Impact of coronary culprit lesion calcium in patients undergoing paclitaxel-eluting stent implantation (a TAXUS-IV sub study).

Journal: The American Journal Of Cardiology
Published:
Abstract

Randomized clinical trials have shown that paclitaxel-eluting stents significantly reduce restenosis after percutaneous coronary intervention. The impact of lesion calcification on the efficacy of paclitaxel-eluting stents is unknown. In the TAXUS-IV trial, 1,314 patients who underwent percutaneous coronary intervention were randomly assigned to a bare-metal or paclitaxel-eluting stent. By core laboratory analysis, 247 lesions (19%) were moderately or severely calcified. At the 9-month angiographic follow-up examination, the paclitaxel-eluting stent had significantly reduced the amount of late loss compared with the control stent (0.26 +/- 0.56 vs 0.51 +/- 0.48 mm, p = 0.015) within the analysis segment in the calcific lesions. The analysis segment restenosis rate was similar in patients with calcified and noncalcified lesions after paclitaxel-eluting stent implantation (7.5% vs 8.0%, respectively; p = 1.0). The rate of ischemia-driven target lesion revascularization (TLR) at 1 year was reduced by 56% in patients with calcified lesions (11.9% vs 5.1%, p = 0.09) and by 75% in noncalcified lesions (15.7% vs 4.3%, p <0.0001). By interaction testing, the efficacy of the paclitaxel-eluting stent in reducing TLR at 1 year was similar in the calcified and noncalcified lesions (p = 0.30). Moreover, by multivariate analysis, implantation of the paclitaxel-eluting stent was a powerful independent predictor of freedom from TLR, with similar hazard ratios for efficacy in calcified and noncalcified lesions (0.30 and 0.26, respectively). In conclusion, implantation of paclitaxel-eluting stents in patients with de novo coronary lesions significantly reduced restenosis in patients with and without calcified lesions.

Authors
Issam Moussa, Stephen Ellis, Michael Jones, Dean Kereiakes, Daniel Mcmartin, Barry Rutherford, Roxana Mehran, Michael Collins, Martin Leon, Jeffrey Popma, Mary Russell, Gregg Stone