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Future Developments in Coronary Stenting

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Title: Future Developments in Coronary Stenting


1
Future DevelopmentsinCoronary Stenting
  • Keith D Dawkins MD FRCP FACC
  • Southampton University Hospital
  • UK

2
Conflicts of Interest
  • Research Grant Support
  • Boston Scientific Corporation
  • Advisory Board/Consultant
  • Abbott Vascular
  • Boston Scientific Corporation
  • Conor Medsystems
  • Eli Lilly
  • Medtronic
  • Nycomed

3
Angioscopy Doppler Flow Intravascular
Ultrasound Optical Coherence Tomography Palpograph
y Pressure Measurements Thermography Virtual
Histology
1977
Brachytherapy Cutting Balloon Directional
Atherectomy Extraction Atherectomy Laser
Atherectomy Perfusion Balloon Rotational
Atherectomy
2007
4
Balloon
5
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6
gt3 Million Patients gt4.5 Million DES
Worldwide DES Penetration
7
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8
Changes in Stock Price (2005-2007)
9
Drug Eluting Stent Use ()
98.1
Des Use ()
76.4
2006
Wessex Cardiac Unit
10
The Players
11
Drug Eluting Stents
Deliver on Ideal Stent Platform
Drug Selection
Elution Mechanism
SAFETY EFFICACY
12
What are the Expectations of the available Stent
Technology ?
13
Expectations of Stent Technology
Efficacy
Safety
  • Deliverable
  • Low TLR
  • Low Restenosis
  • Low Late Lumen Loss
  • Cost-Effective
  • No Device Malfunction
  • No Early MACE
  • Q AMI
  • Non-Q AMI
  • No Stent Thrombosis

14
Real World Target Lesions
  • Long Lesions 10
  • Small Vessels 13
  • Bifurcations 20
  • Diabetics 24
  • Simple 33

15
Efficacy
The Patient
The Analyst
16
Efficacy
The Patient
17
Efficacy
The Analyst
Late Loss (mm)
Sirius
Taxus II
Endeavor II
18
Coronary Artery
Stent
TLR
Late Loss
Restenosis gt50 (TLR)
19
Late Loss vs. Restenosis
Example 3.0mm Bare Metal Stent Mean Late Loss
1.0 0.5mm
Angiographic Restenosis Late Loss gt1.5 mm (50
DS)
Clinical Restenosis (TLR) Late Loss gt2.1 mm
(70 DS)
Mean Late Loss
Distribution Density
Don Baim 2006 (Modified)
20
ENDEAVOR I vs. RESOLUTE
QCA 4 months
Late Loss (mm)
N100
N30
Endeavor I
Resolute
21
SPIRIT II
plt0.0001
QCA 6 months
Late Loss (mm)
N202
N73
Taxus
Xience V
22
SPIRIT II
X
plt0.0001
QCA 6 months
Late Loss (mm)
N202
N73
Taxus
Promus
23
Stent A
Stent B
Lower Late Loss
Higher Late Loss
  • Low Restenosis
  • Small Vessels
  • Diabetes
  • ? Low Thrombosis
  • ? Low Restenosis
  • ? Small Vessels
  • ? Diabetes
  • Low Thrombosis

24
Paclitaxel
  • Multi-functional activities with cell
  • Dose dependent effects
  • Anti-proliferative
  • Anti-inflammatory
  • Prevents SMC migration
  • Promotes apoptosis at low doses
  • Cytostatic within the therapeutic range

Taxus Brevifolia
Taxol
25
Sirolimus (Rapamycin)
Streptomyces hygroscopicus Easter Island (Rapa
Nui)
  • Macrolide antibiotic
  • Potent immunosuppressant and anti-proliferative
    agent
  • Binds to the cytosolic protein FK-binding protein
    12 (FKBP 12)
  • Inhibits m-TOR
  • Blockade of cell cycle progression at the G1/S
    transition
  • Relaxation of smooth muscle

Sirolimus
26
Cytokine/Growth Factor
Antigen
Receptor Tyrosine Kinase
TCR
Pimecrolimus
PLC
mTOR
PHAS-1
PIP2
InsP3 DAG
Sirolimus
Ca
Calcineurin??
Calmodulin
Translation
Calcineurin
MAPKKS
Removal of p21/p27
Pimecrolimus
Activation of CDKs
AP-1
NFAT
NFKB
IL-2
P
NFAT
Cell cycle progression
RNA
Nucleus
IL-2
NFAT
NFKB
AP-1
Modified from Donners 2003
27
Spectrum of Limus Analogues
Everolimus Biolimus A9
Tacrolimus
Zotarolimus
Sirolimus
Pimecrolimus
Anti-proliferative mTOR Binding
Anti-inflammatory Calcineurin Inhibition
28
(No Transcript)
29
Genous Stent (48 hour Balloon-injured Porcine
Model)
Bare Metal
EPC Capture
M Kutryk (unpublished)
30
Polymer based Drug Delivery
  • Local, targeted, short-term, low-dose drug
    delivery
  • Controlled release of drug from polymer
  • Homogeneous drug coverage along stent
  • Retention of drug on stent during handling
  • Prevention of
  • Drug loss during implantation
  • Overdose from non-uniform drug distribution and
    immediate burst release of total loaded dose

31
DES Release Profiles
100
ENDEAVOR
CYPHER
80
XIENCE
60
Cumulative Drug Release ()
40
20
TAXUS
0
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
Days
32
Normal appearance of DES Polymer
TAXUS
CYPHER
33
Problems with polymers
Polymer damaged by expansion in air at room
temperature
Bare areas
Redundant polymer
34
59 Year Old Female with TAXUS Stent in the LAD
for 130 Days
80 surface endothelialized
Circ 2004109701-705
35
Polymer ThicknessTaxus, Cypher Xience
Coating Thickness (µm)
Cypher
Xience
Taxus
36
New Polymers Coatings
  • Reduced Polymer Volume
  • Bioabsorbable Polymers
  • No Polymer
  • Depot Technology
  • Setagon Nano Technology
  • Surface Modifications
  • Nano-membranous Filters
  • Photolithographic Etching
  • Hydroxyappetite HA

37
Reservoir Technology (Conor Medsystems)
  • The reservoir system provides the ability to load
    drug and control the delivery time and rate
  • A bioresorbable polymer with minimal contact with
    the vessel wall thus, reduced polymer tissue
    interaction and no long term residual drug or
    polymer
  • GENESIS Trial assesses the combination of
    Pimecrolimus (an anti-inflammatory), and
    Paclitaxel (an anti-restenotic)
  • GENESIS is the first dual-drug RCT

38
Polymer Degradation (Porcine Model)
39
Paclitaxel and Pimecrolimus Dual Drug Components
Thrombosis
Extra-Cellular Matrix Production
Inflammation
Proliferation
This drug combination targets two separate
aspects of the restenotic process
Adapted from Nikol, Atherosclerosis 199612317-31
40
TAXUS Element Stent Platform
  • Geometry designed for drug delivery
  • Four stent models
  • Consistent surface-to-artery ratios
  • Apex balloon
  • Bi-component balloon
  • Multilayer
  • Platinum Enriched Stainless Steel
  • Radio-opaque
  • Thin Struts
  • High radial strength

41
TAXUS Odyssey Stent Program
Asymmetric Polymer Coating
Optimized Drug Release
Bioresorbable Polymer
Pro-healing Surface
42
BMJ January 20th 2007
43
Bifurcations
Devax
BSC (Petal)
Medtronic
YMed
44
Intra-coronary stentsAnticoagulant
Antiplatelet therapy
?
Year
45
Thrombus
46
The Platelet, the enemy of the interventionist
47
History of Stent Thrombosis
Stent Thrombosis ()
PS1 1991
STRESS2 1993
Colombo3 1995
ISAR4 1996
STARS5 1997
1. Schatz et al. Circulation.199183148 2.
Fischman et al. N Engl J Med. 1994331496 3.
Colombo et al. Circulation.1995911676 4.
Schömig et al.Circulation.1994,902716 5. Leon
et al. N Engl J Med. 19983391665 6. Joner et
al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 200648193
48
Pooled Analysis of the Safety and Efficacy of
Sirolimus and Paclitaxel eluting Stents
p0.3
Stent Thrombosis ()
1 4 years
30 days 1 year
0-30 days
N Engl J Med 2006356000-000
49
Sirolimus Eluting Stent vs. Bare Metal Stent
n
n
D
Cypher 16 months after deployment
BMS 24 months after deployment
Circulation 20031071340-1341
50
Delayed Endothelialization in DES compared with
BMS
100 80 60 40 20 0
BMS (n25)
DES (n23)
Percentage Endothelialization ()
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20
gt40
Duration Post-Implant (months)
JACC 200648000-000
51
Sirolimus Eluting Stent vs. Bare Metal Stent
BMS
Confluent endothelial cells longitudinally
aligned
Confluent endothelial cells with few adherent
platelets
Cypher
Rare non-confluent endothelial cells with minute
platelet thrombus
Pavement-shaped endothelial cells
52
Endothelial Dysfunction after Sirolimus-Eluting
Stent Implantation
Baseline angiogram 6/12 post SES implant (LAD)
Post acetylcholine (IC) 0.14 µgm/min (2mins)
Post GTN (IC) 250 µgm/min bolus
Circulation 2006113e850-851
53
Biodegradable Stents
and many more
54
Clopidogrel Non-Responsiveness
Distribution of Changes in ADP-induced Platelet
Aggregation
J Am Coll Cardiol 200545246-251
55
Coronary Imaging
56
Drug Eluting Stents vs. Bare Metal Stents
BENEFIT
RISK
?
Reduced Restenosis
Stent Thrombosis
Death, AMI, TLR
57
Lancet 20063681421-1428
58
2.5
59
www.gapminder.org
60
Conclusions
  • The importance of Late Loss in relation to DES
    thrombosis is yet to be defined
  • Polymer based drug delivery is likely to be
    responsible for some MACE
  • Bioerodable polymers may be associated with less
    complications
  • Multiple drug delivery may allow pacification of
    the arterial response to stent implantation
  • Developments in dedicated bifurcation stent
    technology offer some promise
  • Bioerodable stents (the Holy Grail) may be
    clinically relevant within five years
  • Developments in coronary imaging (MR, CT) will
    impact stent design
  • Anti-platelet responsiveness should be further
    investigated
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