Repository logo
  • English
  • Srpski (lat)
  • Српски
Log In
Have you forgotten your password?
  1. Home
  2. Browse by Author

Browsing by Author "Jagic, Nikola (11641086000)"

Filter results by typing the first few letters
Now showing 1 - 5 of 5
  • Results Per Page
  • Sort Options
  • Loading...
    Thumbnail Image
    Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Publication
    A first-in-man clinical evaluation of Ultimaster, a new drugeluting coronary stent system: CENTURY study
    (2015)
    Barbato, Emanuele (58118036500)
    ;
    Salinger-Martinovic, Sonja (15052251700)
    ;
    Sagic, Dragan (35549772400)
    ;
    Beleslin, Branko (6701355424)
    ;
    Vrolix, Mathias (9437101100)
    ;
    Neskovic, Aleksandar N. (35597744900)
    ;
    Jagic, Nikola (11641086000)
    ;
    Verheye, Stefan (6701468632)
    ;
    Mehmedbegovic, Zlatko (55778381000)
    ;
    Wijns, William (7006420435)
    Aims: To report the six-month angiographic and two-year clinical outcome data from the first-in-man study with the Ultimaster DES, a thin-strut cobalt-chromium sirolimus-eluting stent (SES) with an innovative abluminal-gradient-coated bioresorbable polymer. Methods and results: CENTURY is a multicentre, single-arm, prospective study that enrolled 105 patients (113 lesions) with coronary artery disease. All patients were scheduled to have an angiographic follow-up at six months, while 45 and 20 patients respectively had IVUS and OCT assessments. The primary endpoint was six-month in-stent late lumen loss. Secondary endpoints included clinical, IVUS and OCT outcomes. Clinical follow-up is available up to two years and will continue up to five years. Procedural success was 97.1% and device success was 100%. Angiographic late loss at six months was 0.04±0.35 mm, also reflected in a low binary restenosis rate of 0.9% and confirmed by IVUS-assessed neointimal volume obstruction of 1.02±1.62%. The mean strut coverage assessed by OCT was 96.2% with 1.66±4.02 malapposed stent struts. There were no deaths in the study, three (2.9%) periprocedural and one (0.9%) spontaneous myocardial infarction, not related to the target vessel. At one and two years, the target lesion failure rate was 3.8% and 5.7%, while the TLR rate was 1.9% and 2.8%, respectively. There was one acute definite stent thrombosis. Conclusions: The Ultimaster™ novel bioresorbable polymer sirolimus-eluting stent demonstrated good performance, including high procedural success and strong suppression of neointimal proliferation at six months. Good safety and effectiveness were shown up to two years in the studied population. © Europa Digital & Publishing 2015. All rights reserved.
  • Loading...
    Thumbnail Image
    Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Publication
    Association of coronary ischemia estimated by fractional flow reserve and Psychological characteristics of patients
    (2017)
    Dreckovic, Miodrag Jovan (56104950100)
    ;
    Jagic, Nikola (11641086000)
    ;
    Miloradovic, Vladimir (8355053500)
    ;
    Neskovic, Aleksandar (35597744900)
    ;
    Soldatovic, Ivan (35389846900)
    ;
    Anovic, Srdilija (57195075239)
    Introduction: Psychological characteristics of patients, depression, stress and anxiety are recognized as important confounding risk factors for ischemic heart disease. However, the impact of psychological characteristics on coronary ischemia and vice versa remain poorly understood. Aim: To demonstrate the interplay of psychological characteristics, depression, stress and anxiety with coronary ischemia estimated with fractional flow reserve (FFR). Material and methods: From 2014 to 2016, 147 patients who were planned for FFR measurement were included in this study. Psychological characteristics of patients were evaluated using the Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale 21 items (DASS 21) self-report questionnaire. Results: Comparing the FFR ischemic vs. FFR non-ischemic groups, a significant difference was observed regarding results achieved for the depression, anxiety and stress scales. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to model the correlation between FFR and the DAS scale. It was clear, when controlling for previous myocardial infarction, that FFR was significant in all analyses. However, when the Canadian Cardiovascular Society grading of angina pectoris (CCS) class was entered in the model, FFR was not a significant predictor of anxiety, but was significant in other analysis. Conclusions: Higher degrees of the psychological characteristics depression, stress and anxiety were observed in the group of patients with coronary ischemia, corresponding to lower fractional flow values.
  • Loading...
    Thumbnail Image
    Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Publication
    Cardiopoietic cell therapy for advanced ischaemic heart failure: Results at 39 weeks of the prospective, randomized, double blind, sham-controlled CHART-1 clinical trial
    (2017)
    Bartunek, Jozef (7006397762)
    ;
    Terzic, Andre (7004939597)
    ;
    Davison, Beth A. (7102616573)
    ;
    Filippatos, Gerasimos S. (7003787662)
    ;
    Radovanovic, Slavica (24492602300)
    ;
    Beleslin, Branko (6701355424)
    ;
    Merkely, Bela (7004434435)
    ;
    Musialek, Piotr (6602191124)
    ;
    Wojakowski, Wojciech (55937490100)
    ;
    Andreka, Peter (6602739546)
    ;
    Horvath, Ivan G. (35315794200)
    ;
    Katz, Amos (7402569337)
    ;
    Dolatabadi, Dariouch (6508388377)
    ;
    El Nakadi, Badih (6603603243)
    ;
    Arandjelovic, Aleksandra (8603366600)
    ;
    Edes, Istvan (7003689191)
    ;
    Seferovic, Petar M. (6603594879)
    ;
    Obradovic, Slobodan (6701778019)
    ;
    Vanderheyden, Marc (7003468696)
    ;
    Jagic, Nikola (11641086000)
    ;
    Petrov, Ivo (56204260300)
    ;
    Atar, Shaul (7003487445)
    ;
    Halabi, Majdi (13008501300)
    ;
    Gelev, Valeri L. (15832032700)
    ;
    Shochat, Michael K. (8916466700)
    ;
    Kasprzak, Jaroslaw D. (35452933600)
    ;
    Sanz-Ruiz, Ricardo (24451341300)
    ;
    Heyndrickx, Guy R. (7006188682)
    ;
    Nyolczas, Noemi (24388812000)
    ;
    Legrand, Victor (7005354273)
    ;
    Guédès, Antoine (7004710124)
    ;
    Heyse, Alex (7801320602)
    ;
    Moccetti, Tiziano (55632940300)
    ;
    Fernandez-Aviles, Francisco (7006121046)
    ;
    Jimenez-Quevedo, Pilar (8873531300)
    ;
    Bayes-Genis, Antoni (7004094140)
    ;
    Hernandez-Garcia, Jose Maria (57189234598)
    ;
    Ribichini, Flavio (7003741814)
    ;
    Gruchala, Marcin (6602138765)
    ;
    Waldman, Scott A. (7102179927)
    ;
    Teerlink, John R. (55234545700)
    ;
    Gersh, Bernard J. (35371853600)
    ;
    Povsic, Thomas J. (57207517008)
    ;
    Henry, Timothy D. (7102043625)
    ;
    Metra, Marco (7006770735)
    ;
    Hajjar, Roger J. (19134434400)
    ;
    Tendera, Michal (7005482361)
    ;
    Behfar, Atta (6602328079)
    ;
    Alexandre, Bertrand (57193733544)
    ;
    Seron, Aymeric (12786420500)
    ;
    Stough, Wendy Gattis (10341323900)
    ;
    Sherman, Warren (57211674521)
    ;
    Cotter, Gad (57985372400)
    ;
    Wijns, William (7006420435)
    Aims Cardiopoietic cells, produced through cardiogenic conditioning of patients' mesenchymal stem cells, have shown preliminary efficacy. The Congestive Heart Failure Cardiopoietic Regenerative Therapy (CHART-1) trial aimed to validate cardiopoiesis-based biotherapy in a larger heart failure cohort. Methods and results This multinational, randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled study was conducted in 39 hospitals. Patients with symptomatic ischaemic heart failure on guideline-directed therapy (n= 484) were screened; n = 348 underwent bone marrow harvest and mesenchymal stem cell expansion. Those achieving> 24 million mesenchymal stem cells (n=315) were randomized to cardiopoietic cells delivered endomyocardially with a retention-enhanced catheter (n=157) or sham procedure (n= 158). Procedures were performed as randomized in 271 patients (n = 120 cardiopoietic cells, n= 151 sham). The primary efficacy endpoint was a Finkelstein Schoenfeld hierarchical composite (all-cause mortality, worsening heart failure, Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire score, 6-min walk distance, left ventricular end-systolic volume, and ejection fraction) at 39 weeks. The primary outcome was neutral (Mann Whitney estimator 0.54, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.47 0.61 [value> 0.5 favours cell treatment], P = 0.27). Exploratory analyses suggested a benefit of cell treatment on the primary composite in patients with baseline left ventricular end-diastolic volume 200-370mL (60% of patients) (Mann Whitney estimator 0.61, 95% CI 0.52-0.70, P = 0.015). No difference was observed in serious adverse events. One (0.9%) cardiopoietic cell patient and 9 (5.4%) sham patients experienced aborted or sudden cardiac death. Conclusion The primary endpoint was neutral, with safety demonstrated across the cohort. Further evaluation of cardiopoietic cell therapy in patients with elevated end-diastolic volume is warranted. © The Author 2016.
  • Loading...
    Thumbnail Image
    Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Publication
    FFR-Guided Percutaneous Coronary Intervention vs Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting in Patients With Diabetes
    (2025)
    Takahashi, Kuniaki (57204287561)
    ;
    Otsuki, Hisao (55785227900)
    ;
    Zimmermann, Frederik M. (56285170900)
    ;
    Ding, Victoria Y. (56993126400)
    ;
    Engstrøm, Thomas (7004069840)
    ;
    Hørsted Thyregod, Hans Gustav (15840501400)
    ;
    Beleslin, Branko (6701355424)
    ;
    Putnik, Svetozar (16550571800)
    ;
    Tapp, Luke (26026430400)
    ;
    Barker, Thomas (37088236300)
    ;
    Redwood, Simon (7004926172)
    ;
    Young, Christopher (7403446051)
    ;
    Bech, G. Jan-Willem (6602258737)
    ;
    Hoohenkerk, Gerard J.F. (24168594800)
    ;
    De Bruyne, Bernard (7006955211)
    ;
    Pijls, Nico H.J. (7005052242)
    ;
    Fearon, William F. (7003425177)
    ;
    Bhindi, Ravinay (57203195611)
    ;
    Brady, Peter (7102115595)
    ;
    Yong, Andy (59876666000)
    ;
    Yan, Tristan (8653304000)
    ;
    Ng, Martin (59786365400)
    ;
    Plunkett, Brian (6603965243)
    ;
    Layland, Jamie (25822527300)
    ;
    Newcomb, Andrew (24475437800)
    ;
    Sapontis, James (55884724900)
    ;
    Smith, Julian (35270156300)
    ;
    Asrress, Kaleab (6506972728)
    ;
    El Nakadi, Badih (6603603243)
    ;
    Noiseux, Nicolas (57203558558)
    ;
    Peniston, Charles (6701921776)
    ;
    Chong, Aun-Yeong (54885647800)
    ;
    Glineur, David (6602288806)
    ;
    Minhas, Kunal (55344888300)
    ;
    Raab, Michael (59735409500)
    ;
    Nemec, Petr (57211775278)
    ;
    Engstroem, Thomas (47461160500)
    ;
    Thyregod, Gustav (57233740600)
    ;
    Modrau, Ivy (19736146000)
    ;
    Rioufol, Gilles (6701508426)
    ;
    Farhat, Fadi (55947797500)
    ;
    Park, Seung-Jung (59735915300)
    ;
    Choo, Suk Jung (59735750500)
    ;
    Kalinauskas, Gintaras (17342507700)
    ;
    Bruinsma, Brandon (59735663600)
    ;
    Larsen, Alf Inge (7201649557)
    ;
    Haaverstad, Rune (7004553021)
    ;
    Menon, Madhav (57190861283)
    ;
    El Gamel, Adam (59597170700)
    ;
    Jagic, Nikola (11641086000)
    ;
    Sreckovic, Miodrag (56104950100)
    ;
    Rosic, Milenko (57381064700)
    ;
    Witt, Nils (19337997600)
    ;
    Corbascio, Matthias (6701605914)
    ;
    Ostlund-Papadogeorgos, Nikolaos (57188835397)
    ;
    Angeras, Oskar (55580696900)
    ;
    Jeppsson, Anders (7005509590)
    ;
    Oldroyd, Keith (7003557589)
    ;
    Berry, Colin (57549730300)
    ;
    Watkins, Stuart (8689606900)
    ;
    Al‐Attar, Nawwar (6602088099)
    ;
    MacCarthy, Philip (7004217635)
    ;
    Wendler, Olaf (55602108900)
    ;
    Curzen, Nick (7006653922)
    ;
    Miskolczi, Szaboles (25936485700)
    ;
    Sunil, Ohri (59735832300)
    ;
    Sarma, Jaydeep (35724660400)
    ;
    Barnard, James (59735832400)
    ;
    Baker, Thomas (57356134400)
    ;
    Kharbanda, Rajesh (57202041603)
    ;
    Sayeed, Rana (6602336116)
    IMPORTANCE Outcomes in patients with diabetes after fractional flow reserve (FFR)-guided percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) using current-generation drug-eluting stents (DES) compared with coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) are unknown. OBJECTIVES To investigate the relative treatment effect of PCI vs CABG according to diabetes status with respect to major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events (MACCE) at 3 years and to evaluate the impact of the SYNTAX score. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS This is a prespecified subgroup analysis of the FAME (Fractional Flow Reserve vs Angiography for Multivessel Evaluation) 3 trial, an investigator-initiated, randomized clinical trial conducted at 48 centers worldwide. The FAME 3 trial enrolled patients with 3-vessel coronary artery disease not involving the left main undergoing coronary revascularization between August 2014 and December 2019. Data analysis was conducted in August 2023. Clinical follow-up was performed at hospital discharge and at 1 month, 6 months, 1 year, 2 years, and 3 years after randomization. INTERVENTION Either FFR-guided PCI with current-generation DES or CABG. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The primary end point was MACCE, defined as the composite of all-cause death, myocardial infarction, stroke, or repeat revascularization at 3 years. RESULTS Of 1500 total patients enrolled, mean (SD) patient age was 65.1 (8.4) years, and 265 patients (17.7%) were female. The FAME 3 trial included 428 patients with diabetes (28.5%). Patients with diabetes, especially those receiving insulin, had a higher risk of MACCE at 3 years compared with those without diabetes. Regarding relative treatment effect, the risk of MACCE was higher after FFR-guided PCI compared with CABG in both patients with diabetes (hazard ratio [HR], 1.44; 95% CI, 0.91-2.28; P = .12) and those without diabetes (HR, 1.50; 95% CI, 1.08-2.07; P = .02), with no significant interaction (P for interaction = .94). In patients with a low SYNTAX score (<23), there was no significant difference in MACCE between PCI and CABG, while in patients with an intermediate to high SYNTAX score (≥23), PCI had a higher risk of MACCE than CABG, regardless of diabetes status. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE In this subgroup analysis of the FAME 3 randomized clinical trial, the relative benefit of CABG compared with FFR-guided PCI was similar among patients with and without diabetes. © 2025 American Medical Association. All rights reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
  • Loading...
    Thumbnail Image
    Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Publication
    Serbia: Coronary and structural heart interventions from 2010 to 2015
    (2017)
    Stojkovic, Sinisa (6603759580)
    ;
    Milasinovic, Dejan (24823024500)
    ;
    Bozinovic, Nenad (56614042000)
    ;
    Davidovic, Aleksandar (57195997815)
    ;
    Debeljacki, Dragan (6508154911)
    ;
    Djenic, Nemanja (35848370100)
    ;
    Hinic, Sasa (55208518100)
    ;
    Jagic, Nikola (11641086000)
    ;
    Micic, Olivera (57195995532)
    ;
    Mitov, Vladimir (26533102800)
    ;
    Neskovic, Aleksandar N. (35597744900)
    ;
    Nikolic, Milan (57195996071)
    ;
    Sagic, Dragan (35549772400)
    ;
    Stankovic, Goran (59150945500)
    Serbia's interventional community has been facing the multifaceted challenge of an ageing population with cardiovascular diseases as the primary cause of death nationwide, coronary artery disease (CAD) being the most prevalent subset. The following two fields of activity have marked the trajectory of progress in the field of interventional cardiology in Serbia: first, the expansion of the infrastructure, mainly through the opening of new catheterisation laboratories across all of the country's administrative regions, which has resulted in better accessibility to coronary interventions for the general population; second, the creation of national platforms for continuous education, training and the promotion of clinical research in interventional cardiology, with close programmatic links to European Association of Percutaneous Cardiovascular Interventions (EAPCI)-based educational initiatives, including the curriculum for interventional cardiology. As growth seems to be inherent to the concept of progress, we report here on the expanding numbers of coronary interventions in the period between January 2010 and December 2015, and the early experiences with structural heart interventions in Serbia. © Europa Digital and Publishing 2017. All Rights Reserved.

Built with DSpace-CRIS software - Extension maintained and optimized by 4Science

  • Privacy policy
  • End User Agreement
  • Send Feedback