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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Continuous subcutaneous angiopeptin treatment significantly reduces neointimal hyperplasia in a porcine coronary in-stent restenosis model.

BACKGROUND: In-stent restenosis results primarily from neointimal hyperplasia. This study evaluated the efficacy and the optimal mode of administration of angiopeptin, a somatostatin analogue with antiproliferative activity, in a porcine coronary in-stent restenosis model. METHODS AND RESULTS: Forty pigs were randomly assigned to one of four groups (n = 10 per group): (1) controls receiving saline infusion at the site of stent implantation via a local delivery catheter, (2) local treatment group receiving one-time treatment (200 (micrograms angiopeptin) at the site of stent placement, (3) systemic treatment group receiving continuous angiopeptin over a 1-week period via a subcutaneous osmotic pump (200 micrograms/kg total dose) and (4) combined local and systemic treatment group. Then, one oversized Palmaz-Schatz stent (mean ratio of stent to artery diameters, 1.3:1) was implanted in the left anterior descending coronary artery. The degree of neointimal reaction was evaluated 4 weeks later by angiography (maximal percent diameter stenosis), intravascular ultrasound (total in-stent neointimal volume), and histology (maximal area stenosis). Systemic treatment produced the least neointimal hyperplasia and significantly reduced in-stent restenosis compared with the control group by all end points, despite similar degrees of injury. Angiography showed 25 +/- 17% versus 50 +/- 17% diameter stenosis in the systemic angiopeptin group versus the control group (P < .0001), intravascular ultrasound revealed 23 +/- 10 versus 58 +/- 27 mm3 neointimal volume in the systemic angiopeptin versus control group (P = .0002), and histology showed 41 +/- 16% versus 69 +/- 18% area stenosis (P = .0016) in the systemic angiopeptin versus control group. Plasma angiopeptin levels revealed rapid clearance (within 6 hours) after local therapy, whereas the levels persisted for up to 2 weeks in the systemic group. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that continuous subcutaneous treatment with angiopeptin after stent implantation significantly reduces in-stent restenosis by inhibiting neointimal hyperplasia.[1]

References

  1. Continuous subcutaneous angiopeptin treatment significantly reduces neointimal hyperplasia in a porcine coronary in-stent restenosis model. Hong, M.K., Kent, K.M., Mehran, R., Mintz, G.S., Tio, F.O., Foegh, M., Wong, S.C., Cathapermal, S.S., Leon, M.B. Circulation (1997) [Pubmed]
 
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