From the Journals

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

View on the News

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

SOURCE: Brilakis ES et al. Lancet. 2018 May 19;391(10134);1997-2007.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Culprit-vessel PCI may be safer long term in cardiogenic shock
MDedge Cardiology
Restrictive transfusions do not increase long-term CV surgery risk
MDedge Cardiology
Coronary CT angiography radiation dose fell 78% from 2007-2017
MDedge Cardiology
New stroke intervention guidelines stress volume
MDedge Cardiology
Think DEB, not BMS, with high bleeding risk
MDedge Cardiology
Risk factors for postop cardiac events differ between vascular and general surgery
MDedge Cardiology
FDA approves device for coronary artery perforations
MDedge Cardiology
Top research at TCT 2018
MDedge Cardiology
TCT presents new, ‘massive’ integrated, hands-on learning center
MDedge Cardiology
Connecting at TCT 2018
MDedge Cardiology