Balloon-based radiation therapy for treatment of in-stent restenosis in human coronary arteries: results from the BRITE I study. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Catheter-based intracoronary radiation therapy demonstrated reduction of the recurrence rate of in-stent restenosis by 35%-50% when compared to conventional therapy. The objectives of this study were to determine the safety and feasibility of a new balloon-shaped source design and a higher applied dose to reduce the restenosis rates. Thirty-two patients with in-stent restenosis who met study eligibility criteria were successfully treated with standard PCI techniques. Following a successful intervention, a P-32 beta-balloon source was positioned to cover the angioplasty site and a dose of a 20 Gy at 1 mm from the surface of the source was administered. The primary endpoint was a composite of major adverse cardiac events (any death, MI, emergent CABG, or repeat target vessel revascularization) during 6 months of follow-up. At 6 months, only one patient underwent repeat PTCA to the target vessel (3%). There were no instances of death, emergency surgery, late thrombosis, total occlusions, or MI. Binary restenosis measured by QCA at the stented segment was 0% and for the whole analysis vessel was 7.5%. Beta-radiation delivered with a balloon P-32 source design for patients with in-stent restenosis results in lower than expected rate of angiographic and clinical restenosis and the absence of late complications.

publication date

  • November 1, 2002

Research

keywords

  • Arteries
  • Catheterization
  • Coronary Restenosis
  • Radiotherapy, Computer-Assisted
  • Stents

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0036842160

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1002/ccd.10359

PubMed ID

  • 12410499

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 57

issue

  • 3