Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01735825

Treatment of Coronary In-Stent Restenosis

Prospective Randomised Study Comparing Efficacy of Treatment Coronary In-stent Restenosis Using Drug Eluting Paclitaxel-coated Balloon and Drug Eluting Stent With Everolimus.

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
199 (actual)
Sponsor
University Hospital Ostrava · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
20 Years – 90 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to compare efficacy of coronary in-stent restenosis therapy using drug eluting paclitaxel-coated balloon catheters with the latest generation of drug eluting stents releasing everolimus.

Detailed description

In-stent restenosis after coronary angioplasty is currently one of the main limitations of this method, leading to a recurrence of exertional angina pectoris or manifesting as acute coronary syndrome. Histopathologic substrate of in-stent restenosis is neointimal hyperplasia. Repeated plain balloon angioplasty or using cutting balloon catheters in the treatment of in-stent restenosis does not achieve satisfactory results. Brachytherapy, used in the past, it has also abandoned. The current treatment of in-stent restenosis is the use of drug eluting stents. Local drug released from these stents prevents new neointimal hyperplasia.This treatment carries the risk of late thrombosis (due to delayed neoendotelization) the stent struts and requires rigorous long-term dual antiplatelet therapy with the risk of bleeding complications. The drug-coated balloon catheters provide short-term penetration of the active substance into the vascular wall, leading to the inhibition of hyperproliferation vascular smooth muscle cells, but due to short-term effect they do not affect negatively stent struts neoendotelization. Comparable effects of in-stent restenosis therapy using paclitaxel releasing balloons was demonstrated in comparison with paclitaxel releasing stents, however, the development of drug eluting stents meanwhile progressed. The aim of our study is to compare efficacy of coronary in-stent restenosis therapy using drug eluting paclitaxel-coated balloon catheters with the latest generation of drug eluting stents releasing everolimus. Primary endpoint of our study is late lumen loss, because it represents accurate angiographic parameter predicting the need for repeat revascularisation and thus the clinical benefit for the patient. The 3rd observational, non-randomised arm compares the treatment with seal-wing paclitaxel-eluting balloon with two randomised arms (PEB vs. EES). 3-year long term clinical follow-up of iopromide-coated PEB and EES arms was performed. All clinical MACE (CV death, AMI and TVR) were recorded. Subanalysis of seal-wing PEB arm comparrng the treatment of BMS and DES-ISR was added.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEpaclitaxel-coated balloon catheter with Iopromide coatingPatients with coronary in-stent restenosis treated by drug eluting paclitaxel-coated balloon catheter
DEVICEdrug eluting stent with everolimusPatients with coronary in-stent restenosis treated by drug eluting stent with everolimus
DEVICEseal-wing paclitaxel-eluting balloon catheterPatients with coronary in-stent restenosis treated by seal-wing paclitaxel-eluting balloon catheter

Timeline

Start date
2012-01-01
Primary completion
2015-07-01
Completion
2018-06-01
First posted
2012-11-28
Last updated
2022-12-08

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Czechia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01735825. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.