Differences in clinical and angiographic outcomes with different drug-eluting stents in Japanese patients with and without diabetes mellitus

2012 
Abstract Background Although percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) is associated with worse clinical outcomes, the efficacy of drug-eluting stents (DES) in Japanese patients and differences in effectiveness between different DES types remain unknown. Methods and subjects Five-hundred and sixty-two consecutive patients (183 with DM, 379 without DM) with 676 lesions were treated with sirolimus-eluting stents (SES, n  = 531; 160 DM group, 371 non-DM group) or paclitaxel-eluting stents (PES, n  = 145; 64 and 81, respectively). We assessed the initial and 8-month follow-up clinical and angiographic outcomes. Results There were no significant differences in clinical and lesion characteristics, although the pre-minimum luminal diameter was smaller in the DM group ( p  = 0.016). The risk of major adverse cardiac events (MACE), defined as cardiac death, non-fatal myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, or recurrent angina pectoris, was higher in the DM group compared with the non-DM group (17.4% vs 9.5%, p  = 0.007). Among diabetic patients, although SES reduced late loss by 0.45 mm ( p p Conclusions Diabetic patients have worse mid-term prognosis than non-diabetic patients undergoing PCI with DES. Although the superiority of SES in terms of late loss or restenosis may not play a clinically meaningful role in the treatment of diabetic patients, this phenomenon was independent of the presence of diabetes.
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