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Browsing by Author "Carrie, Didier (7006798967)"

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    Cobalt-Chromium KAname™ coRonary stEnt System in the treatment of patients with coronary artery disease (kare study)
    (2014)
    Carrie, Didier (7006798967)
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    Schächinger, Volker (7003997927)
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    Danzi, Gian Battista (57209549829)
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    Macaya, Carlos (6506673631)
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    Zeymer, Uwe (7005045618)
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    Putnikovic, Biljana (6602601858)
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    Iniguez, Andres (7005329352)
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    Moreno, Raul (6506647911)
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    Mehmedbegovic, Zlatko (55778381000)
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    Beleslin, Branko (6701355424)
    Objectives To evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the Kaname™ cobalt-chromium (Co-Cr), thin strut, bare metal stent (BMS) system for the treatment of coronary artery lesions.; Background Despite widespread use of drug-eluting stents, a certain percentage of patients with coronary artery disease are still treated with BMS. Therefore, it is essential to evaluate their clinical performance.; Methods Two hundred eighty-two patients were enrolled in this prospective, single-arm study including a predefined subset of 79 patients with small vessels. The primary end-point was freedom from target vessel failure (TVF) at 6 months. Key angiographic and intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) end-points were late loss, diameter stenosis, binary restenosis, and neointimal hyperplasia volume.; Results Freedom from TVF at 6 months was 93.3% and at 1 year 90.8% in total population, and 92.4% and 87.3% in small vessels, respectively. Clinically driven target lesion revascularization (TLR) rates at 6 and 12 months were 4.3% and 6.4% in total population, and 3.8% and 7.6% in small vessels, respectively. At 6 months in-stent late loss was 0.75 plusmn; 0.43 mm and binary restenosis rate was 16.9% in total population, and 0.64 plusmn; 0.40 mm and 26.1% in small vessels, while IVUS assessed neointimal hyperplasia volume at 6 months was 128.9 plusmn; 42.6 mm3 for total population. There were no definite and probable stent thromboses up to 12 months.; Conclusions Results indicate good safety and effectiveness of the Kaname™ stent with clinically equivalent results in small and larger vessels, as such providing useful treatment option for patients with ischemic heart disease considered for BMS implantation. (J Interven Cardiol 2014;27:491-499) © 2014, Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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    Long-term clinical outcomes after bioresorbable and permanent polymer drug-eluting stent implantation: Final five-year results of the CENTURY II randomised clinical trial
    (2018)
    Wijns, William (7006420435)
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    Valdes-Chavarri, Mariano (7101845217)
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    Richardt, Gert (7006414918)
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    Moreno, Raul (6506647911)
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    Iniguez-Romo, Andres (7005329352)
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    Barbato, Emanuele (58118036500)
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    Carrie, Didier (7006798967)
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    Ando, Kenji (35399496600)
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    Merkely, Béla (7004434435)
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    Kornowski, Ran (16947378300)
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    Eltchaninoff, Hélène (7005210072)
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    Stojkovic, Sinisa (6603759580)
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    Saito, Shigeru (7404854449)
    Aims: The aim of this study was to establish the long-term safety and efficacy of a sirolimus-eluting stent with bioresorbable polymer (BP-SES; Ultimaster) by comparison with an everolimus-eluting stent with permanent polymer (PP-EES; XIENCE). Methods and results: CENTURY II (Clinical Evaluation of New Terumo Drug-Eluting Coronary Stent System in the Treatment of Patients with Coronary Artery Disease) is a large-scale, prospective, multicentre, randomised single-blind, controlled, non-inferiority trial conducted at 58 study sites globally, including Europe, Japan and Korea, powered to prove non-inferiority for freedom from target lesion failure (TLF: cardiac death, target vessel-related myocardial infarction [MI] and target lesion revascularisation) at nine months. Patients requiring a percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) were randomised (1:1) to BP-SES (n=551) or PP-EES (n=550). Freedom from TLF at five years was 90.0% in the BP-SES and 91.1% in the PP-EES group (p=0.54). The patient-oriented composite endpoint (all death, any MI, any revascularisation) was 24.1 and 25.6% (p=0.57) with BP-SES and PP-EES, respectively. The very late stent thrombosis rate from one to five years was especially low at 0.2% in both arms. Conclusions: This randomised clinical trial showed that the BP-SES stent was non-inferior to the benchmark PP-EES stent for TLF. Safety and efficacy measures were comparable up to five-year follow-up after PCI. © Europa Digital & Publishing 2018.
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    The EBC TWO Study (European Bifurcation Coronary TWO): A Randomized Comparison of Provisional T-Stenting Versus a Systematic 2 Stent Culotte Strategy in Large Caliber True Bifurcations
    (2016)
    Hildick-Smith, David (8089365300)
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    Behan, Miles W. (8862299400)
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    Lassen, Jens F. (57189389659)
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    Chieffo, Alaide (57202041611)
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    Lefèvre, Thierry (13608617100)
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    Stankovic, Goran (59150945500)
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    Burzotta, Francesco (7003405739)
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    Pan, Manuel (7202544866)
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    Ferenc, Miroslaw (8933716300)
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    Bennett, Lorraine (35847475900)
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    Hovasse, Thomas (25627893900)
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    Spence, Mark S. (7103007124)
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    Oldroyd, Keith (7003557589)
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    Brunel, Philippe (7006007671)
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    Carrie, Didier (7006798967)
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    Baumbach, Andreas (56962775900)
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    Maeng, Michael (20034699800)
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    Skipper, Nicola (56108237700)
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    Louvard, Yves (7004523655)
    Background-For the treatment of coronary bifurcation lesions, a provisional strategy is superior to systematic 2-stent techniques for the most bifurcation lesions. However, complex anatomies with large side branches (SBs) with significant ostial disease length are considered by expert consensus to warrant a 2-stent technique upfront. This consensus view has not been scientifically assessed. Methods and Results-Symptomatic patients with large caliber true bifurcation lesions (SB diameter ≥2.5 mm) and significant ostial disease length (≥5 mm) were randomized to either a provisional T-stent strategy or a dual stent culotte technique. Two hundred patients aged 64±10 years, 82% male, were randomized in 20 European centers. The clinical presentations were stable coronary disease (69%) and acute coronary syndromes (31%). SB stent diameter (2.67±0.27 mm) and length (20.30±5.89 mm) confirmed the extent of SB disease. Procedural success (provisional 97%, culotte 94%) and kissing balloon inflation (provisional 95%, culotte 98%) were high. Sixteen percent of patients in the provisional group underwent T-stenting. The primary end point (a composite of death, myocardial infarction, and target vessel revascularization at 12 months) occurred in 7.7% of the provisional T-stent group versus 10.3% of the culotte group (hazard ratio, 1.02; 95% confidence interval, 0.78-1.34; P=0.53). Procedure time, X-ray dose, and cost all favored the simpler procedure. Conclusions-When treating complex coronary bifurcation lesions with large stenosed SBs, there is no difference between a provisional T-stent strategy and a systematic 2-stent culotte strategy in a composite end point of death, myocardial infarction, and target vessel revascularization at 12 months. Clinical Trial Registration-URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT 01560455. © 2016 American Heart Association, Inc.

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