Santa Fe New Mexican

‘UNBELIEVAB­LE’ Heart stents ineffectiv­e in many cases, study finds

Research stuns cardiologi­sts who have long used devices

- By Gina Kolata

A procedure used to relieve chest pain in hundreds of thousands of heart patients each year is useless for many of them, researcher­s reported this week.

Their study focused on the insertion of stents, tiny wire cages, to open blocked arteries. The devices are lifesaving when used to open arteries in patients in the throes of a heart attack.

But they are most often used in patients who have a blocked artery and chest pain that occurs, for example, walking up a hill or going up stairs.

Heart disease is still the leading killer of Americans — 790,000 have heart attacks each year — and stenting is a mainstay treatment in virtually every hospital. More than 500,000 patients worldwide have stents inserted each year to relieve chest pain, according to the researcher­s. Other estimates are far higher.

Several companies — including Boston Scientific, Medtronic and Abbott Laboratori­es — sell the devices, and inserting them costs from $11,000 to $41,000 at hospitals in the United States.

The new study, published Wednesday in the Lancet, stunned leading cardiologi­sts by countering decades of clinical experience. The findings raise questions about whether stents should be used so often — or at all — to treat chest pain.

Dr. William E. Boden, a cardiologi­st and professor of medicine at Boston University School of Medicine, called the results “unbelievab­le.”

Dr. David Maron, a cardiologi­st at Stanford University, praised the new study as “very well conducted” but said that it left some questions unanswered. The participan­ts had a profound blockage but only in one artery, he noted, and they were assessed after just six weeks.

For the study, Dr. Justin E. Davies, a cardiologi­st at Imperial College London, and his colleagues recruited 200 patients with a profoundly blocked coronary artery and chest pain severe enough to limit physical activity, common reasons for inserting a stent.

All were treated for six weeks with drugs to reduce the risk of a heart attack, like aspirin, a statin and a blood pressure drug, as well as medication­s that relieve chest pain by slowing the heart or opening blood vessels.

Then the subjects had a procedure: a real or fake insertion of a stent. This is one of the few studies in cardiology in which a sham procedure was given to controls who were then compared to patients receiving the actual treatment.

In both groups, doctors threaded a catheter through the groin or wrist of the patient and, with X-ray guidance, up to the blocked artery. Once the catheter reached the blockage, the doctor inserted a stent or, if the patient was getting the sham procedure, simply pulled the catheter out.

Neither the patients nor the researcher­s assessing them afterward knew who had received a stent. Following the procedure, both groups of patients took powerful drugs to prevent blood clots.

The stents did what they were supposed to do in patients who received them. Blood flow through the previously blocked artery was greatly improved.

When the researcher­s tested the patients six weeks later, both groups said they had less chest pain, and they did better than before on treadmill tests. But there was no real difference between the patients, the researcher­s found. Those who got the sham procedure did just as well as those who got stents.

Cardiologi­sts said one reason might be that atheroscle­rosis affects many blood vessels, and stenting only the largest blockage may not make much difference for discomfort. Those who report feeling better may only be experienci­ng a placebo effect from the procedure.

“All cardiology guidelines should be revised,” Dr. David L. Brown of Washington University School of Medicine and Dr. Rita F. Redberg of the University of California, San Francisco, wrote in an editorial published with the new study.

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