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Published Online
on August 4, 2003

Circulation. 2003
Published online before print August 4, 2003, doi: 10.1161/01.CIR.0000086982.96064.A0
A more recent version of this article appeared on August 12, 2003
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Right arrow Restenosis
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Submitted on May 2, 2003
Revised on June 17, 2003
Accepted on June 18, 2003

Repeat Intracoronary Radiation for Recurrent In-Stent Restenosis in Patients Who Failed Intracoronary Radiation

Ron Waksman MD*, Robert Lew MD, Andrew E. Ajani MD, Augusto D. Pichard MD, Lowell F. Satler MD, Kenneth M. Kent MD, Rosanna Chan PhD, R. Larry White MD, William O. Suddath MD, Ellen Pinnow MS, Rebecca Torguson BcS, Christian Dilcher MD, Roswitha Wolfram MD, and Joseph Lindsay MD

From Washington Hospital Center, Washington, DC.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: ron.waksman{at}medstar.net.

Background--Intracoronary radiation therapy (IRT) is the only proven treatment for in-stent restenosis (ISR). It is, however, associated with a significant failure rate. The present study evaluated the outcomes of patients who underwent repeat intracoronary radiation for recurrent ISR.

Methods and Results--Fifty-one consecutive patients who failed a previous radiation treatment, presented with angina and angiographic evidence of ISR, and were treated with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and repeat radiation to the same segment were studied. Twenty-five patients were treated with gamma radiation in a dose of 15 Gy, and 26 were treated with beta radiation doses of 18.3 to 23 Gy. The mean cumulative dose for this cohort was 39.5±11.9 Gy (range, 29 to 75.6 Gy). The outcomes of those patients were compared with outcomes of 299 patients who also failed initial radiation but were treated with repeat conventional PCI to a previously irradiated segment without repeat radiation. At 9 months after treatment, the repeat-IRT group had lower rates of target lesion revascularization (23.5% versus 54.6%; P<0.001) and major adverse cardiac events, including target vessel revascularization (29.4% versus 61.3%; P<0.001). At 9 months, patients with repeat IRT were free of angiographic and clinical events related to the radiation therapy.

Conclusions--Repeat gamma or beta radiation to treat failed IRT for ISR after conventional PCI is safe and effective at 9 months and should be considered as a therapeutic option for this difficult patient subset.


Key words: radioisotopes • restenosis • stents




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