Frontiers in Neurology (Nov 2021)

Safety and Efficacy of Rapamycin-Eluting Vertebral Stents in Patients With Symptomatic Extracranial Vertebral Artery Stenosis

  • Gaoting Ma,
  • Ligang Song,
  • Ning Ma,
  • Raynald,
  • Jie Shuai,
  • Wei Wu,
  • Jieqing Wan,
  • Zhenwei Zhao,
  • Guangjian Li,
  • Sen Yin,
  • Shenghao Ding,
  • Jiang Li,
  • Baixue Jia,
  • Xu Tong,
  • Dapeng Mo,
  • Feng Gao,
  • Xuan Sun,
  • Yiming Deng,
  • Xiaochuan Huo,
  • Wei Li,
  • Kangning Chen,
  • Zhongrong Miao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2021.649426
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Background and Purpose: Drug-eluting stents generally have superior performance to bare metal stents in the treatment of vertebral artery stenosis (VAS). This prospective, multicenter, and single-arm clinical trial was initiated to assess in-stent restenosis (ISR) and midterm outcome after rapamycin-eluting stent placement in patients with symptomatic extracranial VAS.Methods: The subjects underwent angiographic follow-up at 6 months and final clinical follow-up at 12 months. The primary efficacy endpoint was ISR at 6 months. Secondary endpoints included technical success, target lesion-related transient ischemic attack (TIA), stroke, or death, and all-cause TIA, stroke, or death during the 12-month follow-up period.Results: A total of 104 stents were implanted in the 101 patients and 83 patients (82.2%) completed angiographic follow-up at 6 months. The technical success rate was 86.1% (87/101); mean in-stent stenosis rate was 25.1 ± 17.1% and ISR rate was 5.9% (95% CI: 0.8–10.9%). All the patients with ISR were completely asymptomatic and no stent fractures were observed during angiographic follow-up. At the 12-month clinical follow-up, target lesion-related TIA, stroke, or death had occurred in two (2.0%) patients and all-cause TIA, stroke, or death had occurred in six (6.1%) patients.Conclusion: The placement of rapamycin-eluting stents in patients with symptomatic extracranial VAS yields favorable ISR results and showed a trend of favorable safety outcomes including low rates of perioperative complications and late stroke. However, further study is needed to establish the long-term clinical benefits of this stent in the treatment of VA disease.

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