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Restenosis Reduced with Brachytherapy

November / December 2002

In the United States more than one million angioplasties are performed each year. "Intracoronary stents, by virtue of their ability to prevent elastic recoil and constrictive remodeling, reduce the frequency of angiographic restenosis to approximately 20 percent.

As a result, routine stenting has become the preferred approach of many cardiologists for the prevention of restenosis and is used in more than 80 percent of current coronary interventions," says Daniel M. Kolansky, MD, interventional cardiologist and director of the Cardiac Care Unit at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. "But restenosis remains a barrier to the long-term durability of this treatment modality, occurring in 15 to 20 percent of patients."

The FDA approved coronary vascular brachytherapy in the fall of 2000. The team of interventional cardiologists and radiation oncologists at Penn Cardiac Care at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania and Penn Presbyterian Medical Center have now performed coronary vascular brachytherapy on more than 150 patients.

"Previously, the alternatives for patients with restenosis were another angioplasty, continued angina or bypass surgery," says Howard C. Herrmann, MD, director of Interventional Cardiology at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. "Brachytherapy has become an important modality in the armamentarium of interventional cardiologists. It can help us avoid the need for multiple angioplasties and open-heart surgery and allows us to treat restenosis more effectively."

Coronary vascular brachytherapy entails administering radiation to the blocked area of the blood vessel. It inhibits cellular proliferation and reduces in-stent restenosis by up to 40 to 60 percent.

Immediately following angioplasty, an interventional cardiologist places a specially designed catheter at the site of the treated stenosis. Radioactive seeds are then advanced into the treatment segment by the radiation oncologist. The seeds are sent out through the catheter hydraulically and remain in the vessel for 2.5 to 4.5 minutes depending on the length of the treated segment, the diameter of the stenotic region, the number of radioactive seeds used, and the planned radiation dose. Brachytherapy also requires the expertise of a radiation physicist in addition to an interventional cardiologist and the cardiac catheterization laboratory staff. The procedure is not available at most hospitals.

Administering the correct dosage of radiation during therapy and placing the patient on prolonged anti-platelet therapy, has been effective in reducing late thrombosis and restenosis from occurring for up to two to five years from angioplasty. "An excessive radiation dose could prohibit proper healing following angioplasty, which requires a small amount of normal tissue growth. Without this tissue growth, the bare metal becomes a prime location for blood clots and other problems," explains Gene Chang, MD, interventional cardiologist at Penn Cardiac Care at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center.

To help adequately measure the distribution of the radiation dose, Peter Bloch, PhD, radiological physicist in Penn's Department of Radiation Oncology has developed an innovative software program in which data can be directly input into a laptop during vascular brachytherapy. "This is ideal for our patients. It allows us to treat much longer segments of blood vessel and make adjustments to the radiation dose distribution during the procedure so we can avoid under and over doses of radiation," says Paul E. Wallner, DO, FACR, radiation oncologist at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.

Although all patients who undergo angioplasty are at risk for in-stent restenosis, patients who are diabetic, have smaller caliber arteries, have extensive blockage or have a long lesion have up to a 40 to 50 percent chance of developing restenosis within six months.

"Pharmaceutical agents and mechanical devices such as cutting, balloons, atherectomy devices and lasers used to treat recurrent plaque build-up from inside the artery wall continue to be an area of intense research. So far, these methods have not proven to be any more effective than redilating and reopening the blocked section of the artery through balloon angioplasty," says Dr. Chang. "Unfortunately, once restenosis occurs it is likely to continue to reoccur." In fact, investigators at Penn recently published a study that found when in-stent restenosis returns very aggressively within three months, the patient is at a much higher risk of having the artery narrow again no matter what treatment is administered.

In the near future, drug-eluting stents (stents coated with an immunosuppressant agent that blocks cell growth) will be available. In ongoing clinical trials in the United States, interim analysis has shown that renarrowing has been reduced to about five percent or lower when a drug-coated stent is utilized.

"Cardiologists will then be faced with determining the best treatment for patients who present with in-stent restenosis after having a drug-coated stent deployed during their initial angioplasty," says Dr. Chang. "Researchers are looking at radiation therapy versus placing another stent. Vascular brachytherapy may still remain the best therapy for these patients."

In general, the risks of the procedure are similar to those of angioplasty. At present, the diameter of the radiation sources and delivery catheter may prevent treatment of very narrow distal vessels, but thinner sources and catheters will be available shortly.

Another question is the unknown effects that radiation may have in later years. "Although a small percentage of patients could develop a problem 10, 15, or 20 years later, patients undergoing coronary vascular brachytherapy are faced with the absolute risk of myocardial infarction or needing cardiac surgery in the near term," says Dr. Wallner.

 


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