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Two-stent techniques for coronary bifurcation lesions (main vessel first versus side branch first): results from the COBIS (COronary BIfurcation Stenting) II registry

Authors
Park, Taek KyuBin Song, YoungYang, Jeong HoonLee, Joo MyungHahn, Joo-YongChoi, Seung-HyukChoi, Jin-HoLee, Sang HoonOh, Ju HyeonYu, Cheol WoongJeong, Jin-OkGwon, Hyeon-Cheol
Issue Date
Sep-2017
Publisher
EUROPA EDITION
Keywords
bifurcation; drug-eluting stent; other technique
Citation
EUROINTERVENTION, v.13, no.7, pp.835 - 842
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
EUROINTERVENTION
Volume
13
Number
7
Start Page
835
End Page
842
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/82443
ISSN
1774-024X
Abstract
Aims: It has not been known which two-stent technique is best for treating bifurcation lesions. We aimed to compare the outcomes from main vessel (MV) first and side branch (SB) first techniques for patients with bifurcation lesions requiring a two-stent approach. Methods and results: A total of 673 patients with bifurcation lesions were treated with two-stent techniques: MV first (n=250) or SB first (n=423). The rate of a composite of cardiac death, myocardial infarction, or target lesion revascularisation (TLR) was similar in the two groups (SB first versus MV first, 15.1% versus 15.6% in the total population [p=0.90]; 14.3% versus 17.4% in a propensity score-matched population [p=0.80]). There were significant interactions associated with TLR risk between MV and SB first techniques according to angiographic factors. Patients in the MV first group had a lower risk of TLR when they had a lesion with MV diameter stenosis >= 70% (p for interaction=0.4), more severe stenosis of the MV than of the SB (p for interaction=0.008), or MV lesion length >= 18 mm (p for interaction=0.01). Conclusions: Clinical outcomes were similar for patients treated with MV or SB first two-stent techniques. Using "more severe lesion first" two-stent techniques might offer a favourable prognosis.
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