Too Little, Too Late? Absorb BVS Shows Promising Results in STEMI Patients

The study was small, short, and used a surrogate endpoint, but one expert posits that future bioresorbable scaffolds may have a niche in STEMI.

Too Little, Too Late? Absorb BVS Shows Promising Results in STEMI Patients

MUNICH, Germany—It might be “too little, too late,” but a small study suggests the Absorb bioresorbable scaffold, formerly from Abbott, might actually be effective in STEMI patients.

Although investigators caution the study was short in duration and utilized an angiographic endpoint, the Absorb scaffold performed as well as the everolimus-eluting stent (Xience, Abbott Vascular) with respect to the primary endpoint of lesion diameter stenosis at 6 to 8 months (24.6% with Absorb vs 27.3% with Xience; P < 0.001 for noninferiority). Other measures, such as late lumen loss and target lesion revascularization, were also not significantly different between the two treatment strategies.

“We don’t usually test new stent technologies straightaway in STEMI patients, but some people felt it could be a niche well suited to bioresorbable scaffolds,” lead investigator Robert Byrne, MBBCh, PhD (Deutsches Herzzentrum München, Germany), told TCTMD. “They’re younger patients who may profit from the scaffolds longer term. They often have focal lesions in larger vessels and we know scaffolds weren’t good in smaller vessels.”

Additionally, plaque morphology is quite different in STEMI with thrombus and stable coronary artery lesions, said Byrne. The STEMI patient might have less calcification, which may allow the scaffold to expand more uniformly. “That had been an issue with scaffolds, this slightly lower radial strength that perhaps played a role in their downfall,” he said.

Wave after wave of bad news plagued the Absorb BVS, with studies consistently showing the scaffold was associated with an increased risk of device-oriented clinical events, specifically an increased risk of target-vessel MI and late scaffold thrombosis compared with Xience. Abbott Vascular has stopped selling Absorb, although they have said they will continue to work on developing a better, second-generation device.

Other bioresorbable scaffolds are in testing, but the future is murky. Recently, the European Society of Cardiology/European Association for Cardiothoracic Surgery (EACTS) downgraded the use of bioresorbable scaffolds in their newest clinical guidelines for myocardial revascularization, stating the devices should not be used in practice but only in clinical trials.   

Excellent Results . . . for a Bioresorbable Scaffold

In the ISAR-ABSORB MI study, which was presented at the European Society of Cardiology Congress 2018, investigators randomized 173 patients to treatment with Absorb and 89 to treatment with Xience. Three-quarters of the randomized patients presented with STEMI, and the remaining patients had a NSTEMI with visual evidence of thrombus on angiography. Patients were well matched between groups, with approximately 48% undergoing treatment of the left anterior descending artery.

For the primary endpoint, there was no evidence of an interaction of a treatment effect except for diagnosis at presentation, with a more favorable result observed in patients with STEMI compared with those with NSTEMI.

In terms of safety, there was no difference in the risk of death/MI among patients treated with Absorb and Xience at 1 year, nor was there an increased risk of definite/probable stent thrombosis (1.7% with Absorb vs 2.3% with Xience; HR 0.76; 95% CI 0.13-4.56). Additionally, there was no difference in the rates of device-oriented clinical events.

Roxana Mehran, MD (Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY), who moderated the interventional session where the trial was presented, said the “results were excellent for a bioresorbable scaffold.” Byrne agreed, saying the data are “striking in comparison with the broader patient collective.” Although ISAR-ABSORB MI is consistent with the TROFI-II results, both trials are small studies and underpowered for clinical endpoints, he stressed,

Byrne said it took more than 3 years to enroll patients in ISAR-ABSORB MI, but that the data provide “food for thought” going forward with future technologies.

Gregg Stone, MD (NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, NY), who also moderated the session, said optical coherence tomography (OCT) data, which Byrne presented in a separate session, suggested “somewhat better healing” with Absorb compared with Xience.

“Your data are very good here,” he said, but noted that just 57% of patients treated with Absorb underwent postdilatation after implantation.

“I am worried about the lack of postdilatation when you get beyond 1 year,” he said. “We know that people tend to undersize devices in STEMI, there’s a lot of thrombus that resolves over time, and you’re likely to have a high malapposition rate.” In turn, that might increase the risk of events that occur with scaffold dismantling between 1 and 3 years, said Stone.  

Scaffold Thrombosis Rate ‘Sticks Out’

In addition to the ISAR-ABSORB MI study, Holger Nef, MD (University of Giessen, Germany), presented data on 10,312 patients treated with Absorb in everyday clinical practice. The data, from the European Absorb Consortium, included patients from five European registries and showed a lower rate of scaffold thrombosis at 12 months—1.6%—than observed in clinical trials. Target-vessel MI and target-lesion failure occurred in 1.8% and 3.6% of treated patients, respectively. 

Although the real-world clinical outcome data are favorable and the rate of target-lesion failure comparable with second-generation drug-eluting stents, “the rate of scaffold thrombosis remains high,” said Nef.

Like other studies, investigators documented a learning curve with the device—clinical outcomes were better among patients implanted after the device was available longer—but the rate of scaffold thrombosis among patients implanted with Absorb after 2015 remained high at 1.4%.   

Stone said that even in the absence of a control arm, the high rate of scaffold thrombosis in the registry data compared with contemporary drug-eluting stents “sticks out.”

Alexandre Abizaid, MD (Instituto Dante Pazzanese de Cardiologia, São Paulo, Brazil), however, saw the glass half full, stating the new consortium data are “surprisingly positive” for a real-world population, of whom 33% had a STEMI at the time of presentation. “We learned a lot with the Absorb program,” said Abizaid, citing the importance of the PSP (predilatation, sizing, and postdilatation) implantation protocol that resulted in better outcomes as operators gained experience.

Acknowledging the difficult history of Absorb BVS, as well as the new ESC/EACTS guidelines, Marie-Claude Morice, MD (Cardiovascular European Research Center, Massy, France), one of the panel discussants, emphasized the importance of moving slowly before reintroducing bioresorbable scaffolds into clinical practice. Abizaid, in contrast, said he was disappointed with new ESC/EACTS contraindication for scaffolds, stressing the need for longer-term data and the need for new devices.

“I think that’s going to be hard on investment and timing,” he said, “but I’m still positive on the technology. It makes good sense.”   

Michael O’Riordan is the Managing Editor for TCTMD. He completed his undergraduate degrees at Queen’s University in Kingston, ON, and…

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Sources
  • Byrne RA, on behalf of the ISAR-Absorb MI investigators. A prospective, randomized trial of BVS versus EES in patients undergoing coronary stenting for myocardial infarction. Presented at: European Society of Cardiology Congress 2018. August 28, 2018. Munich, Germany.

  • Wiebe J, West N, Baumbach A, Outcomes of 10,312 patients treated with everolimus-eluting bioresorbable scaffolds during daily clinical practice: results from the European Absorb Consortium. Presented at: European Society of Cardiology Congress 2018. August 28, 2018. Munich, Germany.

Disclosures
  • Byrne reports research/grant support from Boston Scientific, Heartflow and consulting/honoraria from B. Braun, Boston Scientific, and Biotronik.
  • Nef reports grant/research support and honoraria from Abbott Vascular.
  • Abizaid reports serving on the advisory board for Boston Scientific.

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