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About
The primary objective of the PRE-COMBAT trial is:
To establish the safety and effectiveness of coronary stenting with the sirolimus-eluting balloon expandable stent (Cordis Johnson & Johnson, Warren, New Jersey) compared with bypass surgery for the treatment of an unprotected LMCA stenosis. The alternative hypothesis is that the experimental strategy (coronary stenting with the sirolimus-eluting stents) is not inferior to the standard strategy (bypass surgery).
Full description
Despite bypass surgery has been considered as the standard strategy for the treatment of unprotected left main coronary artery (LMCA) lesions, several studies have demonstrated that percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) of the unprotected LMCA is feasible and appears to be an alternative strategy in selected patients. However, the safety and efficacy of PCI in patients with unprotected LMCA stenosis are still a matter of debate.
Previous studies have demonstrated the safety and feasibility of unprotected LMCA intervention using bare metal stents (BMS). There was a favorable initial outcome after LMCA intervention using BMS in low-risk patients. However, in-stent restenosis after BMS implantation has emerged as the interference to widely perform PCI for unprotected LMCA lesions and the most important reason for selection of bypass surgery as the first choice for treating LMCA stenosis. In-stent restenosis in these patients not only influences long-term survival, but also make repeat intervention more complex. Despite endeavors to decrease in-stent restenosis after LMCA intervention using BMS, such as aggressive debulking atherectomy, the restenosis rate still remains at 20-30%. The sirolimus-eluting stent (SES) (Cypher, Cordis, Johnson & Johnson Corp, Miami, Florida) markedly decreases in-stent restenosis in elective patients with relatively simple coronary lesions. In real-world practice using SES, patients undergoing SES implantation were treated with a less restrictive interventional approach. However, the results are very promising similar to the randomized controlled trials. These findings warrant new studies to compare the efficacy of SES for more complex lesion subsets including LMCA disease with coronary artery bypass graft (CABG).
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
The patient has a known hypersensitivity or contraindication to any of the following medications:
Systemic (intravenous) Sirolimus, paclitaxel or ABT-578 use within 12 months.
Any previous PCI within 1 year
Previous bypass surgery
Any previous PCI of a LMCA or ostial left circumflex artery or ostial left anterior descending artery lesion within 1 year
Intention to treat more than one totally occluded major epicardial vessel
Acute MI patients within 1 week
Patients with EF<30%.
Patients with cardiogenic shock
Any disabled stroke with neurological deficit or any cerebrovascular accident within 6 months
Creatinine level > 2.0mg/dL or dependence on dialysis.
Severe hepatic dysfunction (AST and ALT > 3 times upper normal reference values).
Gastrointestinal or genitourinary bleeding within the prior 3 months, or major surgery within 2 months.
History of bleeding diathesis or known coagulopathy (including heparin-induced thrombocytopenia), or will refuse blood transfusions.
Current known current platelet count <100,000 cells/mm3 or Hgb <10 g/dL.
An elective surgical procedure is planned that would necessitate interruption of thienopyridines during the first 1 year post enrollment.
Non-cardiac co-morbid conditions are present with life expectancy <1 year or that may result in protocol non-compliance (per site investigator's medical judgment).
Patients who are actively participating in another drug or device investigational study, which have not completed the primary endpoint follow-up period.
Subject unable or unwilling to follow-up with visits required by protocol
Female of childbearing potential, unless a recent pregnancy test is negative, who possibly plan to become pregnant any time after enrollment into this study
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
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1,454 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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