Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jul 2024)

Drug-Eluting Balloons and Drug-Eluting Stents in Diabetic Patients Undergoing Percutaneous Coronary Intervention Due to Restenosis—DM-Dragon Registry

  • Piotr Niezgoda,
  • Michał Kasprzak,
  • Jacek Kubica,
  • Łukasz Kuźma,
  • Rafał Januszek,
  • Sylwia Iwańczyk,
  • Brunon Tomasiewicz,
  • Jacek Bil,
  • Mariusz Kowalewski,
  • Miłosz Jaguszewski,
  • Maciej Wybraniec,
  • Krzysztof Reczuch,
  • Sławomir Dobrzycki,
  • Stanisław Bartuś,
  • Maciej Lesiak,
  • Mariusz Gąsior,
  • Rafał Wolny,
  • Adam Witkowski,
  • Robert Gil,
  • Bernardo Cortese,
  • Fabrizio D’Ascenzo,
  • Wojciech Wojakowski,
  • Wojciech Wańha

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13154464
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 15
p. 4464

Abstract

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Background: The rate of in-stent restenosis (ISR) is decreasing; however, it is still a challenge for contemporary invasive cardiologists. Therapeutic methods, including drug-eluting balloons (DEBs), intravascular lithotripsy, excimer laser coronary atherectomy, and imaging-guided percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with drug-eluting stents (DES), have been implemented. Patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) are burdened with a higher risk of ISR than the general population. Aims: DM-Dragon is aimed at evaluating the clinical outcomes of ISR treatment with DEBs vs. DES, focusing on patients with co-existing diabetes mellitus. Methods: The DM-Dragon registry is a retrospective study comprising data from nine high-volume PCI centers in Poland. A total of 1117 patients, of whom 473 individuals had DM and were treated with PCI due to ISR, were included. After propensity-score matching (PSM), 198 pairs were created for further analysis. The primary outcome of the study was target lesion revascularization (TLR). Results: In DM patients after PSM, TLR occurred in 21 (10.61%) vs. 20 (10.1%) in non-diabetic patients, p = 0.8690. Rates of target vessel revascularization (TVR), target vessel myocardial infarction, device-oriented composite endpoint (DOCE), and cardiac death did not differ significantly. Among diabetic patients, the risk of all-cause mortality was significantly lower in the DEB group (2.78% vs. 11.11%, HR 3.67 (95% confidence interval, CI) [1.01–13.3), p = 0.0483). Conclusions: PCI with DEBs is almost as effective as DES implantation in DM patients treated for ISR. In DM-Dragon, the rate of all-cause death was significantly lower in patients treated with DEBs. Further large-scale, randomized clinical trials would be needed to support these findings.

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