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The introduction of Bare-metal stents (BMS) since 1986 has alleviated the limitations of plain old balloon angioplasty (POBA) related elastic recoil and flow-limiting dissections. Later on, higher restenosis rates due to exaggerated neointimal growth in BMS has led to the development of drug-eluting stents (DES), which elutes an antiproliferative drug to the vessel wall and reduce the restenosis rate. However, late stent thrombosis and restenosis, with a hazard of nearly 2% per year after implantation, remained a concern and motivated the development of drug-coated balloons (DCB).
The advantages of DCB are that leaving no metal in the blood vessel and respect the vessel anatomy.
Recently, studies with the strategy of DCB angioplasty with bailout stenting have demonstrated safety and efficacy for the small-vessel disease. In the BASKET-SMALL 2 trial, which compared SeQuent Please DCB with EES or Taxus DES in the vessels that have reference diameter<3mm, showed that at 12-month follow-up, DCB was non-inferior to DES (MACE [cardiac death, non-fatal myocardial infarction, and target-vessel revascularisation] rates: 8% vs. 9%).
Although some small-scale RCT using surrogate endpoints have reported that no significant difference in MLD or late lumen loss between the two groups in large vessels, up to now, there is no large-scale RCT comparing the clinical outcomes of DCB versus DES in large vessels with de novo lesions.
Therefore, the investigators hypothesized that in patients undergoing non-complex percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for de-novo stenoses, drug-coated balloon (DCB) is non-inferior to drug-eluting stents (DES).
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Patients with an indication for PCI due to acute or chronic coronary syndrome
Patients with de-novo, non-complex lesion* and underwent successful pre-dilation**
Patients who are able to complete the follow-up and compliant to the prescribed medication
Vessels treated<3; stents implanted<3; lesions treated<3 or Total stent length<60 mm 2. Bifurcation does not require 2 stents 3. Non left main lesion 4. Non venous or arterial graft lesion 5. Non chronic total occlusion lesion 6. Do not require the use of atherectomy device
**Successful pre-dilation is defined as fulfilling all the following criteria
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2,272 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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