STENTYS Self-Apposing Stent performs well in new coronary indications

STENTYS (FR0010949404 – STNT), a medical technology company commercializing in Europe the world's first and only Self-Apposing® Stent to treat acute myocardial infarction (AMI), announced new data this week in indications outside of myocardial infarction. Results from the OPEN II study and a series from the Amsterdam Medical Center were presented during the TCT (Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics) conference in San Francisco. 
 
OPEN II is a prospective, single-arm trial that enrolled 217 patients treated for chest pain due to a narrowing at a coronary artery bifurcation with the STENTYS paclitaxel-eluting stent in 21 hospitals in 6 European countries. The primary endpoint of MACE (composite of cardiac death, myocardial infarction, emergent by-pass surgery and target lesion revascularization) at 6 months was 10.1% for the whole study group, with a rate of 6.9% in patients with simple lesions. These results were presented by Christoph K. Naber, M.D., Ph.D. of Contilia Heart 
and Vascular Center (Essen, Germany), Principal Investigator of the study, and fare favorably compared to the landmark trials in this area. 
 
“This large study in a highly complex group of patients with challenging lesions confirms that the STENTYS stent can be used in routine practice, and leads to very good results compared to those published historically,” said Dr. Naber. 
 
Huangling Lu, M.D., from Amsterdam Medical Center (Amsterdam, the Netherlands) also presented a series of 87 patients treated with STENTYS at her institution. This series enrolled primarily patients with atypical anatomy: 53% had aneurysmatic or ectactic (dilated) vessels, 31% had tapered vessels, 23% had large vessels (above 4.5mm) and 10% had by-pass grafts. At 12 months, the MACE rate was 4.7%. 
 
“The Self-Apposing stent is the only available product that can conform to complex, non-cylindrical vessel anatomy, as detailed on its recently extended CE Mark label,” said Gonzague Issenmann, CEO and co-founder of STENTYS. “These data will further support the marketing of our product in these indications in Europe and the Middle East.” 
 
Coronary arteries generally have cylindrical shape and uniform diameters, but can vary greatly in some patients. In these cases, conventional stents often cannot maintain contact to the artery wall, resulting in inadequate implantation called malapposition which can lead to adverse clinical events and heart attacks. The STENTYS Self-Apposing Stent is engineered to solve the dilemma of artery diameter discrepancy. Its flexible, self expanding design takes the shape of the patient’s unique vessel anatomy and perfectly apposes to the irregular 
contours of a blood vessel.