Paclitaxel-Eluting Balloon Angioplasty and Cobalt-Chromium Stents Versus Conventional Angioplasty and Paclitaxel-Eluting Stents in the Treatment of Native Coronary Artery Stenoses of Diabetic Patients
Overview
- Phase
- Phase 2
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- Coronary Stenosis
- Sponsor
- Heart Centre Rotenburg
- Enrollment
- 84
- Locations
- 1
- Primary Endpoint
- Late lumen loss at 9 months
- Status
- Completed
- Last Updated
- 10 years ago
Overview
Brief Summary
The aim of the study is to compare the efficacy of Paclitaxel-eluting PTCA-balloon dilation (SeQuentTM Please) followed by cobalt-chromium stent (CoroflexTM Blue) deployment versus Paclitaxel-eluting stent (TaxusTM LibertéTM) deployment in the treatment of de-novo-stenoses in native coronary arteries (reference diameter:more then 2.5 mm and below 3.5 mm, length of stenosis ≥ 10 mm ≤ 20 mm) of patients with diabetes mellitus for ≥ 3 years for procedural success and preservation of vessel patency.
This study is a prospective, randomized, multi-center, two-armed phase-II pilot study conducted in Malaysia and Thailand.
128 diabetes mellitus patients shall complete the study per protocol after random assignment to either of the treatment groups on the order of 20 to 50 patients per center.
Diabetes mellitus patients with stable or selected forms of unstable angina or documented ischemia due to a de-novo stenosis in a native coronary artery will be enrolled. Vessels may not supply an entirely infarcted myocardial area.
Late lumen loss at 9 months is the primary endpoint.
Investigators
Ralf Degenhardt, PhD
Data Manager
Heart Centre Rotenburg
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •History of diabetes mellitus of at least 3 yrs prior to enrollment. Diabetes mellitus may be treated either orally or s.c.
- •Stable blood glucose level for the 6 months preceding enrollment as reflected by HbA1c concentrations measured exclusively ≤ 8 %
- •Patients with stable angina pectoris (CCS class 1-3) or with unstable angina pectoris (Braunwald class 1-2, A-C) or documented ischemia or with documented silent ischemia
- •Patients eligible for coronary revascularization by means of PCI
- •Women of childbearing potential may not be pregnant nor have the desire to becoming pregnant during the first year following the study procedure. Hence, patients will be advised to use an adequate birth control method up to and including 6 months follow-up
- •Patients who are mentally and linguistically able to understand the aim of the study and to show sufficient compliance in following the study protocol
- •Patients must agree to undergo the 9 months angiographic follow-up
- •Patients must agree to undergo the 3 year clinical follow-up
- •De-novo native coronary artery stenosis (reference diameter: ≥2.5 mm and ≤ 3.5 mm, length of stenosis: ≥ 10 mm and ≤ 20 mm)
- •Target lesion is ≥ 3 mm distant from a major side branch (\> 2.0 mm in diameter) and ≥ 3 mm form a previously deployed stent of any type (including active and passive coatings, bare metal stents)
Exclusion Criteria
- •Patients with acute (\< 24 h) or recent (48 hours) myocardial infarction
- •Patients with unstable angina pectoris (Braunwald class 3)
- •Patients with severe congestive heart failure
- •Patients with severe heart failure NYHA IV
- •Patients with severe valvular heart disease
- •Women who are pregnant or lactating
- •Patients with another coronary stent implanted previously into the target vessel, drug eluting stents less than 9 months and bare metal stents or stents with passive coatings less than 3 months before the PEPCAD IV DM PCI
- •Patients with bleeding diathesis in whom anticoagulation or anti-platelet medication is contraindicated
- •Patients who had a cerebral stroke \< 6 months prior to the procedure
- •Patient participates in other clinical trials involving any investigational device or drug
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
Late lumen loss at 9 months
Time Frame: 9 months
Secondary Outcomes
- Indication for premature follow-up(up to 9 months)
- Type of recurrence (Mehran-Classification)(9 months)
- Target vessel failure(9 months)
- Occurrence of acute (up to 48 hours), subacute (up to 30 days), and late thrombosis(3 years)
- 30-day MACE rate(30 days)
- Percent in-stent stenosis at 9 months(9 months)
- Percent in-segment stenosis at 9 months(9 months)
- In-stent late loss index at 9 months(9 months)
- Angiographic binary in-stent stenosis rate at 9 months(9 months)
- In-segment late loss index at 9 months(9 months)
- Angiographic binary in-segment stenosis rate at 9 months(9 months)
- Acute and cumulative MACE rate at 9 months(9 months)
- Procedural success(during procedure)
- Cumulative MACE rate after 2 years(2 years)