From the Journals

DIVA results similar for drug-eluting, bare-metal stents

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Are first-generation stents better for this indication?

The predominant use of second-generation drug-eluting stents in the DIVA study may explain why the researchers found no difference in outcomes for bare metal and drug-eluting stents.

Most patients in previous trials were treated with first-generation drug-eluting stents, but second-generation drug-eluting stents perform better than their first-generation counterparts in native coronary artery disease. One might think that this finding should also apply to saphenous vein bypass graft lesions in which atherosclerosis is more aggressive and the progress of the disease much faster, yet this was not the case in DIVA, and the study authors did not provide an explanation for this finding.

One possible reason for the comparability of outcomes in the drug-eluting stents and bare metal stents groups may be that saphenous vein bypass graft lesions may be more favorably disposed to paclitaxel, commonly used in first-generation drug-eluting stents, than the drugs found in the second-generation stents. The DIVA findings may indicate that the second-generation drug-eluting stents performed worse, not that the bare metal stents performed better.

Studies of only first-generation paclitaxel-eluting stents showed a sustained benefit. Any notion that the pathophysiology of saphenous vein grafts might make them more amenable to a bare metal stent while a drug-eluting stent is better suited for native vessels is purely speculative. Further research comparing the effect of different stent types in saphenous vein bypass graft failure is warranted.

Raban V. Jeger, MD, and Sven Möbius-Winkler, MD, made these remarks in an invited commentary. Dr. Jeger is with the University Hospital Basel (Switzerland), and Dr. Möbius-Winkler is with University Hospital Jena (Germany). Dr. Jeger disclosed he is the principal investigator of the BASKET-SAVAGE trial, which received funding from Boston Scientific Germany. Dr. Möbius-Winkler had no financial relationships to disclose.


 

FROM THE LANCET


Pricing aside, Dr. Brilakis and his coauthors reported no statistical differences in terms of outcomes between the DES and BMS groups. Baseline characteristics of both groups were similar, and the vessel failure rates were 17% in the DES group and 19% in the BMS group after 12 months of follow-up. After 2-7 years, “target vessel failure occurred in approximately one in three patients, with no difference between the bare-metal and drug-eluting stents,” Dr. Brilakis and his coauthors said.

There was no significant difference in cardiac death rates – 5% for DES patients and 4% for BMS patients – or in rates of target lesion revascularization, at 9% and 8%, respectively. Postprocedure medication rates were also similar between the two groups. For example, the rates of patients on P2Y12 inhibitors were 89% for both groups at 12 months and, among those who had follow-up at 36 months, 48% for DES and 44% for BMS.

Among the limitations of the study that Dr. Brilakis and his coauthors noted was the high proportion of men in the VA population – only two women, both in the DES group, participated in the study – and the interventionists doing the index SVG intervention were not masked to the type of stent used.

Dr. Brilakis disclosed relationships with Abbott Vascular, Amgen, Asahi, Boston Scientific, Cardinal Health, CSI, Elsevier, GE Healthcare, Medicure, Medtronic, Nitiloop, InfraRedx, and Osprey.

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