Abstract

In-stent restenosis results primarily from neointimal hyperplasia. In a previous study we showed that continuous subcutaneous Angiopeptin infusion for 1 week significantly reduces neointimal hyperplasia in a porcine coronary overstretch in-stent restenosis model. The present study evaluated the relative efficacy of immediate-release and sustained-release Angiopeptin in the same model. Thirty pigs (n = 10 in each group) were randomly assigned to three groups: controls receiving no Angiopeptin (Group 1); a sustained-release treatment group receiving one time intramuscular administration of 20 mg of Angiopeptin (Group 2); and a systemic treatment group receiving continuous Angiopeptin over a 1-week period via a subcutaneous osmotic pump (200 micrograms/kg total dose) (Group 3). One oversized Palmaz-Schatz stent (mean stent/artery = 1.25) was subsequently implanted in the left anterior descending coronary artery. The degree of neointimal reaction was evaluated 4 weeks later by angiography (maximal per cent diameter stenosis) and histology (maximal neointimal area corrected for injury score). A trend towards a reduction in diameter stenosis was observed by angiography, despite a similar degree of injury (25 +/- 17% in Group 1, 13 +/- 8% in Group 2, and 14 +/- 9% in Group 3; P = 0.072 by ANOVA). Histology demonstrated that both Angiopeptin treatment strategies significantly reduced in-stent neointimal area compared with the control group (1.65 +/- 0.97 mm2 in Group 1 versus 0.93 +/- 0.41 mm2 in Group 2 versus 0.85 +/- 0.28 mm2 in Group 3; P = 0.016 by ANOVA). Measurement of plasma Angiopeptin levels revealed comparable levels in both treatment groups, which persisted for up to 2 weeks. This study shows that single-dose intramuscular administration of sustained-release Angiopeptin reduces in-stent restenosis as effectively as the prolonged systemic treatment requiring a subcutaneous pump. Thus, a practical, effective, pharmacologic therapy for preventing in-stent restenosis may be available and should be evaluated in patients.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call