Drug-eluting stent | |
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ICD-9-CM | 00.55 |
MeSH | D054855 |
A drug-eluting stent (DES) is a thin tube that is used to treat narrowed arteries in medical procedures. It releases drugs to prevent the growth of scar tissue and reduce the risk of stent restenosis, which is the narrowing of the stented area of an artery after treatment. A drug-eluting stent is different from other types of stents because it has a coating that delivers medication directly to the arterial wall. A DES is often made of metal alloys and can be inserted into blocked or narrowed arteries through a catheter placed in a peripheral artery, such as in the arm or leg. DES is fully integrated with a catheter delivery system and is viewed as one integrated medical device.[1][2][3]
DES medical devices are commonly used in the treatment of coronary artery disease (CAD), by opening narrowed arteries caused by atherosclerosis. Such stents are also commonly used to treat peripheral artery disease and at the site of other stenotic or occlusive lesions caused by a number of disease states Over the last three decades, coronary stenting has matured into a primary minimally invasive treatment tool in managing CAD.[4]
Coronary artery stenting is inherently tied to percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) procedures. PCI is a minimally invasive procedure performed via a catheter (not by open-chest surgery), it is the medical procedure used to place a DES in narrowed coronary arteries. PCI procedures are performed by an interventional cardiologist using fluoroscopic imaging techniques to see the location of the required DES placement. PCI uses larger peripheral arteries in the arms or the legs to thread a catheter/DES device through the arterial system and place the DES in the narrowed coronary artery or arteries. Multiple stents are often used depending on the degree of blockage and the number of diseased coronary arteries that are being treated. As of 2023, more than 90 percent of stents used in PCI procedures were DES.[5]
Drug-eluting stents in current use were approved by the FDA after clinical trials demonstrated they were superior to prior non-drug eluting or bare-metal stents.[6] There is significant clinical data relating to the use and outcomes of DES, general stents, PCI and coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery.[7] As of 2023, DES devices are a primary choice of interventional cardiologists and the use of bare metal stent (BMS) systems is less common.[8] DES products hold an advantage over BMS offerings. Based on long-term outcomes, the quality of life for individuals with cardiac conditions has been measurably enhanced through the use of DES technologies and PCI procedures.[9][10]
Uses
Drug-eluting stents are used in the treatment of various medical conditions usually at the site of stenotic or occlusive arterial lesions, but one of the primary medical uses is in the treatment of coronary artery disease. Stents are inserted into narrowed coronary arteries, primarily caused by atherosclerosis. Stents are then expanded to open up the narrowed artery. Such stents gradually release a drug compound that suppresses cellular growth, into the newly stented area, thereby reducing the potential for blockage within the stent area itself.[11] Such blockage is termed in-stent restenosis (ISR). This in-stent blockage is most often caused by excessive cell proliferation or thrombi (blood clots). Anticoagulation therapy (blood thinners), has become a standard treatment following the placement of DES. This therapy significantly reduces the occurrence of adverse events post-stenting.[12][5][13]
Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), a minimally invasive procedure, involves the placement of a drug-eluting stent (DES) in a coronary artery. This procedure, previously known as angioplasty with a stent, is considered non-surgical as it is performed through a small puncture in a peripheral artery, avoiding the need to open the chest wall. While bleeding from the puncture site was once a concern, advancements in PCI practices have mitigated this issue through the use of pressure bands and arterial closure systems. Modern DES/PCI procedures are generally painless, although some mild discomfort may be experienced.[14][15][16]
Clinical indications
Coronary arteries providing blood to the heart. The blood vessels originate from the aorta and surround the heart. | |
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Identifiers | |
MeSH | D054855 |
Anatomical terminology |
PCI and stent placement are considered when someone shows signs of reduced blood flow in the arteries that supply the heart or when tests, such as different types of coronary artery imaging, show a blockage in those arteries.[17][18]
Symptoms can include:
- severe, pressure-like chest pain unrelieved by rest;
- shortness of breath, fatigue, lightheadedness;
- palpitations;
- atypical symptoms: nausea, vomiting, indigestion, confusion, back pain.[19]
In a medical setting, it's not very useful for doctors to rely solely on what people say about where their pain comes from or how it feels. This is because the way people describe chest pain caused by reduced blood flow to the heart can vary greatly and may not match what is typically taught in medical education or described in books and articles.[20][21]
Contraindications
DES is not recommended in some cases as it may do more harm than good. DES is not suitable:
- when individuals have a bleeding tendency;[22]
- when a coronary artery has no clear and identifiable narrowing;[23]
- when only one diseased coronary artery supplies oxygenated blood to the heart muscle. During stent placement, there is a short period of blood flow blockage by the balloon inflation. This blockage time is often longer than twenty seconds to allow the DES to expand and embed into the arterial wall. In this case, this time may be too long and cause serious events due to lack of blood to the heart muscle.[24]
Bleeding disorders make DES unsuitable because of the need for anticoagulation drugs (blood thinners) during the procedure and in post-stenting aftercare. Other factors that could rule out the use of stents include a history of in-stent blockage, bleeding problems, complex or unsuitable coronary anatomy, or a short life expectancy due to other serious medical conditions.[25]
Risks and complications
Risks from the procedure
Like all medical procedures, stent placement carries some risks. Risks include bleeding, allergic reactions to the contrast agents used to visualize the coronary arteries, and myocardial infarction. With percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), the requirement for emergency coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery has decreased as better practices have been introduced. In some situations, coronary stenting is permitted in hospitals without cardiac surgery facilities.[26] This remains controversial in the United States because of the rare but unpredictable risk of coronary artery perforation.[27]
Stent thrombosis risks
A complication of coronary stenting is stent thrombosis (blood clots). This occurs when a new clot forms within the stent and occludes blood flow, causing a heart attack.[28][29][30]
In-stent restenosis risks (ISR)
DES were designed to specifically combat issues of restenosis that occurred with older bare-metal stents (BMS). Though less frequent with drug-eluting stents, restenosis can still occur.[31]
Since the advent of DES technology, the incidence of ISR has significantly decreased.[32][33]
Usage outside the scope of typical regulatory approval
DES have been shown to be superior to BMS in reducing short-term complications of stenting in saphenous vein grafts.[34] However, the use of these stents in bypass grafts was not their originally intended use nor within the scope of originally regulatory approval (US FDA, European Medicines Agency, etc.). The practice of using a medical device or drug in a way not specified in the original or current approved labeling is often referred to as "off-label" use.[35]
In regions were cardiac stenting has become commonplace, think tanks and advocacy groups express concern about the overzealous use of stents,[36] because patients who received stents for unapproved reasons[37][38] often have worse outcomes compared to patients who received stents for approved uses.[39][40][41]
Clinical procedure
DES placement
People who receive a coronary stent have different needs depending on their medical condition. Some patients are actually having a heart attack and need immediate life-saving emergency care. Other patients are at high risk of having a heart attack in the very near future. For people from each of these groups, PCI procedures may vary slightly, with particular modifications as to how they are sedated, pain management, and broader intensive care issues such as breathing support.[42]
Many people who are not in critical care situations are usually fully awake during the PCI procedure and DES placement, but they receive local anesthetic at the site of catheter entry, to ensure there is no pain. Different sedation and pain management practices are used by different medical institutions and practitioners, but patient comfort is always a primary consideration.[43]
The catheter/stent system is inserted into the body by piercing a peripheral artery (an artery in the arm or leg) and moved through the arterial system to deliver the DES into the blocked coronary artery. The stent is then expanded to widen (open) blocked or narrowed coronary arteries (narrowed by plaque buildup), caused by a condition called atherosclerosis. Peripheral arterial access is usually through the femoral (upper leg) or the radial artery (arm/wrist) and less often done through the brachial or ulnar artery (wrist/arm).[44][45] In the past, controlling bleeding at the point of arterial access after the procedure was a problem. Modern arterial pressure bands and arterial closure systems now exist, which have helped control bleeding after the procedure, but it is still a concern.[46][47][48]
Modern catheter/stent systems are integrated medical devices, made of a guidewire, catheter, balloon, and stent. The stent tube mesh is initially collapsed onto the balloon of the device, and it is small enough to be passed through relatively narrow peripheral arteries. When in position, the balloon is inflated by introducing physiological saline, and this pushes the overlaying stent firmly into the diseased artery wall, inflation time and pressure are recorded during this placement procedure (consider an umbrella example, first closed and then opened). After placement, the balloon is deflated, and the device is removed from the body, leaving the expanded stent in place and opening up the artery.[49][50]
The interventional cardiologist decides how to treat the blockage in the best way during the PCI/DES placement, based on real-time data. The cardiologist uses imaging data provided by both intravascular ultrasound (IVUS), and fluoroscopic imaging (combined with a radiopaque dye). During the procedure, the information obtained from these two sources enables the cardiologist to track the path of the catheter-DES device as it moves through the arterial blood vessels. This information also helps determine both the location and characteristics of any plaque causing narrowing in the arteries. Data from these two techniques is used to correctly position the stent and to obtain detailed information relating to the coronary arterial anatomy. Given that this anatomy varies greatly among individuals, having this information becomes crucial for effective treatment. The obtained data is recorded on video and may be used in cases when further treatment is needed.[51][52][53]
Post-stenting recovery and rehabilitation
For many people the stenting procedure does not require staying in the hospital for any extended time period, most people leave the hospital the same day. Much of the time immediately after the stenting is spent in a recovery area to make sure the access site is not bleeding and to ensure vital signs are stable.[54]
In most hospital settings, the interventional cardiologist who performed the procedure will speak directly with the patient/family and give them information about how things went, and follow-up instructions. The nursing staff will keep an eye on the person's condition and use tools like ECG to monitor their heart. To prevent a blood clot from forming in the stent, medications are given right after the procedure. One common medication is plavix, which is a potent blood thinner that comes as a pill. Other medicines that thin the blood are also used, and it's typical to combine aspirin with plavix.[55] For people who have had a heart attack, the length of hospitalization is dependent on the degree of heart muscle damage caused by the event.[56]
A catheter with DES is a medical device, so people who receive it are given a medical device card. This card has information on the implanted DES and a medical device serial number. This information is important for future medical procedures, because it helps the doctors to know what type of device is in the person's body. Some arterial closure systems, which are devices that help to seal the access site after the procedure, are also medical devices and have their own informational cards.[57]
The access site is the place where the catheter enters the artery in the arm or leg. There is usually soreness and bruising at this site. This bruising and soreness usually get better after a week or so. People are advised to rest for a week or two and not to lift heavy things. This is mainly to make sure the access site heals well. It is normal to have follow-up appointments with a cardiologist or a primary care provider/general practitioner within a week or two of the procedure.[58][59]
People who get a coronary stent usually have more check-ups every three to six months for the first year, but this can vary. They usually do not need to have another coronary angiography, which is a test that uses a special dye and X-rays to see the arteries of the heart. If the doctors suspect that the heart disease is getting worse, they can prescribe a stress test, which is a test that measures how the heart works during physical activity. People who have symptoms or show signs of reduced blood flow to the heart in a stress test may need to have a diagnostic cardiac re-catheterization.[60]
After PCI-stenting procedures, physical examinations are important. People who have a high risk of complications or more complex coronary problems may need to have angiography. This may be the case even if the results of non-invasive stress tests, which are tests that measure how the heart works during physical activity, appear normal.[61]
Cardiac rehabilitation activities depend on many factors, but mainly on how much the heart muscle was damaged before the PCI/DES procedure. Many people who have this procedure have not had a heart attack, and their hearts may be fine. Others may have had a heart attack and their hearts may have trouble pumping oxygen-rich blood to the body. Rehabilitation activities are tailored to each person's needs.[62]
Efficacy
Benefits
DES are an improvement over older BMS devices as they reduce the chances of in-stent blockages. This reduces the incidence of serious post-stenting events such as, angina occurrence or recurrence, heart attacks, and death. They also reduce the likelihood of requiring another PCI procedure to open a blockage caused by the actual stent.[63]
The major benefit of drug-eluting stents (DES) when compared to bare-metal stents (BMS) is the prevention of in-stent restenosis (ISR). Restenosis is a gradual re-narrowing of the stented segment that occurs most commonly between 3–12 months after stent placement.[64] High rates of restenosis associated with BMS prompted the development of DES, which resulted in a reduction of ISR incidence to around 5-10%.[65] Continued development of newer generation DES have resulted in the near-elimination of BMS from clinical practice.[66]
Procedure outcomes
A key benefit of DES usage compared to BMS is a lower incidence of repeat revascularization procedures (re-stenting, invasive bypass surgeries etc.). Revascularization procedures are treatments that restore blood flow to parts of your heart that are not getting enough blood, a problem called ischemia. This can happen because of plaque buildup in the arteries of the heart, which can narrow or block them.[67] Rates of repeat revascularizations and stent thrombosis (blood clots) are significantly lower in those who received DES compared to BMS.[65]
Newer generations of DES devices have substantially improved safety outcomes, specifically regarding stent thrombosis, recurrent myocardial infarctions, and death.[67]
Design considerations
Summary
In designing a DES, the following factors are important issues:
- How the device functions as a structural scaffold keeping an artery open by physical means.
- Materials used for the stent fabrication, focusing on biocompatibility, extended mechanical performance in a biological environment such as human blood and located in an area that is in constant motion as the heart beats, and with some focus on the suitability for future patient imaging using MRI technologies, due to the high magnetic fields used in such imaging.[68]
- The drug-delivery features of the device.
- The drug that was chosen for the device, suitability in inhibiting restenosis, pharmacokinetics etc.
- DES products are integrated medical devices. Stents are part of a sophisticated PCI delivery system, and other components, such as the catheter design, are important considerations.
Newer stenting technologies that focus on the absorption of the stent over a period of time add further complexity to design considerations.[69][70][71]
Drugs commonly utilized in DES are everolimus, sirolimus, paclitaxel and biolimus. These drugs are also used for other purposes, that involve moderating the immune system or treating cancer. They work by inhibiting cell growth. In DES, they are used in very small amounts and for a short time, and only in the area where the stent is placed.[72]
Considerations for regulatory submission, assessment and approval
There are a number of very detailed medical device design considerations for DES products, these considerations are included in submissions for approval to regulatory authorities such as the US FDA:[71]
- Aspects of the design that relate to a DES as structural devices that keep an artery open by purely physical means.
- Choice of the construction materials, with a particular focus on biocompatibility, longevity in the human body, mechanical stress resistance and the suitability of the chosen material for future patient imaging using MRI technologies, due to the high magnetic fields used in such imaging.[68]
- Choice of a mechanism of the drug release: how long the drug lasts, and how to make the stent release the drug in a manner that inhibits in-stent restenosis.
- Choice of chemical agent the stent will deliver.
- Choice of the stent delivery technology as an integrated system: catheter design, placement visualization and assessment of the success of artery reperfusion (is the treated artery actually supplying cardiac muscle with sufficient oxygenated blood).
- Quality assurance considerations such as those defined in ISO 13485.
- Quality control considerations: what testing can be performed on each manufactured unit prior to release for sale to demonstrate its usage suitability.[69][70][73]
- Traceability issues, can a single stent be traced from the manufacturer to the patient it was implanted in. In the case of a recall of a product it is critical to be able to trace the stent from design, manufacture, and distribution to the patient.
The drug choice is a critical design element and determining its true effectiveness in inhibiting neointimal growth due to the proliferation of smooth muscle cells that would cause restenosis can be a design challenge. Much of the neointimal hyperplasia seems to be caused by inflammation.[73]
Vascular stents are classified by the US as class III medical devices,[74] meaning that they pose the highest risk to patients and are subject to both general and premarket approval, which requires clinical trials and scientific evidence of safety and effectiveness, as well as rigorous mechanical testing.[75] During the mechanical testing process, universal testing machines induce bending, stretching, twisting, and putting pressure on vascular stents from various angles.[74]
The specific properties of each type of stent and its intended use depend on the results of testing, and vice versa: different types of stents may need different or additional tests based on where they will be placed in the body and what they will be used for. Some of these additional tests might include checking how well the stent can withstand being crushed or bent out of shape, its resistance to getting kinks in it, whether it resists corrosion or damage over time, as well as making sure any coatings on the device remain intact.[74]
Alternatives to stenting procedures
Pharmacological therapy for coronary artery disease may be indicated instead of or in addition to invasive treatment. For those requiring percutaneous coronary intervention or surgery, medical therapy should be viewed as complementary to revascularization procedures, rather than an opposing strategy. Coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery is an alternative to percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with drug-eluting stents (DES) for patients with ischemic left ventricular systolic dysfunction (LVSD). CABG is associated with lower risks of all-cause mortality, repeat revascularization, and myocardial infarction compared to PCI. However, there is no significant difference between the two procedures in terms of cardiovascular mortality, stroke, major adverse cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events, and ventricular tachycardia.[76]
History
The first procedure to treat blocked coronary arteries was coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG), wherein a section of vein or artery from elsewhere in the body is used to bypass the diseased segment of the coronary artery. In 1977, Andreas Grüntzig introduced percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA), also called balloon angioplasty, in which a catheter was introduced through a peripheral artery and a balloon expanded to dilate the narrowed segment of the artery.[77]
As equipment and techniques improved, the use of PTCA rapidly increased, and by the mid-1980s, PTCA and CABG were being performed at equivalent rates.[78] Balloon angioplasty was generally effective and safe, but restenosis was frequent, occurring in about 30–40% of cases, usually within the first year after dilation. In about 3% of balloon angioplasty cases, failure of the dilation and acute or threatened closure of the coronary artery (often because of dissection) prompted emergency CABGs.[78]
Charles Theodore Dotter and Melvin Judkins had proposed using prosthetic devices inside arteries in the leg to maintain blood flow after dilation as early as 1964.[79] In 1986, Puel and Sigwart implanted the first coronary stent in a human patient.[80] Several trials in the 1990s showed the superiority of stent placement over balloon angioplasty. Restenosis was reduced because the stent acted as a scaffold to hold open the dilated segment of the artery. Acute closure of the coronary artery (and the requirement for emergency CABG) was reduced, because the stent repaired dissections of the arterial wall. By 1999, stents were used in 84% of percutaneous coronary interventions (i.e., those done via a catheter, and not by open-chest surgery).[80]
Early difficulties with coronary stents included a risk of early thrombosis (clotting) resulting in occlusion of the stent.[78] Coating stainless steel stents with other substances such as platinum or gold did not eliminate this problem.[80] High-pressure balloon expansion of the stent to ensure its full apposition to the arterial wall, combined with drug therapy using aspirin and another inhibitor of platelet aggregation (usually ticlopidine or clopidogrel) nearly eliminated this risk of early stent thrombosis.[78][80]
Though it occurred less frequently than with balloon angioplasty or other techniques, stents nonetheless remained vulnerable to restenosis, caused almost exclusively by neointimal tissue growth (tissue formation in the inner 'tube' structure of the artery). To address this issue, developers of drug-eluting stents used the devices themselves as a tool for delivering medication directly to the arterial wall. While initial efforts were unsuccessful, the release (elution) of drugs with certain specific physicochemical properties from the stent was shown in 2001 to achieve high concentrations of the drug locally, directly at the target lesion, with minimal systemic side effects.[81] As currently used in clinical practice, "drug-eluting" stents refers to metal stents that elute a drug designed to limit the growth of neointimal scar tissue, thus reducing the likelihood of stent restenosis.[82]
The first successful trials were of sirolimus-eluting stents. A clinical trial in 2002 led to the approval of the sirolimus-eluting Cypher stent in Europe in 2002. After a larger pivotal trial (one designed for the purpose of achieving FDA approval), published in 2003, the device received FDA approval and was released in the U.S. in 2003.[80] Soon thereafter, a series of trials of paclitaxel-eluting stents led to FDA approval of the Taxus stent in 2004.[83] Both sirolimus and paclitaxel are natural products, making the drug-eluting stents a specific kind of application totally dominated by drugs directly derived from natural sources.[84]
The first resorbable stent tested in humans was developed by the Igaki Medical Planning Company in Japan and was constructed from poly-L-lactic acid (a form of polylactic acid); they published their initial results in 2000.[85] The German company Biotronik developed a magnesium absorbable stent and published clinical results in 2007.[85]
The first company to bring a bioresorbable stent to market was Abbott Vascular which received European marketing approval in September 2012; the second was Elixir which received its CE mark in May 2013.[86][87] In 2017, Abbott pulled its bioabsorbable stent, Absorb, from the European market after negative press regarding the device.[88] Boston Scientific also announced termination of its Renuvia bioresorbable coronary stent program as studies showed higher risk of serious adverse events.[89]
Due to challenges in developing resorbable stents, many manufacturers have focused efforts on targeting or reducing drug release through bioabsorbable-polymer coatings. Boston Scientific's Synergy bioabsorbable polymer stent has been shown potential to reduce the length of dual antiplatelet therapy post-implantation.[90] MicroPort's Firehawk target eluting stent has been shown to be non-inferior to traditional drug-eluting stents while using one-third of the amount of equivalent drug.[91]
The first DES products available for treating patients were stainless steel alloys composed of iron, nickel, and chromium and were based on existing bare metal stents.[73] These stents were hard to visualize with medical imaging, posed a risk of causing allergic responses, and were difficult to deliver. Subsequent new alloys were used, namely cobalt-chrome and platinum chrome, with improved performance. Bioresorbable stents have been developed in which the stent itself dissolves over time.[92] Materials explored for use include magnesium, polylactic acid, polycarbonate polymers, and salicylic acid polymers.[85] Resorbable stents have held the promise of providing an acute treatment that would eventually allow the vessel to function normally, without leaving a permanent device behind.[93]
For the coating of DES, one to three or more layers of polymer can be used: a base layer for adhesion, a main layer that holds and elutes (releases) the drug into the arterial wall by contact transfer, and sometimes a top coat to slow down the release of the drug and extend its effect. The first few drug-eluting stents to be licensed used durable coatings. The first generation of coatings appears to have caused immunological reactions at times, and some possibly led to thrombosis. This has driven experimentation and the development of new coating approaches.[86]
Research directions
A research direction for a DES is to improve the material from which a device is made. The first-generation DES were made of stainless steel, while contemporary DES mainly consist of different kinds of alloys such as cobalt chromium and platinum chromium1. In the current generation DES, thinner struts are employed than in the first-generation DES with preserved radial strength and radio-opacity. The lower strut thickness is believed to be associated with better stent-related outcomes including target lesion revascularization, myocardial infarction, and stent thrombosis.[94]
Another area of research for DES focuses on polymers. The current generation DES includes both durable polymer-coated stents and biodegradable polymer-coated stents. It has been reported that the presence of a durable polymer in the body over a long period can lead to chronic inflammation and neoatherosclerosis. To address this potential limitation, researchers have developed biodegradable polymer DES as an alternative solution.[94][95][96]
Scientists are also studying different drugs that could be used in DES to prevent restenosis. These drugs, which have immunosuppressive and anti-cancer properties, aim to inhibit the growth of smooth muscle cells. Additionally, there is a specific type of stent that features an extra layer of anti-CD4 antibodies on its struts. This additional layer is positioned on top of the polymer coating and aims to capture circulating endothelial progenitor cells. The goal behind this design is to promote improved healing of the blood vessel lining, known as the endothelium.[94][5]
A potential research focus for DES is the application of a polymer-free DES in clinical practice: moving away from polymer-based DES and instead using either a polymer-free DES or a drug-coated coronary stent. In the case of the polymer-free DES, it utilizes an abluminal coating of probucol to control the release of sirolimus. On the other hand, the drug-coated coronary stent has a micro-structured abluminal surface that allows for direct application of an anti-restenotic drug.[94][5]
Society and culture
Brand names and manufacturers
As of 2023 there are over 20 different types of drug-eluting stents available, with differences in features and characteristics.[97]
Economics
The economic evaluation of DES has been a topic of extensive research.[98] In 2007, the overall incremental cost-effectiveness ratio in Europe was €98,827 per quality-adjusted life-years gained. Avoiding one revascularization with DES would cost €4,794, when revascularization with BMS costs €3,2606.[99]
Controversies
There were controversies related to the use of DES. In 2012, a meta-analysis of clinical trial data[100] showed no benefit of the use of DES for people with stable coronary artery compared to treatment with drugs, yet, The New York Times interviewed David Brown, an author of the analysis, who said that more than half of patients with stable coronary artery disease were implanted with stents without even trying drug treatment and that he believed this happened because hospitals and doctors wanted to make more money.[101]
The interview sparked a debate among cardiologists, researchers, and patients about the appropriateness and effectiveness of DES for stable coronary artery disease: some agreed with the study's findings and questioned the overuse of stents,[102][103][104] while others criticized the study's methods and limitations and defended the benefits of stents, arguing that that the interviewee's statement was "outrageous and defamatory" and that he was "insulting the integrity of the entire profession.[105][106][107]
In 2013 the Times of India reported that DES were widely overused and that Indian distributors used profits from high markups on DES to bribe doctors to use them.[108][109]
In 2014 an investigation by the Maharashtra Food and Drug Administration found that high markups and bribery related to DES was still widespread.[110]
Intellectual property disputes
There have been several patent disputes related to drug-eluting stents. In one of them, Boston Scientific was found guilty of infringing upon a patent that was awarded to the University of Texas system in 2003 and ultimately licensed to TissueGen.[111][112] The patent concerns technology that TissueGen founder Kevin Nelson, Ph.D., developed while a faculty member at UT Arlington, designed to deliver drugs through an extruded fiber in an implanted vascular stent. Boston Scientific was therefore ordered to pay $42 million in lost royalties to TissueGen and the University of Texas.[111] The intellectual property case between Boston Scientific and TissueGen has finally reached a verdict after half a decade.[111]
Class action lawsuits
There have been class action lawsuits related to drug-eluting stents. In 2014, the former owners of St. Joseph Medical Center agreed to pay a $37 million class action lawsuit settlement with hundreds of patients who were given unnecessary coronary stents. Lawyers say Dr. Mark Midei lied to patients about how blocked their arteries were to justify implanting a dangerous coronary heart stent. Cordis Corporation, a subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson, is facing lawsuits from people who were injured by the Cypher Stent, a stainless-steel drug-eluting coronary stent that is coated in sirolimus. In 2003, the FDA issued a Safety Warning after receiving 290 reports of blood clots, and at least 60 deaths were reported.[113][114]
See also
- bioresorbable stent – medical stent that dissolves or is absorbed by the body;
- coronary stent – medical stent implanted into coronary arteries;
- drug-eluting implant – implant for delivering a drug.
References
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- ↑ "Onyx Frontier DES - Coronary Stents". Medtronic. Retrieved 23 November 2023.
- ↑ "Promus PREMIER™ Drug-Eluting Coronary Stent System". www.bostonscientific.com. Retrieved 23 November 2023.
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8 What is stent thrombosis? Stent thrombosis occurs when there is complete occlusion of the artery due to the formation of a thrombus in the stent. ... Stent thrombosis is a potentially catastrophic event and often presents as STEMI, requiring emergency revascularization. Stent thrombosis carries a mortality rate of 20% to 45%.
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