Two-Year Clinical Outcome after Carvedilol-Loaded Stent Implantation in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease
Article information
Abstract
Background/Aims
Carvedilol is an antioxidant that inhibits smooth muscle cell proliferation and migration. The aim of this study was to investigate the beneficial effects of carvedilol-loaded stents on 2-year clinical outcomes after stent implantation in patients with coronary artery disease.
Methods
We performed a prospective trial with male subjects to compare the safety and effects of carvedilol-loaded BiodivYsio® stents implanted into 20 patients with those of bare-metal BiodivYsio® stents implanted into 21 patients for de novo coronary lesions. The primary end point was the degree of neointimal hyperplasia, which was measured by intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) 6 months after the procedure; the secondary end point was major adverse cardiac events (MACE) at 2 years after implantation. All carvedilol and control stents were deployed successfully.
Results
A 2-year follow-up was completed for 19 patients (95%) in the carvedilol stent group and 20 patients (95%) in the control stent group. IVUS showed a trend toward a larger luminal area (6.86 ± 2.59 vs. 5.47 ± 1.52 mm2, p = 0.267), smaller neointimal area (1.34 ± 0.70 vs. 2.40 ± 1.73 mm2, p = 0.18), and reduced net decrease in luminal area (-0.78 ± 0.97 vs. -1.89 ± 1.78 mm2, p = 0.106) in the carvedilol stent group compared with the control stent group, respectively. There were no significant differences in the incidence of MACE (10.5 vs. 30.0%, respectively, p = 0.132) between the groups at 2 years after stent implantation. Stent thrombosis did not occur in either group after 2 years.
Conclusions
The carvedilol-loaded stents tended to inhibit neointimal hyperplasia without the occurrence of cardiac death, myocardial infarction, or stent thrombosis at 2-year follow-up.
INTRODUCTION
The long-term clinical efficacy of intracoronary stenting is mainly limited by restenosis due to neointimal hyper-plasia, which is caused by inflammation in the vessel wall in response to arterial injury after stent implantation, as well as cytokine- and growth factor-induced smooth muscle migration, proliferation, and proteoglycan deposition [1-3].
Carvedilol is a non-selective β-adrenergic antagonist and vasodilator with antioxidative and free-radical-scavenging properties [4]. It also inhibits vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation, migration, and extracellular matrix synthesis [5-7]. Carvedilol, therefore, is expected to reduce neointimal hyperplasia, and we previously showed that carvedilol-loaded stents were effective in the prevention of coronary restenosis in a porcine model [8]. However, no human study has been undertaken to prove their efficacy.
We hypothesized that the delivery of carvedilol by a stent can prevent neointimal hyperplasia and improve long-term clinical outcomes in patients with coronary artery disease. In this study, we investigated the beneficial effects of carvedilol-loaded stents based on 2-year clinical outcomes after stent implantation.
METHODS
Study population
We performed a prospective trial using male subjects to compare the safety and effects of carvedilol-loaded BiodivYsio® stents (Biocompatibles Ltd., Farnham, UK) which were implanted into 20 patients, with those of bare-metal BiodivYsio® stents, which were implanted into 21 patients for de novo coronary lesions between November 2003 and September 2005 at Chonnam National University Hospital. The inclusion criteria were aged between 18 and 80 years, reference diameter between 2.5 and 4.0 mm, lesion length < 25 mm, and critical stenosis (> 70%) on angiography. Patients with graft-vessel stenosis, cardiogenic shock, a left ventricular ejection fraction < 35%, or contraindications for antiplatelet agents were excluded from the study. The study protocol was reviewed and approved in sequence by the Ministry of Health and Welfare and the Ethics Committee of Chonnam National University Hospital. Informed consent was obtained from all patients.
Stent preparation
Carvedilol (Boehringer, Mannheim, Germany) was loaded onto 3.0 × 15 mm BiodivYsio® drug-delivery stents (Biocompatibles Ltd.) at a concentration of 5 mg/mL, which was prepared by dissolving powdered carvedilol in methanol. Each stent was immersed in the drug solution for 5 minutes, then removed from the solution and air-dried. The amount of drug loaded onto the stents was measured by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The stents were kept in individual vials containing HPLC mobile phase solvent (acetonitrile [60%] and 0.25 mol/L ammonium acetate [40%]) then placed in an ultrasound bath for a 30-minutes extraction. We previously showed that about 50% of the loaded carvedilol was released after 5 minutes, 77% after 30 minutes, and 85% after 60 minutes based on in vitro release kinetics [8].
Study procedure and definition
All procedures were done according to standard techniques: randomly selected stents were deployed after predilation with a balloon catheter. Additional balloon dilatation was performed in cases of remaining residual stenosis. All patients received aspirin (300 mg at least 12 hours before stent implantation and 100-200 mg/day indefinitely), ticlopidine (500 mg at least 6 hours before stent implantation and 250 mg/day for two months), or clopidogrel (300 mg at least 6 hours before stent implantation and 75 mg/day for two months). Unfractionated heparin was administered as a 5,000 U bolus, followed by 1,000 U/hour and an additional 5,000 U just before percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) to maintain the activated clotting time at 250-300 seconds.
Coronary angiography was performed at baseline. Quantitative measurements of the diameter of the coronary arteries were obtained by a blinded reviewer using a workstation with dedicated software (Phillips H5000 or Allura DCI). From two orthogonal views, the minimal lumen diameter and interpolated reference diameter were calculated as a mean. All intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) studies were performed at the time of the procedure and 6 months after the procedure by a follow-up angiogram. The images were acquired with motorized pullback at a constant speed of 1 mm/sec (Galaxy, Boston Scientific, Natick, MA, USA). Using volumetric analysis, we measured the external elastic membrane (EEM) and lumen cross-sectional area (CSA). The plaque plus media (P&M) CSA was calculated as the EEM CSA minus the lumen CSA, and the plaque burden was calcul-ated as the P&M CSA divided by the EEM CSA. The lesion was the site with the smallest lumen CSA. In cases where multiple image slices had the same minimum lumen CSA, the image slice with the largest EEM and P&M was measured.
A successful procedure was defined as a patient-treated vessel with anterograde thrombolysis in myocardial infarction flow-grade III and angiographic residual stenosis < 20% without the occurrence of any cardiac events. In-stent restenosis was defined as in-stent luminal diameter stenosis > 50%; stent thrombosis was defined according to academic research consortium criteria [9].
Study endpoints
The primary end point was the degree of neointimal hyperplasia, which was measured by IVUS at 6 months after the procedure; the secondary end point was major adverse cardiac events (MACE; cardiac death, non-fatal myocardial infarction, and percutaneous or surgical target vessel revascularization) at the 2-year clinical follow-up.
Statistical analysis
SPSS version 15.0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA), was used for all analyses. Continuous variables are presented as the mean value ± SD; comparisons were conducted by Student's t test, or by a nonparametric Wilcoxon test if the normality assumption was violated. Discrete variables were presented as percentages and relative frequencies; comparisons were conducted by χ2 statistics or Fisher's exact test as appropriate. A p value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
RESULTS
Baseline and procedural characteristics
No significant differences were noted in terms of age, sex, risk factors for coronary artery disease, clinical presentation, creatinine clearance level as calculated by the Cockcroft-Gault equation, and left ventricular ejection fraction between the groups (Table 1).
The two groups showed no significant difference in the target vessels, the number of diseased vessels, or ACC/AHA lesion type. All carvedilol and control stents were deployed successfully. No significant differences in stent length and diameter were found between the groups (Table 2). No significant complications were detected after the procedure in either group.
IVUS results
No significant differences in the baseline pre- and post-PCI IVUS findings were observed between the groups. Follow-up IVUS showed a trend toward a smaller neointimal area and larger luminal area in the carvedilol-loaded stent group compared with the control stent group. Moreover, there was a trend toward a reduced net decrease in intrastent luminal area in the carvedilol-loaded stent group compared with the control stent group (Table 3).
Clinical follow-up results
A 2-year follow-up was completed for 19 patients (95%) in the carvedilol-loaded stent group and 20 patients (95%) in the control stent group. No significant differences in the incidence of total MACE (10.5 vs. 30.0%, respectively, p = 0.13), cardiac death (0% in both groups), nonfatal myocardial infarction (0% in both groups), target lesion revascularization (10.5 vs. 25.0%, p = 0.24), and target vessel revascularization (10.5 vs. 30.0%, p = 0.13) between groups were found. Neither group showed stent thrombosis at the 2-year follow-up (Table 4).
DISCUSSION
This study is the first randomized, prospective clinical trial to evaluate the effects of carvedilol-loaded stents in patients with coronary artery disease in terms of their long-term clinical outcomes. Patients who received carvedilol-loaded stents were free of procedure-related complications and acute, subacute, late, and very late stent thrombosis.
Although the incidence of MACE was not significantly different between the two groups, the target vessel revascularization rate was almost three times higher in the control bare-metal stent group compared with the carvedilol stent group. Additionally, a tendency toward decreased neointimal hyperplasia in serial IVUS measure-ments was observed in the carvedilol stent group despite a larger plaque burden before stenting. The carvedilol-loaded stents, therefore, were expected to have a potential therapeutic benefit for the prevention of in-stent restenosis.
Recent advances in drug-eluting stents have markedly reduced the incidence of in-stent restenosis [10,11]. However, no improvement in terms of long-term prognosis [12] has occurred, possibly due to late or very late stent thrombosis [13]. Re-endothelialization and the inhibition of wound healing by paclitaxel and sirolimus have been suggested as a biologic mechanism of late stent thrombosis [14,15]. At the 2-year follow-up, late or very late stent thrombosis was absent in the carvedilol-loaded stent group. In our previous porcine study [8], pathologic examination at 28 days after stent implantation revealed complete and equivalent healing and re-endothelialization in the control, probucol, and carvedilol-loaded stent groups. In addition, pharmacological studies have revealed that carvedilol may protect the ischemic myocardium and offer vascular protection against other chronic pathological processes, including atherosclerosis and acute vascular injuries arising from coronary artery procedures due to its antioxidative and anti-inflammatory properties [16]. Nevertheless, it is unknown whether carvedilol itself promotes re-endothelialization, similar to probucol [17].
The main limitations of this study are the small number of patients and the fact that it was a single-center study. Specifically, our study included only 41 patients with de novo, single-vessel, relatively simple lesions. Considering the small number of patients used to assess the clinical outcomes, a large-population study is needed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of carvedilol-loaded stents.
In conclusion, the carvedilol-loaded stents used in this study tended to inhibit neointimal hyperplasia without the occurrence of cardiac death, myocardial infarction, and stent thrombosis. These observations require confirmation in a large, randomized, multicenter study.
Acknowledgements
This study was supported by a grant from the Korean Healthcare Technology R&D Project, Ministry for Health, Welfare and Family Affairs, Republic of Korea (A084869).
Notes
No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.