IMR Press / RCM / Volume 10 / Issue S2 / DOI: 10.3909/ricm10S20004

Reviews in Cardiovascular Medicine (RCM) is published by IMR Press from Volume 19 Issue 1 (2018). Previous articles were published by another publisher in Open Access under a CC-BY (or CC-BY-NC-ND) licence, and they are hosted by IMR Press on imrpress.com as a courtesy and upon agreement with MedReviews, LLC.

Open Access Review
Treatment of Left Main and Multivessel Disease in the Drug-Eluting Stent Era
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1 Columbia University Medical Center and The Cardiovascular Research Foundation, New York, NY
Rev. Cardiovasc. Med. 2009, 10(S2), 24–33; https://doi.org/10.3909/ricm10S20004
Published: 20 February 2009
Abstract
For decades, the established standard of care for left main and multivessel coronary artery disease has been coronary artery bypass surgery because a significant survival advantage was found in patients revascularized with surgery compared with medical management. Although visions of less invasive strategies to manage this disease arose with the development of percutaneous coronary interventions, surgery proved to provide higher survival rates compared with balloon angioplasty and improved durability, with fewer required repeat revascularizations, compared with use of bare-metal stents. Drug-eluting stents revived hopes of an alternative treatment modality after trials demonstrated their safety and efficacy in other types of high-risk patients. Their widespread on- and off-label use led to several nonrandomized studies and, more recently, to randomized clinical trials comparing drug-eluting stents and bypass surgery.
Keywords
Left main coronary artery
Multivessel coronary artery disease
Bare-metal stents
Drug-eluting stents
CABG
Diabetes mellitus
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