Seyferth Elisabeth R, Song Helen, Vance Ansar Z, Clark Timothy W I
Section of Interventional Radiology, Department of Radiology, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Penn Presbyterian Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA, 19104, USA.
CVIR Endovasc. 2024 Aug 3;7(1):60. doi: 10.1186/s42155-024-00472-4.
Statins are widely used in coronary and peripheral arterial disease, but their impact on patency of stents placed for peripheral arterial disease is not well-studied. The purpose of this study was to evaluate femoropopliteal stent primary patency according to statin intensity at the time of stent placement and compare this effect to other covariates that may influence stent patency.
A retrospective review identified 278 discrete femoropopliteal stent constructs placed in 216 patients over a 10-year period; Rutherford categories were 2 (3.6%), 3 (12.9%), 4 (21.2%), 5 (49.6%), and 6 (12.6%). Stent locations were common femoral (1.8%), common femoral/superficial femoral (0.7%), superficial femoral (50.7%), superficial femoral/popliteal (32.7%) and popliteal (14.0%) arteries; 63.3% of stents were paclitaxel-eluting. Primary patency of each stent construct was determined with duplex ultrasound, angiography, or computed tomographic angiography. Greater than 50% restenosis or stent occlusion was considered loss of patency. Cox proportional hazard and Kaplan-Meier modeling were used to assess the effect of statin use and additional covariates on stent patency.
Patients on any statin at the time of stent placement were half as likely to undergo loss of primary unassisted patency as patients on no statin therapy (hazard ratio, 0.53; 95% confidence interval, 0.19-0.87; P = .004). Moderate/high intensity statin therapy conferred 17 additional months of median stent patency compared to the no statin group. Antiplatelet therapy, anticoagulant therapy, drug-eluting stents (versus bare metal or covered stents), and Rutherford class were not predictive of stent patency (P = 0.52, 0.85, 0.58, and 0.82, respectively).
Use of statin therapy at the time of femoropopliteal stent placement was the most predictive examined variable influencing primary unassisted patency.
他汀类药物广泛应用于冠心病和外周动脉疾病,但它们对外周动脉疾病支架通畅性的影响尚未得到充分研究。本研究的目的是根据支架置入时他汀类药物的强度评估股腘动脉支架的初始通畅率,并将这种效果与其他可能影响支架通畅性的协变量进行比较。
一项回顾性研究确定了在10年期间216例患者中置入的278个独立的股腘动脉支架结构;卢瑟福分级为2级(3.6%)、3级(12.9%)、4级(21.2%)、5级(49.6%)和6级(12.6%)。支架置入部位为股总动脉(1.8%)、股总动脉/股浅动脉(0.7%)、股浅动脉(50.7%)、股浅动脉/腘动脉(32.7%)和腘动脉(14.0%);63.3%的支架为紫杉醇洗脱支架。通过双功超声、血管造影或计算机断层血管造影确定每个支架结构的初始通畅率。再狭窄大于50%或支架闭塞被视为通畅性丧失。采用Cox比例风险模型和Kaplan-Meier模型评估他汀类药物使用及其他协变量对支架通畅性的影响。
支架置入时使用任何他汀类药物的患者发生初始无辅助通畅性丧失的可能性是未接受他汀类药物治疗患者的一半(风险比,0.53;95%置信区间,0.19 - 0.87;P = 0.004)。与未使用他汀类药物的组相比,中度/高强度他汀类药物治疗使支架中位通畅时间延长了17个月。抗血小板治疗、抗凝治疗、药物洗脱支架(与裸金属支架或覆膜支架相比)以及卢瑟福分级均不能预测支架通畅性(P分别为0.52、0.85、0.58和0.82)。
股腘动脉支架置入时使用他汀类药物治疗是影响初始无辅助通畅性的最具预测性的研究变量。