Sidebranch occlusion after coronary stenting with or without balloon predilation: direct versus conventional stenting.

2002 
Direct stenting (DS) is a novel approach in percutaneous treatment of coronary artery lesions. Several studies confirmed the safety and feasibility of the procedure with success rates greater than 90%. However, the data regarding the incidence of sidebranch occlusion (SBO) after DS are scarce. The purpose of this study was to evaluate SBO (> 1 mm) after DS and compare it to conventional stenting (CS) with balloon predilation. The study population consisted of 151 patients (88 underwent DS, 63 underwent CS) with 185 sidebranches jailed by the stent (110 in DS group, 75 in CS group). SBO was observed in 20 out of 110 patients in the DS group (18.2%) and 18 out of 75 patients in the CS group (24%). Although the incidence of SBO was higher in the CS group compared to the DS group (24% vs. 18.2%, respectively), these values did not reach statistical significance (p > 0.05). Most of the SBOs were observed in cases with type D sidebranch morphology (p < 0.001) and in cases with sidebranch ostial diameter stenosis ≥ 50% (p = 0.019). None of the other clinical and angiographic variables predicted the SBO. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report comparing incidence of SBO between two different PCI methods (CS vs DS). Randomized studies with larger patient populations should be conducted to compare this approach with conventional stenting.
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