions over his 25 years at FDA. Currently, Jay has responsibility for implementing the Unique Device Identification requirements of the 2007 FDA Amendments Act and 2012 FDA Safety and Innovation Act. He holds a master’s degree in risk analysis and a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering.





Emmanuel Nyakako
, Senior VP of Global Quality & Regulatory Affairs, Zimmer Inc

 




Matthew Myers, PhD, Research Physicist, FDA 

Matthew R. Myers received his doctorate in Applied Mathematics from the University of Arizona. He worked in the research and development laboratory of Corning Glass Works, where he performed mathematical modeling of fiber drawing and other processes involving molten glass. Dr. Myers was later employed as an acoustics consultant with BBN Systems and Technologies. In 1990, Dr. Myers joined the Center for Devices and Radiological Health of the U. S. FDA. He has performed mathematical modeling in the areas of drug delivery, cardiovascular implants, virus transport, and most recently, therapeutic ultrasound. His current research areas include noninvasive methods for pre-clinical testing of focused-ultrasound surgery devices, and modeling of debris retention in reusable medical devices. Dr. Myers also performs consulting reviews on device submissions involving fluid flow and acoustic wave propagation, most recently applications to treat Parkinson’s disease and Essential Tremor with therapeutic ultrasound.




Dr. Thomas J Webster, Associate Professor, Divisions of Engineering and Orthopaedic Surgery, Brown University 

Thomas J. Webster’s degrees are in chemical engineering from the University of Pittsburgh (B.S., 1995) and in biomedical engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (M.S., 1997; Ph.D., 2000). He is currently the Department Chair and Professor of Chemical Engineering at Northeastern University in Boston. He has graduated/supervised over 109 visiting faculty, clinical fellows, post-doctoral students, and thesis completing B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. students. To date, his lab group has generated over 9 textbooks, 48 book chapters, 306 invited presentations, at least 403 peer-reviewed literature articles, at least 567 conference presentations, and 32 provisional or full patents. His H index is 47. Some of these patents led to the formation of 9 companies. He has received numerous honors including, but not limited to: 2002, Biomedical Engineering Society Rita Schaffer Young Investigator Award; 2005, Coulter Foundation Young Investigator Award; 2011, Oustanding Leadership Award for the Biomedical Engineering Society (BMES); and Fellow, American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering.




John (Barr) Weiner, Associate Director of Policy, Office of Combination Products, FDA 

John Barlow Weiner is the Associate Director for Policy in the Food and Drug Administration’s Office of Combination Products, which is tasked with the classification and assignment for regulation of therapeutic products (drugs, devices, biological products, and combination products), and with ensuring the sound and consistent regulation of combination products. Prior to joining OCP, Mr. Weiner was an Associate Chief Counsel in FDA’s Office of Chief Counsel, advising the agency on various issues including regulation of drugs and cross-cutting topics including the regulation of products that use nanotechnology. Before coming to FDA, Mr. Weiner was in private practice in the areas of food and drug, environmental, and related aspects of public international and trade law. He has published and lectured on topics in all three areas. Mr. Weiner received a BA from Princeton University and a JD with honors from the Columbia University School of Law.




Olivia Hecht
, Senior Marketing Manager, Wireless & Networking, Philips Healthcare

Olivia Hecht is currently Sr. Manager of Technology and Platforms Integration, for Philips Healthcare Patient Care and Clinical Informatics. She came to the healthcare industry with over 20 years in the information technology sector working in product management and product marketing for companies such as Bay Networks, an early innovator in network infrastructure; RSA Security, a leader in enterprise security; and Legra Systems, a start up manufacturer of enterprise Wi-Fi equipment. She has a Masters degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Bachelor of Science in Biology.




Joel Kent, Regulatory Affairs Manager, GE Healthcare 

Joel Kent, RAC (Canada, EU and US) is currently Manager, Regulatory Affairs for GE Healthcare, Healthcare Systems Patient Care Solutions business. He has 18 years experience in regulatory affairs covering a variety of medical devices. He holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Electrical and Biomedical Engineering from Duke University and a Master of Science in Biomedical Engineering, Worcester Polytechnic Institute. Mr. Kent has nine publications related to pulse oximetry and gastric tonometry and has been granted two US and Japanese Patents for Remote Sensing Tonometric Catheter Apparatus and Method. He is a lecturer at Northeastern University, Boston, MA and is an IEEE Senior Member and American Society for Quality (ASQ) Senior Member. In addition, he is a Regulatory Affairs Professional Society (RAPS) member serving as Vice-Chair of the RAPS Boston Chapter and member of the RAPS 2008-2011 Annual Conference Committee and RAPS Annual Conference Preconference workshop committee on Latin America Medical Device Regulations in 2012. Speaking engagements have included the RAPS Annual Conferences, Medical Devices Summit East 2011, 2012 and 2013 and the 11th annual AdvaMed Emerging Growth Company Council conference.




Pat Baird, Product Design Owner, Baxter Healthcare

Pat Baird is a Product Design Owner at Baxter Healthcare, with oversight responsibility for over $400M in installed medical devices. His previous roles included software developer, function manager, program manager, and engineering department manager. Drawing on 20 years’ experience in product development, he has published and presented over 30 papers on topics such as software development, change management, stakeholder management, and risk management. He is currently the co-chair of the AAMI Infusion Pump Standards committee, chair of the Assurance Case Technical Information Report Working Group, a US representative to the IEC standards committee, founder of the Infusion Systems Safety Council and the Coalition of Organizations Reporting Adverse Events. He has earned multiple industry awards for his work to advance patient safety. He recently completed a Masters in Healthcare Quality and Patient Safety at Northwestern University in Chicago.




Dr. Eric Ledet, Associate Professor, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

Eric Ledet is an Associate Professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute where he has taught medical device design and maintained an active research program in orthopaedic biomechanics for the last 9 years. Prior to joining RPI, he served as Director of the Orthopaedic Research Program at the Albany Medical College for 9 years. He has served as a consultant to medical device companies for 15 years and is currently principal partner in three medical device startup companies. He earned a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Arizona and a Master of Science and doctorate in biomedical engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.




Judith K Meritz, Associate General Counsel, Covidien




Jeffrey Morang
, Human Factors Engineer and User Experience Analyst, Siemens Healthcare Diagnostics

Jeffrey Morang is a Human Factors Engineer for the Point of Care line of instruments at Siemens Healthcare Diagnostics. Jeff received his MS in Human Factors and Ergonomics from San Jose State University. Jeff has experience as a researcher in aeronautical human factors, focusing on human perceptual and cognitive performance, for the Virtual Airspace Modeling and Simulation Project at the NASA Ames Research Center. After graduation, he joined Future Combat Systems project at British Aerospace Systems responsible for mapping soldier roles and assessing their cognitive and physical workloads using real-time usability testing methods. Jeff has brought that expertise to his current position at Siemens where his team is responsible for employing a synergistic design and testing methodology on behalf of a variety of end users in the relatively new area of healthcare called Point of Care.




George Papandreou, VP Quality, Lutonix, CR Bard 

George Papandreou, Ph.D., is Vice President of Quality at Lutonix, a subsidiary of C.R. Bard. In his current position, George is working on drug-coated balloons for the treatment of peripheral artery disease. George has extensive experience in formulation, analytical characterization and process development. He has a proven record in the commercialization of advanced drug delivery concepts, such as drug/device combination products, and has contributed in the approval of novel therapeutic solutions, such as the CYPHER® Sirolimus-eluting Coronary Stent. He has defined the strategy to address Chemistry Manufacturing and Controls issues, and has significant expertise in troubleshooting complex technical and quality issues during research, development and manufacturing of drug products. George has earned a Ph.D. in organic chemistry, and has co-authored of over 35 publications, as well as applied and issued patents.




Eric Roden
, Associate Director, Operational Excellence, B. Braun Medical 




Marjorie Shulman
, Director, 510(K) Premarket Notification Staff, FDA




Rahul Sapreshker, Associate Professor- Electrical Engineering & Computer Science, MIT


Roger Narayan, Professor, Biomedical Engineering, North Carolina State University

Dr. Roger Narayan is a Professor in the Joint Department of Biomedical Engineering at the University of North Carolina and North Carolina State University. He is an author of over one hundred publications as well as several book chapters on processing and characterization of biomedical materials. He currently serves as an editorial board member for several academic journals, including as editor-in-chief of Materials Science and Engineering C: Materials for Biological Applications (Elsevier). Dr. Narayan has been elected as Fellow of ASM International, AAAS, and AIMBE.


 

 

 

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