A Polymer-Based, Paclitaxel-Eluting Stent in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease
Gregg W. Stone, M.D., Stephen G. Ellis, M.D., David A. Cox, M.D., James Hermiller, M.D., Charles O'Shaughnessy, M.D., James Tift Mann, M.D., Mark Turco, M.D., Ronald Caputo, M.D., Patrick Bergin, M.D., Joel Greenberg, M.D., Jeffrey J. Popma, M.D., Mary E. Russell, M.D., for the TAXUS-IV Investigators
Background Restenosis after coronary stenting necessitates repeatedpercutaneous or surgical revascularization procedures. The deliveryof paclitaxel to the site of vascular injury may reduce theincidence of neointimal hyperplasia and restenosis.
Methods At 73 U.S. centers, we enrolled 1314 patients who werereceiving a stent in a single, previously untreated coronary-arterystenosis (vessel diameter, 2.5 to 3.75 mm; lesion length, 10to 28 mm) in a prospective, randomized, double-blind study.A total of 652 patients were randomly assigned to receive abare-metal stent, and 662 to receive an identical-appearing,slow-release, polymer-based, paclitaxel-eluting stent. Angiographicfollow-up was prespecified at nine months in 732 patients.
Results In terms of base-line characteristics, the two groupswere well matched. Diabetes mellitus was present in 24.2 percentof patients; the mean reference-vessel diameter was 2.75 mm,and the mean lesion length was 13.4 mm. A mean of 1.08 stents(length, 21.8 mm) were implanted per patient. The rate of ischemia-driventarget-vessel revascularization at nine months was reduced from12.0 percent with the implantation of a bare-metal stent to4.7 percent with the implantation of a paclitaxel-eluting stent(relative risk, 0.39; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.26 to0.59; P<0.001). Target-lesion revascularization was requiredin 3.0 percent of the group that received a paclitaxel-elutingstent, as compared with 11.3 percent of the group that receiveda bare-metal stent (relative risk, 0.27; 95 percent confidenceinterval, 0.16 to 0.43; P<0.001). The rate of angiographicrestenosis was reduced from 26.6 percent to 7.9 percent withthe paclitaxel-eluting stent (relative risk, 0.30; 95 percentconfidence interval, 0.19 to 0.46; P<0.001). The nine-monthcomposite rates of death from cardiac causes or myocardial infarction(4.7 percent and 4.3 percent, respectively) and stent thrombosis(0.6 percent and 0.8 percent, respectively) were similar inthe group that received a paclitaxel-eluting stent and the groupthat received a bare-metal stent.
Conclusions As compared with bare-metal stents, the slow-release,polymer-based, paclitaxel-eluting stent is safe and markedlyreduces the rates of clinical and angiographic restenosis atnine months.
The implantation of coronary stents reduces the risk of periproceduralcomplications and restenosis more than does balloon angioplastyalone.1,2 Nonetheless, clinical and angiographic restenosisstill occurs in a substantial proportion of patients, oftennecessitating repeated revascularization procedures, decreasingthe quality of life, and increasing health care expenditures.3,4The principal cause of restenosis after coronary stenting isneointimal hyperplasia resulting from the proliferation andmigration of smooth-muscle cells and extracellular matrix production.5Numerous systemic pharmacologic and adjunctive device-basedapproaches have been ineffective at further lowering the riskof restenosis after stenting.6 Recently, the site-specific deliveryof agents capable of interrupting cellular replication has shownpromise in inhibiting neointimal hyperplasia.7 In particular,the polymer-based, sirolimus-eluting stent has proved to besafe and effective in reducing the risk of restenosis in previouslyuntreated lesions of native coronary arteries.8,9
Paclitaxel, a lipophilic molecule derived from the Pacific yewtree Taxus brevifolia, is capable of inhibiting cellular division,motility, activation, secretory processes, and signal transduction.10,11,12,13,14,15The vascular compatibility and efficacy of paclitaxel in reducingneointimal hyperplasia after balloon- and stent-mediated injuryhave been shown in in vitro and in vivo studies.16,17,18,19,20,21The potential for a slow-release, polymer-based, paclitaxel-elutingstent to reduce the risk of restenosis after the treatment ofshort, focal atherosclerotic lesions in humans has been demonstratedin small-to-moderate-sized studies.22,23 We therefore performeda large-scale, prospective, double-blind, randomized, multicentertrial to examine the safety and efficacy of such a stent inreducing the risk of clinical and angiographic restenosis ina broad population of patients and lesions.
Methods
Study Population and Protocol
Patients who were at least 18 years of age, had stable or unstableangina or provokable ischemia, and were undergoing percutaneouscoronary intervention for a single, previously untreated lesionin a native coronary artery were considered for enrollment.Clinical exclusion criteria included previous or planned useof intravascular brachytherapy in the target vessel or of anydrug-eluting stent; myocardial infarction within 72 hours beforeenrollment; a left ventricular ejection fraction of less than25 percent; hemorrhagic diatheses; contraindications or allergyto aspirin, thienopyridines, paclitaxel, or stainless steel;a history of anaphylaxis in response to iodinated contrast medium;use of paclitaxel within 12 months before study entry or currentuse of colchicine; a serum creatinine level of more than 2.0mg per deciliter (177 µmol per liter), a leukocyte countof less than 3500 per cubic millimeter, or a platelet countof less than 100,000 per cubic millimeter; a recent positivepregnancy test, breast-feeding, or the possibility of a futurepregnancy; coexisting conditions that limited life expectancyto less than 24 months or that could affect a patient's compliancewith the protocol; and current participation in other investigationaltrials. The study was approved by the institutional review boardat each participating center, and consecutive, eligible patientsprovided written informed consent.
Before undergoing catheterization, patients received 325 mgof aspirin and a 300-mg oral dose of clopidogrel, a base-lineelectrocardiogram was obtained, and creatine kinase and isoenzymelevels were measured. Angiographic eligibility for inclusionwas then assessed: patients had to have a single target lesionwith a reference-vessel diameter on visual examination of 2.5to 3.75 mm and a lesion length of 10 to 28 mm that could becovered by a single study stent. Angiographic exclusion criteriaincluded a left main or ostial target lesion, moderate or severecalcification of the target vessel or lesion, tortuosity orangulation, bifurcation of the target lesion (defined by a sidebranch measuring more than 2.0 mm in diameter with more than50 percent stenosis), an occluded target lesion (Thrombolysisin Myocardial Infarction grade 0 or 1 flow), or thrombus. Patientswere also excluded if the use of atherectomy or cutting balloonwas planned before stenting. Enrollment was permitted afterthe successful treatment of one additional nonstudy lesion ina nonstudy vessel before randomization.
Randomization and Stent Implantation
Randomization was performed by telephone and was stratifiedaccording to the presence or absence of medically treated diabetesmellitus and vessel size (less than 3.0 mm vs. 3.0 mm or more).Patients were assigned in equal proportions in a double-blindfashion with the use of random serial numbers to treatment witheither the slow-release, polymer-based, paclitaxel-eluting stent(TAXUS, Boston Scientific) or a visually indistinguishable bare-metalstent (EXPRESS, Boston Scientific). Unfractionated heparin wasadministered according to standard practice, and the use ofglycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors was at the operator's discretion.After mandatory dilation with the use of a balloon:artery ratioof 1:1, an appropriate-sized stent (approximately 2 to 4 mmlonger than the lesion, with a ratio of stent diameter to distalreference-vessel diameter of 1 to 1.1:1) was implanted at apressure of at least 12 atm. Stents were available in lengthsof 16, 24, and 32 mm and in diameters of 2.5, 3.0, and 3.5 mm.Additional study stents could be implanted in the event of edgedissections of types B through E or otherwise suboptimal results,and the use of dilation after stent implantation was at theoperator's discretion.
A postprocedural electrocardiogram was obtained, and cardiacenzymes were measured every 8 hours for 24 hours. Patients took325 mg of aspirin daily indefinitely and 75 mg of clopidogreldaily for six months. Clinical follow-up was scheduled at one,four, and nine months and yearly thereafter for five years.
Data Management
Independent study monitors verified 100 percent of the dataon site from case-report forms. Data were maintained in a computerizeddata base by PAREXEL International, and the investigators hadunrestricted access to the data. All major adverse cardiac eventswere reviewed and adjudicated by an independent committee whosemembers were unaware of patients' treatment allocation. A dataand safety monitoring committee periodically reviewed blindedsafety data, each time recommending that the study continuewithout modification. An independent analysis was performedat the angiographic core laboratory by a technician who wasunaware of patients' clinical outcomes, using validated quantitativemethods.24 Measures were reported separately within the stent,within 5 mm proximal and distal to each edge, and over the entiresegment that was analyzed (the "analysis segment"). The manuscriptwas prepared by the principal investigator and revised afterthe other coauthors reviewed it.
End Points and Definitions
The primary end point was the nine-month incidence of ischemia-driventarget-vessel revascularization, as adjudicated by the independentclinical-events committee. Target-vessel revascularization wasconsidered to be driven by ischemia if the stenosis of the targetvessel was at least 50 percent of the luminal diameter on thebasis of a quantitative analysis, with either electrocardiographicchanges while the patient was at rest or a functional studyindicating ischemia in the distribution of the target vessel,or if there was stenosis of at least 70 percent in conjunctionwith recurrent symptoms alone. Target-lesion revascularizationwas defined as repeated revascularization for ischemia owingto stenosis of at least 50 percent of the luminal diameter anywherewithin the stent or within the 5-mm borders proximal or distalto the stent.
Myocardial infarction after the intervention was defined aseither the development of pathologic Q waves lasting at least0.4 second in at least two contiguous leads with an elevatedcreatine kinase MB fraction level or, in the absence of pathologicQ waves, an elevation in creatine kinase levels to more thantwice the upper limit of normal with an elevated creatine kinaseMB level. A creatine kinase level more than five times the upperlimit of normal was required to diagnose a myocardial infarctionafter bypass surgery.
Major adverse cardiac events were defined as death from cardiaccauses (if the cause of death was undetermined, it was categorizedas cardiac), myocardial infarction, or ischemia-driven target-vesselrevascularization. Target-vessel failure was defined as death,myocardial infarction, or ischemia-driven revascularizationrelated to the target vessel. If an adverse event could notconclusively be attributed to a non-target vessel, the eventwas considered a target-vessel failure.
Stent thrombosis was defined as an acute coronary syndrome withangiographic documentation of either vessel occlusion or thrombuswithin or adjacent to a previously successfully stented vesselor, in the absence of angiographic confirmation, either acutemyocardial infarction in the distribution of the treated vesselor death from cardiac causes within 30 days. Binary restenosiswas defined as stenosis of at least 50 percent of the luminaldiameter of the treated lesion.
Statistical Analysis
Using a two-sided test for differences in independent binomialproportions with an alpha level of 0.05 and allowing for a 10percent rate of attrition, we calculated that 1172 patientswould have to undergo randomization for the study to have 85percent power to detect a reduction in the primary end pointof ischemia-driven target-vessel revascularization from an anticipated15 percent after bare-metal stenting to 9 percent with the paclitaxel-elutingstent, a 40 percent relative reduction. The protocol also prespecifiedthat a minimum of 216 patients would be randomly assigned toreceive a 32-mm stent, which became available only in the latterpart of the study. An additional 154 patients whose lesionswere longer than 24 mm therefore underwent randomization, bringingthe total number enrolled to 1326 patients.
The principal secondary end point was the extent of stenosisof the target lesion at nine months. The protocol initiallyprespecified that follow-up angiography be performed in thefirst 536 consecutive patients enrolled a number that,assuming a 25 percent rate of attrition, afforded the study80 percent power to demonstrate a 17 percent reduction in mean(±SD) stenosis, from 27.2 to 22.5±16.7 percent.To make possible adequate angiographic evaluation of long lesions,the angiographic cohort was expanded by 196 consecutive patientswho were receiving 24- or 32-mm stents, resulting in a totalof 732 patients in the follow-up angiographic cohort.
Categorical variables were compared by means of the likelihood-ratiochi-square test or Fisher's exact test. Continuous variablesare presented as means ±SD or medians with interquartileranges and were compared with the use of Student's t-test orthe Wilcoxon two-sample test. The influence of base-line variableson nine-month categorical end points was evaluated with logisticregression with the use of Wald's chi-square test. This analysisincluded all base-line clinical and angiographic features, treatmentassignment, and procedural variables, and the results are expressedas odds ratios with 95 percent confidence intervals. The statistical-analysisplan prespecified that the primary intention-to-treat populationwould consist of all patients in whom an attempt was made toimplant a study stent. All P values are two-sided.
Results
Enrollment and Base-Line Characteristics
Between March 29 and July 8, 2002, 1326 patients at 73 U.S.centers were assigned to receive either a paclitaxel-elutingstent (667 patients) or a bare-metal stent (659 patients). Twelvepatients (0.9 percent) were subsequently excluded because theappropriate stent size was not available for three patients,the guide wire or pre-dilation balloon could not be successfullypassed in three, complications occurred before stenting in three,the lesion was reevaluated before stenting and determined tomeet exclusion criteria in two, and withdrawal of consent byone. The population included in the analysis therefore consistedof 1314 patients: 662 were assigned to receive paclitaxel-elutingstents, and 652 to receive the bare-metal stents. The base-linecharacteristics of the two groups were well matched (Table 1).
Table 1. Base-Line Clinical and Angiographic Characteristics.
Procedural Outcomes
The number of stents implanted per patient, the mean lengthand diameter of the stents, and other deployment and implantationvariables were similar in the two groups (Table 2). The initialangiographic results were also similar in the two cohorts.
Table 2. Stent Implantation and Procedural Results.
Clinical Outcomes
As shown in Table 3, implantation of the paclitaxel-elutingstent, as compared with the bare-metal stent, reduced the primaryend point of the risk of target-vessel revascularization atnine months by 61 percent and lowered the risk of target-lesionrevascularization by 73 percent, a consequence of significantreductions in the rates of both percutaneous coronary interventionand coronary-artery bypass grafting. Multivariate analysis showedthat randomization to the group receiving a paclitaxel-elutingstent was an independent predictor of freedom from target-vesselrevascularization (odds ratio, 0.34; 95 percent confidence interval,0.22 to 0.54; P<0.001). The rates of death, myocardial infarction,and stent thrombosis were low and similar in the two groups.Thus, at the end of the nine-month follow-up period, the ratesof target-vessel failure and major adverse cardiac events weresignificantly lower after the receipt of a paclitaxel-elutingstent than after the receipt of a bare-metal stent (Table 3).
Follow-up angiography at nine months was completed in 559 ofthe 732 prespecified patients (76.4 percent), including 442of the 536 patients (82.5 percent) from the original prespecifiedangiographic cohort and 117 of the 196 patients (59.7 percent)from the extended long-lesion cohort, from whom consent forangiographic follow-up had not initially been obtained. Therewere no significant base-line clinical or angiographic differencesbetween patients in whom follow-up angiography was scheduledand those in whom it was not scheduled, except that the lesionwas significantly longer in patients in the follow-up angiographiccohort (mean, 14.4±6.9 vs. 12.1±5.1 mm; P<0.001).Among patients in the angiographic follow-up cohort, diabetesmellitus was present in 27.7 percent of those who received apaclitaxel-eluting stent and 23.8 percent of those who receiveda bare-metal stent (P=0.24), and the mean lesion length was14.4±6.7 and 14.4±7.1 mm, respectively (P=0.94).
Quantitative follow-up data were available for 559 patients.As compared with those who received a bare-metal stent, patientswho received a paclitaxel-eluting stent had a significantlysmaller amount of late loss and a lower loss index, resultingin greater luminal dimensions and a smaller degree of stenosisat follow-up, both within the stented segment and at its edges(Table 4 and Figure 1). The use of a paclitaxel-eluting stentreduced the risk of binary restenosis by 77 percent within thestent and by 70 percent in the analysis segment.
Figure 1. Cumulative Distribution Curves (Paired-Lesion Analysis) for Percent Stenosis of the Luminal Diameter in the Group That Received a Paclitaxel-Eluting Stent and the Group That Received a Bare-Metal Stent before and Immediately after the Intervention and at Nine Months.
At nine months, the mean degree of stenosis in the group that received a paclitaxel-eluting stent was 13.5 percentage points less than the value in the group that received a bare-metal stent (95 percent confidence interval, 16.3 to 10.7; P<0.001).
Multivariate analysis showed that randomization to the groupthat received a paclitaxel-eluting stent was an independentpredictor of freedom from restenosis (odds ratio, 0.16; 95 percentconfidence interval, 0.08 to 0.30; P<0.001).
The relative reduction in the risk of restenosis with the paclitaxel-elutingstent, as compared with the bare-metal stent, was independentof diabetes mellitus status, epicardial-vessel location, andthe length and diameter of the lesion or stent (Figure 2). Amongpatients with restenosis, those treated with the paclitaxel-elutingstent were much less likely than those who received a bare-metalstent to have a diffuse or proliferative pattern of hyperplasia,and they had a significantly shorter restenosed segment (Table 4).Aneurysms were present at nine months in two patients (0.7percent) in each group; only one of these aneurysms (in a patientwho received a bare-metal stent) developed during the nine-monthfollow-up period.
Figure 2. Subgroup Analysis for the Nine-Month Rate of Angiographic Restenosis in the Analysis Segment among Patients Assigned to Receive a Paclitaxel-Eluting Stent as Compared with Those Assigned to Receive a Bare-Metal Stent.
The analysis includes the 558 patients who underwent follow-up angiography at nine months as prespecified in the protocol and for whom the severity of stenosis could be determined. The lesion length could not be determined in one additional patient. CI denotes confidence interval.
Among patients in the angiographic cohort who completed follow-upangiography, the rate of target-lesion revascularization wasreduced from 14.6 percent with the bare-metal stent to 3.8 percentwith the paclitaxel-eluting stent (P<0.001). Among patientswho did not undergo angiographic follow-up, the rate of target-lesionrevascularization was reduced from 9.2 percent with the bare-metalstent to 2.4 percent with the paclitaxel-eluting stent (P<0.001).
Discussion
In this prospective, randomized, double-blind study, the implantationof a slow-release, polymer-based, paclitaxel-eluting stent markedlyreduced the risk of clinical and angiographic restenosis ascompared with the implantation of a bare-metal stent, in patientswith a wide range of previously untreated coronary lesions.Despite the relatively low rate of restenosis in the controlgroup, the biologic potency of the paclitaxel-eluting stentwas evidenced by a 70 percent relative reduction in the riskof angiographic restenosis, with a corresponding 73 percentreduction in the risk of target-lesion revascularization. Inaddition to reducing the need for repeated percutaneous coronaryintervention, the paclitaxel-eluting stent also reduced theneed for coronary-artery bypass grafting. Notably, target-lesionrevascularization was required in only 3.8 percent of patientsassigned to receive a paclitaxel-eluting stent who underwentprotocol-specified angiographic follow-up, and the rate wasalso significantly reduced among patients who received a paclitaxel-elutingstent who did not undergo routine angiographic follow-up.
The paclitaxel-eluting stent effectively reduced the risk ofrestenosis in a broad range of lesions and patients undergoingpercutaneous intervention. The three principal determinantsof restenosis after coronary-stent implantation are diabetesmellitus status, the reference-vessel diameter, and the lesionlength (or the length of the implanted stent).26,27,28,29,30We found that the risk of restenosis was increased by approximately50 percent among diabetic patients who received a bare-metalstent as compared with those without diabetes who received sucha stent. In contrast, the risk of restenosis was reduced bymore than 80 percent among patients with diabetes who receiveda paclitaxel-eluting stent, so that these patients and patientswithout diabetes had similar rates of angiographic recurrenceafter the receipt of such a stent. The marked efficacy of site-specificpaclitaxel delivery in reducing the risk of restenosis amongpatients with diabetes may be explained by paclitaxel's abilityto disrupt microtubules, leading to inhibition of signal-transductionpathways regulated by insulin that mediate growth, differentiation,and stress responses.31 The rates of restenosis after the implantationof a bare-metal stent in small coronary arteries (no more than2.5 mm in diameter) and long lesions (longer than 20 mm) werealso increased, by 38.5 percent and 41.5 percent, respectively.The benefits of the paclitaxel-eluting stent were particularlyevident in these subtypes of lesions, which had the greatestabsolute reductions in the risk of restenosis.
The ability of the paclitaxel-eluting stent to reduce the extentof neointimal hyperplasia was evident both within the stentand at the proximal and distal margins of the stent. Moreover,when restenosis did occur after the implantation of a paclitaxel-elutingstent, the pattern was much more likely to be focal than diffuseor proliferative, potentially translating into easier subsequentmanagement.25
Use of the paclitaxel-eluting stent was safe, with no excessrisks apparent. Stent thrombosis was infrequent in both groups,and no late stent thromboses occurred after clopidogrel wasdiscontinued at six months. The rates of death from cardiaccauses and myocardial infarction over the nine-month follow-upperiod were also low and were not significantly different betweenthe two groups. Aneurysms did not develop during the nine-monthfollow-up period in any patient who received a paclitaxel-elutingstent.
The safety and efficacy of the slow-release, polymer-based,paclitaxel-eluting stent in our study population cannot be generalizedto patients and types of lesions that were excluded from randomization,including lesions resulting from acute myocardial infarction,thrombus-containing lesions, bifurcations, stenoses of the leftmain coronary artery, heavily calcified stenoses, vessels visuallyestimated as less than 2.5 mm or greater than 3.75 mm in diameter,diseased saphenous-vein grafts, or lesions with in-stent restenosis.The extent to which an injured or unstented margin contributedto the remaining cases of focal restenosis with the paclitaxel-elutingstent cannot be determined with certainty. Moreover, overlappingstents were implanted in relatively few patients in this trial,and thus, further study is required to evaluate the treatmentof lesions that are longer than 28 mm, which require at leasttwo stents. Extended follow-up is required to establish thelong-term safety of this and other drug-eluting stent devices.All of our patients received clopidogrel for six months in orderto maximize the safety of this device (though preclinical studiesdemonstrated equivalent rates of healing with the use of nonoverlappingbare-metal stents and slow-release, paclitaxel-eluting stents).Though the use of a prolonged course of clopidogrel is consistentwith current studies demonstrating an incremental benefit ofextended thienopyridine therapy,32 it is unknown whether thisduration of treatment is necessary to prevent subacute thrombosisafter the implantation of a paclitaxel-eluting stent. Finally,appropriately powered, head-to-head, randomized trials comparingdifferent drug-eluting stent systems are required to evaluatetheir relative safety and efficacy.
Supported by Boston Scientific, Natick, Mass.
Drs. Stone, Ellis, Hermiller, and Caputo report having servedas consultants or advisors to Boston Scientific; Dr. Stone transientlyheld an equity interest in Boston Scientific, which was liquidatedbefore the study results became available; Dr. Greenberg reportsholding an equity interest in Boston Scientific; Drs. Stone,Hermiller, Caputo, and Popma report having received lecturefees from the sponsor; Dr. Russell reports serving as a full-timeemployee of the sponsor and holding equity.
* The investigators, research coordinators, and institutions participatingin the TAXUS-IV Trial appear in the Appendix.
Source Information
From the Cardiovascular Research Foundation and Lenox Hill Heart and Vascular Institute, New York (G.W.S.); the Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland (S.G.E.); Mid Carolina Cardiology, Charlotte, N.C. (D.A.C.); St. Vincent's Hospital, Indianapolis (J.H.); Elyria Memorial Hospital, Elyria, Ohio (C.O.); WakeMed, Raleigh, N.C. (J.T.M.); Washington Adventist Hospital, Tacoma Park, Md. (M.T.); St. Joseph's Hospital, Syracuse, N.Y. (R.C.); Sacred Heart Medical Center, Eugene, Oreg. (P.B.); Florida Hospital, Orlando (J.G.); Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston (J.J.P.); and Boston Scientific, Natick, Mass. (M.E.R.).
Address reprint requests to Dr. Stone at the Cardiovascular Research Foundation, 55 E. 59th St., 6th Fl., New York, NY 10022, or at gstone{at}crf.org.
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Appendix
Members of the TAXUS-IV Study were as follows: Executive Committee G. Stone (principal investigator), Cardiovascular ResearchFoundation and Lenox Hill Heart and Vascular Institute, NewYork; S. Ellis (co-principal investigator), Cleveland ClinicFoundation, Cleveland; P. Teirstein, Scripps Clinic, La Jolla,Calif.; D. Cohen, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston;M. Russell, Boston Scientific, Natick, Mass.; Data Monitoring PAREXEL International, Waltham, Mass.: R. Baldwin (coordinator),Boston Scientific; Data Management and Biostatistical Analysis PAREXEL International: P. Lam (director); M. Cody (coordinator),Boston Scientific; Clinical Events Adjudication Committee Harvard Cardiovascular Research Institute, Boston: D. Cutlip(chair), M. Chauhan, K. Ho, J. Aroesty, J. Kannam; Data andSafety Monitoring Committee B. Gersh (chair), Mayo Clinic,Rochester, Minn.; M. Ohman, University of North Carolina, ChapelHill, Chapel Hill; T. Ryan, Boston Medical Center, Boston; D.Faxon, University of Chicago, Chicago; D. DeMets, Universityof Wisconsin, Madison; Angiographic Core Laboratory Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston: J. Popma (director), J.Shah, A. Wong; Intravascular Ultrasound Imaging Core Laboratory Washington Hospital Center, Washington, D.C.: N. Weissman(director); Study Sites, Principal Investigators, and StudyCoordinators Huntsville Hospital, Huntsville, Ala.:W. Strickland, D. McCrackin; Good Samaritan Regional MedicalCenter, Phoenix, Ariz.: N. Laufer, D. Cook; Scripps MemorialHospital, La Jolla, Calif.: M. Buchbinder, S. Costello; MercyGeneral Hospital, Sacramento, Calif.: M. Chang, S. Bordash;University of California Davis Medical Center, Sacramento: R.Low, K. Harder; Good Samaritan Hospital, Los Angeles: R. Matthews,S. Mullin; Scripps Clinic, La Jolla, Calif.: P. Teirstein, E.Anderson; Stanford Medical Center, Stanford, Calif.: A. Yeung,P. Tsao; Columbia Medical Center of Aurora, Aurora, Colo.: B.Molk, K. Bickett; Aurora Denver Cardiology, Denver: B. Molk,K. Bickett; Connecticut Clinical Research, Bridgeport: E. Kosinski,M. Capasso; Washington Hospital Center, Washington, D.C.: L.Satler, R. Howery; Christiana Hospital, Newark, Del.: J. Hopkins,K. Sullivan; Sarasota Memorial Hospital, Sarasota, Fla.: S.Culp, J. Selby; MediQuest Research Group, Ocala, Fla.: R. Feldman,K. Tighe; Florida Hospital, Orlando: J. Greenberg, M. Allan;St. Vincent's Hospital, Jacksonville, Fla.: G. Pilcher, A. Dennis;Piedmont Hospital, Atlanta: C. Brown, A. Garvitte; Mercy HospitalMedical Center, Des Moines, Iowa: M. Tannenbaum, R. Porter;Mercy Medical Center, Des Moines, Iowa: M. Tannenbaum, M. Craig;Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago: C. Davidson,L. Goodreau; St. John's Hospital, Springfield, Ill.: G. Mishkel,P. Warren; Community Hospital Heart Institution, Indianapolis:W. Corey, M. Portrikus; St. Vincent's Hospital, Indianapolis:J. Hermiller, Jr., M. Fredericks; Central Baptist Hospital,Lexington, Ky.: M. Jones, J. Hamilton; Jewish Hospital Heartand Lung Institute, Louisville, Ky.: D. McMartin, P. Adkisson;Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center, Baton Rouge, La.:A. Rees, B. Toler; Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston:D. Cohen, P. Rooney; New England Medical Center, Boston: C.Kimmelstiel, S. Galvin; Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston:C. Rogers, D. Barry; Sinai Hospital of Baltimore, Baltimore:P. Gurbel, K. Bliden; St. Joseph Medical Center, Towson, Md.:M. Midei, A. Dudek; Washington Adventist Hospital, Takoma Park,Md.: M. Turco, D. Shaddinger; Maine Medical Center, Portland:M. Kellett, C. Berg; St. Mary's Medical Center, Saginaw, Mich.:L. Cannon, C. Wituki; St. John's Hospital, Detroit: T. Davis,T. Ingle; St. Mary's Hospital, Duluth, Minn.: G. Albin, C. Neva;Abbott Northwestern Hospital, Minneapolis: M. Mooney, J. Cartland;Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis: J. Lasala,J. Newgent; Mid-American Heart Institute, Kansas City, Mo.:B. Rutherford, C. Rutherford; Presbyterian Hospital Mid CarolinaCardiology, Charlotte, N.C.: D. Cox, B. Carroll; Wake ForestUniversity Baptist Medical Center, Winston-Salem, N.C.: M. Kutcher,T. Young; Wake Medical Center, Raleigh, N.C.: J. Mann, T. Smallwood;Moses Cone Memorial Hospital, Greensboro, N.C.: T. Stuckey,D. Muncy; Carolinas Health Care System, Charlotte, N.C.: H.Wilson, G. Schwarz; Duke University Medical Center, Durham,N.C.: J. Zidar, S. Dickerson; Nebraska Heart Institute, Lincoln:S. Martin, T. Humlichek; Valley Hospital, Ridgewood, N.J.: C.Hirsch, K. Sayles; Our Lady of Lourdes Medical Center, Camden,N.J.: A. Moak, D. Palazzo; St. Joseph's Hospital and HealthCenter, Syracuse, N.Y.: R. Caputo, C. Lastinger; Albany MedicalCenter Hospital, Albany, N.Y.: A. DeLago, K. Edmunds; NorthShore University Hospital, Manhassett, N.Y.: S. Katz, D. Redmond;Maimonides Medical Center, Brooklyn, N.Y.: J. Shani, L. Budzilowicz;St. Francis Hospital, Roslyn, N.Y.: R. Shlofmitz, E. Haag; LenoxHill Hospital, New York: G. Stone, M. Arif; New York PresbyterianHospitalWeill Medical College of Cornell University,New York: C. Wong, D. Reynolds; Cleveland Clinic Foundation,Cleveland: S. Ellis, L. Vivian; Christ Hospital, Cincinnati:D. Kereiakes, H. Benhase; Elyria Memorial Hospital, Elyria,Ohio: C. O'Shaughnessy, S. Tonich; Oklahoma Foundation for CardiovascularResearch, Oklahoma City: T. McGarry, S. Hanes, T. Ramsey; SacredHeart Medical Center, Eugene, Oreg.: J. Chambers, D. Butler-Sharp;Lancaster General Hospital, Lancaster, Pa.: P. Casale, L. Kruse,M. Adams; Heart Care Group, Allentown, Pa.: J. Kleaveland, C.Trapp; Miriam Hospital, Providence, R.I.: P. Gordon, N. Wright;Rhode Island Hospital, Providence: D. Williams, J. Muratori;Apex Cardiology, Jackson, Tenn.: H. Lui, A. Hinton; St. ThomasHospital, Nashville: R. Wheatley, J. McCarthy; Northeast MethodistHospital, San Antonio, Tex.: C. Casey, S. Farris; Seton MedicalCenter, Austin, Tex.: S. DeMaio, L. Rogers; Capital CardiovascularSpecialists, Austin, Tex.: S. DeMaio, L. Rogers; St. Luke'sEpiscopal Hospital, Houston: D. Fish, M. Harlan; Covenant HealthSystemMedical Center, Lubbock, Tex.: P. Overlie, D. Zamora;Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory Research Center, Houston:A. Raizner, D. McCain; Hermann Hospital, Houston: R. Smalling,C. Carter; Medical Center Hospital of Vermont, Burlington: M.Watkins, L. Chadwick; Swedish Medical Center, Seattle: M. Reisman,W. Ronco.
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(2008). Comparison of an Everolimus-Eluting Stent and a Paclitaxel-Eluting Stent in Patients With Coronary Artery Disease: A Randomized Trial. JAMA
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Tomai, F., Reimers, B., De Luca, L., Galassi, A. R., Gaspardone, A., Ghini, A. S., Ferrero, V., Favero, L., Gioffre, G., Prati, F., Tamburino, C., Ribichini, F.
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