ISSN 1016-5169 | E-ISSN 1308-4488
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Clinical and angiographic outcomes at more than 1 year after treatment of chronic total occlusions with the everolimus-eluting bioresorbable vascular scaffold [Turk Kardiyol Dern Ars]
Turk Kardiyol Dern Ars. 2016; 44(8): 647-655 | DOI: 10.5543/tkda.2016.21774

Clinical and angiographic outcomes at more than 1 year after treatment of chronic total occlusions with the everolimus-eluting bioresorbable vascular scaffold

Aylin Hatice Yamac1, Abdulkadir Yıldız1, Meherrem Nasifov1, Ahmet Tastan2, Nemat Bashirov1, Omer Goktekin1
1Bezmialem Foundation University, Department Of Cardiology
2Şifa Hospital


OBJECTIVE
Treatment of chronic total occlusion (CTO) with everolimus-eluting bioresorbable vascular scaffold (BVS) is safe and effective at short-term follow-up (FU). The current study investigated clinical and angiographic outcomes after treatment of CTO with BVS at >1 year.

METHODS
Thirty patients who underwent successful recanalization of 35 CTOs were included in this study. Quantitative coronary angiography (QCA) was performed at median FU period of 402 days. Clinical endpoints analyzed included all-cause mortality, cardiac death, non-fatal target vessel myocardial infarction, target vessel revascularization (TVR), symptom-driven target lesion revascularization (TLR), and BVS thrombosis.

RESULTS
QCA analysis revealed in-scaffold minimal luminal diameter of 2.14±0.50 mm and late lumen loss (LLL) of 0.38±0.54 mm. One cardiac death, 5 cases with TVR, and 3 cases with TLR were detected at median FU time of 542 days. No BVS thrombosis was observed.

CONCLUSION
The Absorb BVS was safe and effective in the treatment of CTO with acceptable LLL at mid-term FU, comparable to drug eluting stents.

Keywords: Bioresorbable vascular scaffold, chronic total occlusion, late lumen loss.

Corresponding Author: Aylin Hatice Yamac, Türkiye
Manuscript Language: English
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