Clinical Medicine Insights: Cardiology (Jun 2019)

One-Year Follow-Up Results From the Observational, Multicenter, Prospective, and Controlled Registry: The WALTZ All-Comers Study

  • Alfredo E Rodriguez,
  • Miguel Larribau,
  • Carlos Fernandez-Pereira,
  • Jorge Iravedra,
  • Omar Santaera,
  • Carlos Haiek,
  • Juan Lloberas,
  • Mario Montoya,
  • Elias Sisu,
  • Marcelo Menendez,
  • Hernan Pavlovsky,
  • Alfredo M Rodriguez-Granillo,
  • Juan Mieres,
  • Graciela Romero,
  • Zheng Ming,
  • William Pan,
  • David Antoniucci

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/1179546819854059
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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The aim of this study was to evaluate 1-year follow-up results in an all “comers” population treated with a new cobalt chromium bare-metal stent (BMS) design. Since August 2016 to March 2017, 201 (9.7% of screening population) consecutive patients undergoing coronary stent implantation in 11 centers in Argentina were prospectively included in our registry. The inclusion criteria were multiple-vessel disease and/or unprotected left main disease, acute coronary syndromes (ACS) with at least one severe (⩾70%) stenosis in any of major epicardial vessel. In-stent restenosis, protected left main stenosis, or impossibility to receive dual-antiplatelet therapy was an exclusion criterion. Major adverse cardiac events (MACE) were the primary endpoint and included cardiac death, myocardial infarction (MI), and target lesion revascularization (TLR); also, all components of the primary endpoint were separately analyzed. Completeness of revascularization was analyzed as post hoc data using residual SYNTAX or ERACI risk scores. Demographic characteristics showed that 6.5% of patients were very elderly, 22.5% have diabetes, 47% have multiple-vessel disease, 67% have ACS, and 32% have ST elevation MI. At a mean of 376 ± 18.1 days of follow-up, MACE was observed in 10.4% of patients: death + MI + cardiovascular accident (CVA) in 3% (6 of 201) and cardiac death + MI + CVA in 1.5% (3 of 201). Residual ERACI score ⩽5 was associated with 98% of event-free survival ( P < .04). In conclusion, this prospective, multicenter, and observational all-comers registry with this novel BMS design showed a low incidence of adverse events at 1 year mainly due to coronary restenosis.