Abstract

BackgroundThe relationship between late stent malapposition (LSM) and adverse cardiovascular events is controversial. Studies are needed to evaluate long‐term (>5 years) clinical outcomes of LSM detected by optical coherence tomography (OCT) after drug‐eluting stent implantation.Methods and ResultsWe investigated long‐term clinical outcomes of OCT‐detected LSM in 351 patients who received drug‐eluting stents and were examined by both poststent and follow‐up OCT (175±60 days after drug‐eluting stent implantation) from January 2009 to December 2011. LSM was observed in 99 patients (28%). We evaluated the cumulative rate of composite events (cardiovascular death, target‐vessel–related myocardial infarction, target‐vessel revascularization, and stent thrombosis). During 80.1±24.5 months of follow‐up, very late stent thrombosis did not occur in any patients with LSM. The cumulative 8‐year rate of composite events was 7.3% in patients with LSM and 10.5% in patients without LSM (P=0.822, log‐rank test). We further divided patients into the following 4 groups: patients with both late‐persistent and late‐acquired stent malapposition (n=23), patients with late‐persistent stent malapposition alone (n=45), patients with late‐acquired stent malapposition alone (n=31), and patients without LSM (n=252). The cumulative 8‐year rates of composite events were similar among these 4 groups (0%, 9.6%, 9.7%, and 10.5%, respectively; P=0.468 by log‐rank test).ConclusionsDuring long‐term follow‐up (>5 years), very late stent thrombosis did not occur in patients with OCT‐detected LSM. The rates of adverse clinical events were similar between patients with LSM versus those without LSM. Presence of OCT‐detected LSM was not associated with unfavorable clinical outcomes.

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