# Assessment of Paclitaxel Drug-Coated Balloon-Only Angioplasty for Stent Thrombosis: SPARTAN-ST Study

**Authors:** Ioannis Merinopoulos, Bhalraam U, Tharusha Gunawardena, Natasha Corballis, Rajkumar Natarajan, Upul Wickramarachchi, Clint Maart, Sulfi Sreekumar, Chris Sawh, Johannes Reinhold, Trevor Wistow, Alisdair Ryding, Timothy Gilbert, Vassilios S. Vassiliou, Simon C. Eccleshall

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcdd12020059 · 2025-02-05

## TL;DR

This study compares drug-coated balloon angioplasty and drug-eluting stents for treating stent thrombosis and finds similar outcomes.

## Contribution

First study to assess drug-coated balloon-only treatment for stent thrombosis outcomes.

## Key findings

- Drug-coated balloon and drug-eluting stent treatments showed no significant difference in primary endpoint outcomes.
- Diabetes was identified as an adverse predictor, while GPIIbIIIa inhibitor use was favorable.

## Abstract

Background: There are no data regarding the outcomes of patients with stent thrombosis (ST) being treated with drug-coated balloon (DCB) angioplasty. Our aim was to compare the outcomes of patients with ST treated with DCB vs. a drug eluting stent (DES). Methods: In this registry analysis, we identified all patients treated for ST in our institution from June 2011 until November 2019. We excluded patients who died in the cath lab, patients with uncrossable lesions, and patients treated with thrombectomy only. Patient outcomes were obtained from Hospital Episodes Statistics from NHS England. The primary endpoint of this study was the composite of cardiovascular mortality, acute coronary syndrome, or target lesion revascularisation. The data were analysed with Cox regression and Kaplan–Meier estimator plots. Results: A total of 173 patients were identified; 92 treated with DCB-only, 36 with balloon angioplasty (BA), 26 with DES, and 19 with a combination of DES and DCB. We compared the outcomes of 92 patients with DCB versus 20 patients with DES, all of which had presented with late or very late ST. There was no difference between DCB and DES in terms of the primary endpoint (p = 0.06). Multivariate analysis identified diabetes (adverse) and the use of GPIIbIIIa inhibitor (favourable) as the only independent predictors of the primary endpoint. Implantation of a DES was independently associated with worse cardiovascular mortality. Conclusions: This is the first study assessing the outcomes of patients with ST treated with DCB only. It has demonstrated that DCBs are an attractive therapeutic option with a tendency towards favourable outcomes when compared to DESs.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** Paclitaxel (PubChem CID 36314)
- **Diseases:** acute coronary syndrome (MONDO:0005542), diabetes (MONDO:0005015)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** acute coronary syndrome (MESH:D054058), diabetes (MESH:D003920), ST (MESH:D013927), died (MESH:D003643)
- **Chemicals:** GPIIbIIIa inhibitor (-), Paclitaxel (MESH:D017239)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11856968/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11856968