ORLANDO — The safety of drug-eluting coronary stents, compared with bare-metal stents, received a substantial boost in an analysis of data from more than 10,000 patients who received coronary stents in Massachusetts during 2003–2004.
Data collected by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, which sponsored the study, on all patients who received a coronary stent in the state showed that use of drug-eluting stents (DES) was associated with a significantly lower risk of death or need for revascularization and a similar incidence of myocardial infarctions, compared with patients treated with bare-metal stents (BMS), Dr. Laura Mauri reported at the annual scientific sessions of the American Heart Association.
“The results are very reassuring” regarding the relative safety of DES, said Dr. Mauri, a cardiologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston. These are the first large-scale registry data that compare DES with BMS using only patients treated in the United States. And because the study used data collected from nearly 19,000 patients, Dr. Mauri and her associates were able to use an extensive propensity-score analysis that closely matched patients in the DES and BMS groups on 63 clinical and demographic variables.
The findings “are reassuring for patients who have or may get drug-eluting stents,” Dr. Robert O. Bonow said in an interview.
“Data like these may lead to a resurgence in DES use,” said Dr. Bonow, professor of cardiology and chief of cardiology at Northwestern University, Chicago. Use of coronary DES in the United States (and elsewhere) dropped substantially this year after several reports over the past 15 months that raised questions about their safety, compared with BMS.
The Massachusetts Department of Public Health requires reporting on all patients who receive coronary stents in the state. The new study used data collected by the department for more than 21,000 patients who received one or more coronary stents during April 1, 2003-Sept. 30, 2004. This period was selected for the analysis because DES first went on sale in the United States in April 2003, and because all patients in this group had at least 2 years of follow-up data.
The analysis included more than 11,000 patients who received exclusively DES, and more than 6,000 patients who received only BMS. The analysis excluded more than 1,000 patients who received both DES and BMS.
During the early portion of the study period, about 90% of patients received BMS and about 10% received DES. This ratio shifted over the next 18 months, so that by September 2004 the situation was reversed and about 90% of patients who got coronary stents received DES and about 10% got BMS. Throughout the entire period, about 65% of the patients got DES and about 35% received BMS.
This level of DES use was substantially higher than in other registry data that have been reported for coronary stents, in which DES were about 30%–40% of all stents used. This includes data from the Swedish national registry that were published early this year, in which about 30% of patients received DES. In the Massachusetts data, about 70% of the DES used were sirolimus-eluting stents (Cypher). The other 30% of the DES used were placitaxel-eluting stents (Taxus).
The high rate of BMS use early on and the high rate of DES use later were strengths of the new study. A broad population of patients received each stent type, which helped the investigators when they attempted to match very similar patients in the two groups, Dr. Mauri said.
Application of the propensity-score analysis, which matched patients from the two groups based on 63 variables, led to a final-analysis group of 5,441 patients treated with one or more DES and an equal number of patients who received one or more BMS.
The incidence of death during 2 years of follow-up was 9.4% in the DES group and 11.9% in the BMS group, a difference that was highly statistically significant. The total revascularization rate was 20.1% in the DES group and 23.9% in the BMS group, also a highly significant difference. Rates of nonfatal myocardial infarction were 10.8% in the DES patients and 11.8% in the BMS recipients, a difference that was not statistically significant.
The revascularization rate for the DES patients may seem unexpectedly high, but was probably caused by a very liberal approach in which any additional coronary stenting that patients received was counted. Many of the subsequent stenting procedures involved lesions that had not been treated initially, Dr. Mauri said.
The analysis has not yet specifically compared the rates of stent thrombosis in the DES and BMS groups. A major concern about DES safety has been that they might cause a higher incidence of stent thrombosis, compared with BMS. Clinically significant thrombotic events would manifest as death or myocardial infarction, she noted. During most of the study period, patients receiving DES were routinely treated with dual antiplatelet therapy—aspirin and clopidogrel—for 3–6 months. Today, the recommended length of dual therapy is 1 year.