Randomized Comparison of Angioplasty of Complex Coronary Lesions at a Single Center

Author:

Reifart Nicolaus1,Vandormael Michel1,Krajcar Mladen1,Göhring Stefan1,Preusler Wolfgang1,Schwarz Franz1,Störger Hans1,Hofmann Manfred1,Klöpper Johann1,Müller Stefan1,Haase Jürgen1

Affiliation:

1. From Herzzentrum Frankfurt (Germany).

Abstract

Background The purpose of this study was to test whether coronary revascularization with ablation of either excimer laser or rotational atherectomy can improve the initial angiographic and clinical outcomes compared with dilatation (balloon angioplasty) alone. Methods and Results At a single center, a total of 685 patients with symptomatic coronary disease warranting elective percutaneous revascularization for a complex lesion were randomly assigned to balloon angioplasty (n=222), excimer laser angioplasty (n=232), or rotational atherectomy (n=231). The primary end point was procedural success (diameter stenosis <50%, absence of death, Q-wave myocardial infarction, or coronary artery bypass surgery). The patients who underwent rotational atherectomy had a higher rate of procedural success than those who underwent excimer laser angioplasty or conventional balloon angioplasty (89% versus 77% and 80%, P= .0019), but no difference was observed in major in-hospital complications (3.2% versus 4.3% versus 3.1%, P= .71). At the 6-month follow-up, revascularization of the original target lesion was performed more frequently in the rotational atherectomy group (42.4%) and the excimer laser group (46.0%) than in the angioplasty group (31.9%, P= .013). Conclusions Procedural success of rotational atherectomy is superior to laser angioplasty and balloon angioplasty; however, it does not result in better late outcomes. The role of plaque debulking before balloon dilatation in percutaneous coronary revascularization remains to be fully defined.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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