Drug-Coated Stents Help Diabetics with
Heart Repair
Diabetic patients who received drug-eluting
stents had significantly less renarrowing
of their treated arteries and fewer serious
cardiac problems than those treated with
standard stents, which do not release
a drug, according to a report in the medical
journal Circulation .
Stents
are small mesh tubes that help keep arteries
open after angioplasty.
Drug-eluting
stents are coated with medication to prevent
the formation of scar tissue inside the
stent. These drug-eluting stents release
medication within the blood vessel itself.
This medication inhibits the overgrowth
of tissue that can occur within the stent.
The effect of this medication is to deter
the narrowing of the newly stented blood
vessel.
According
to the study, diabetes afflicts more than
150 million people worldwide and is a
major risk factor for heart disease and
stroke, which progresses faster in diabetic
patients than in nondiabetics.
Among
patients with diabetes, cardiovascular
disease is responsible for 75 percent
of all hospital admissions and at least
80 percent of deaths, researchers say.
The
finding is no great surprise, since a
number of studies in the US and other
countries have shown the advantage of
drug-eluting stents.
But
the result is important because "overall,
the outcomes of diabetic patients after
angioplasty are poorer than those of nondiabetics,"
says study author Dr. Manel Sabate, a
consultant in cardiology at San Carlos
University Hospital in Madrid.
The
study included 160 people with diabetes,
half of whom had bare metal stents inserted
after angioplasty. The other half got
stents coated with the drug sirolimus.
Sirolimus prevents further narrowing by
inhibiting scar tissue formation.
In
the nine months following the procedure,
arteries of patients given drug-coated
stents narrowed by an average of only
0.06 millimeters, compared to 0.47 millimeters
for the arteries of those given bare-metal
stents, the researchers report.
That
difference had a very practical benefit.
While
29 of the 80 patients who got the bare
metal stents died or had adverse cardiac
events such as heart attacks, only eight
of the 80 who got coated stents had such
outcomes.
Only
five of those who got coated stents needed
repeat angioplasty, compared to 25 of
those getting the bare metal stents.
During
hospitalization, three standard-stent
patients suffered heart attacks, and one
died of a cardiac rupture. There were
no major cardiac events in the drug-stent
group.
"Conventional
stent implantation still exhibits a high
incidence of major cardiac events in the
diabetic population, especially in those
requiring insulin," Sabate said. "With
the use of conventional stents, the expected
re-narrowing rate may vary from 30 percent
to 60 percent in diabetic patients vs.
15 percent to 30 percent in nondiabetic
patients."
The
researchers said they will continue to
monitor the patients for the next two
years to evaluate the long-term value
of drug-eluting stents.
Sirolimus,
the drug used in the Spanish study, is
one of two medications available to coat
stents.
Two
European studies recently found an advantage
of sirolimus over the other drug, paclitaxel.
The benefit in terms of keeping arteries
open, preventing heart attacks, and keeping
patients alive was greatest for people
at highest risk - a group that includes
diabetics.
"It's
an important study because it was specifically
designed to look at stents in patients
with diabetes, rather than drawing on
a subgroup in a larger trial," says Dr.
Sidney Smith, a professor of medicine
at the University of North Carolina and
a spokesman for the American Heart Association
.
The
study is "good news for patients with
diabetes," Dr. Smith explains. "It shows
that sirolimus-coated stents improve treatment
in both insulin-treated and noninsulin-treated
diabetics."
The
only flaw of the clinical trial was that
it began before the latest generation
of stents became available, he notes.
"The
trial did not compare the newer cobalt
chromium stents," Dr. Smith says. "It
will be important to evaluate them."
Always
consult your physician for more information. |
Atherosclerosis
is a type of arteriosclerosis caused by
a build-up of plaque in the inner lining
of an artery.
Arteriosclerosis
is a general term for thickening or hardening
of the arteries.
Plaque
is made up of deposits of fatty substances,
cholesterol, cellular waste products,
calcium, and fibrin, and can develop in
medium or large arteries. The artery wall
becomes thickened and loses its elasticity.
Atherosclerosis
is a slow, progressive disease that may
start as early as childhood. However,
the disease has the potential to progress
rapidly.
It
is unknown exactly how atherosclerosis
begins or what causes it. Some scientists
think that certain risk factors may be
associated with atherosclerosis, including:
- elevated cholesterol
and triglyceride levels
- high blood
pressure
- smoking
- diabetes mellitus
(type 1 diabetes)
- obesity
- physical inactivity
There
is a gradual build-up of plaque or thickening
of the inside of the walls of the artery,
causing a decrease in the amount of blood
flow, and a decrease in the oxygen supply
to the vital body organs and extremities.
A
heart attack may occur if the oxygenated
blood supply is reduced to the heart.
A stroke may occur if the oxygenated blood
supply is cut off to the brain. Gangrene
may occur if the oxygenated blood supply
is reduced to the arms and legs.
Signs
and symptoms of atherosclerosis may develop
gradually, and may be few, as the plaque
builds up in the artery.
Symptoms
may also vary depending on the affected
artery. However, when a major artery is
blocked, signs and symptoms may be severe,
such as those occurring with heart attack,
stroke, aneurysm, or blood clot.
The
symptoms of atherosclerosis may resemble
other cardiac conditions. Always consult
your physician for a diagnosis.
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American
College of Cardiology
American
Heart Association
Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Circulation:
Journal of the American Heart Association
Go
Red for Women Campaign, AHA
National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
National
Institutes of Health (NIH)
National
Library of Medicine
National
Women's Health Information Center
US
Health and Human Services
|