Monday, November 8, 2004
Coronary Stents Do Not Improve Long-Term Survival
By Richard Merritt, Duke Medical Center News
DURHAM, N.C. – While the placement of stents in newly reopened
coronary arteries has been shown to reduce the need for repeat angioplasty
procedures, researchers from the Duke Clinical Research Institute
have found that stents have no impact on mortality over the long
term.
In the largest such analysis of its kind, the Duke researchers
said their findings have important economic and clinical implications
for physicians who are deciding whether their heart patients should
receive coronary artery bypass surgery, or less-invasive angioplasty,
which includes the placement of a stent.
Stents, which were introduced in the U.S. in 1994, are tiny mesh
tubes that are inserted at the site of a blockage in a coronary
artery that has been opened during balloon angioplasty. The procedure
seeks to prevent the artery from becoming blocked again, a process
known as restenosis. These blockages, caused by atherosclerotic
plaque, can starve the heart of oxygen-rich blood and lead to a
heart attack.

David Kandzari, MD |
Duke cardiologist David Kandzari, M.D., who presented the results
of the Duke analysis Nov.7, 2004, at the American Heart Association's
annual scientific sessions in New Orleans, said the findings on mortality
rates should also be expected to hold true for the latest generation
of drug-eluting stents. These stents, which were introduced in 2003,
are coated with a drug that keeps blood clots from forming inside
them.
"We have found in our long-term analysis that stents do provide
a significant early and sustained reduction in the need for subsequent
procedures to re-open the treated artery," Kandzari said. "However,
we also found that stents do not have any influence on long-term
survival.
"Since earlier studies have shown that new drug-eluting stents
can lessen the incidence of restenosis, we would expect the need
for repeat procedures to decline even more as these stents become
more widely used," Kandzari continued. "While earlier
trials of drug-eluting stents have demonstrated a significant reduction
in repeat procedures, they still have shown no differences in mortality
compared with more conventional stents."
Specifically, the researchers found that over the average seven-year
follow-up period of their study, 19 percent of patients who received
a stent needed another revascularization procedure in the treated
artery, compared to 27 percent for those who did not receive a stent.
However, the long-term mortality rate for those receiving a stent
was 19.9 percent vs. 20.4 percent for those who did not, a disparity
which did not statistically differ.
For their analysis, the researchers consulted the Duke Database
for Cardiovascular Disease, which keeps detailed clinical data on
all heart patients receiving treatment at Duke. The researchers
identified 1,288 matched pairs of patients who underwent either
balloon angioplasty alone or stenting -- yet all had a similar likelihood
of receiving a stent based on their clinical and demographic characteristics.
The patients, 63 percent of whom were male and who had an average
age of 59 years, were treated between 1994 and 2002. One in four
was diabetic, and one in four had suffered a previous heart attack.
"This study, based as it is on a real-world population of
patients, tells us that stents do not save lives, though they do
have a profound effect on avoiding repeat procedures," Kandzari
said. "We've know that restenosis has never been scientifically
associated with increased mortality, but it has been associated
with an increased need for revascularization and with a reduction
in symptoms such as chest pain."
Given these findings, Kandzari said physicians treating their heart
patients should not automatically assume that placing a stent, whether
the original bare-metal type or the newer drug-eluting version,
will be the end of treatment.
"Many physicians will successfully place a stent and think
that's it," Kandzari continued. "The bigger issue is that
many of these physicians should also then be prescribing drugs that
have a clearly demonstrated beneficial effect on long-term mortality."
Kandzari plans to follow up this study with a similar analysis
of the effects of the drug-eluting stents on mortality. Also, the
team plans to measure any differences in the quality of life of
these patients.
"As we take on more and more difficult and complicated cases
in the catheterization lab, we should take a step back to see if
there are certain instances when bypass surgery may be the best
option," Kandzari said. "There is the temptation out there
to just place stents in all patients, no matter what. In some prior
trials, the difference in outcome between angioplasty and surgery
patients was driven by restenosis, not by differences in mortality.
"However, in the era of conventional stenting, we knew that
there we still some instances in which bypass surgery might provide
an incremental survival benefit," Kandzari said. "Before
routinely placing drug-eluting stents in similar patients, these
findings underscore the need for systematic evaluation of drug-eluting
stents in these types of patients."
Patients with left main coronary artery disease, for example, appear
to fare better with bypass surgery than with angioplasty and stents.
Previous study has also suggested this may be true for diabetic
heart patients with extensive disease, who appear to benefit the
most from bypass surgery, Kandzari said.
"Appropriately, a trial is forthcoming to compare treatment
with drug-eluting stents with bypass surgery in diabetic patients,"
he said.
The study was supported by the Cordis Corp., Miami Lakes, Fla.,
which develops stents. Kandzari has no financial interest in Cordis.
Other members of the Duke team were Robert Tuttle, M.D., James
Zidar, M.D., and James Jollis, M.D.
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