Clinical study
Enhanced extracellular matrix accumulation in restenosis of coronary arteries after stent deployment

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0735-1097(02)02598-6Get rights and content
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Abstract

Objectives

The goal of this study was to evaluate the cellular and extracellular composition of human coronary arterial in-stent restenosis after various periods of time following stent deployment.

Background

Neointimal in-growth rather than stent recoil is thought to be important for coronary arterial in-stent restenosis. There is only limited data on the cellular and extracellular composition changes with time after stent deployment.

Methods

We analyzed 29 coronary arterial in-stent restenotic tissue samples (14 left anterior descending coronary artery, 10 right coronary artery, and 5 left circumflex artery) retrieved by using directional coronary atherectomy from 25 patients at 0.5 to 23 (mean, 5.7) months after deployment of Palmaz-Schatz stents employing histochemical and immunocytochemical techniques.

Results

Cell proliferation was low (0% to 4%). Myxoid tissue containing extracellular matrix (ECM) enriched with proteoglycans was found in 69% of cases and decreased over time after stenting. Cell-depleted areas were found in 57% of cases and increased with time after stenting. Versican, biglycan, perlecan, and hyaluronan were present with varying individual distributions in all samples. Positive transforming growth factor-β1 staining was found in 80% of cases. Immunostaining with alpha-smooth muscle actin identified the majority of cells as smooth muscle cells with occasional macrophages present (≤12 cells per section).

Conclusions

These data suggest that enhanced ECM accumulation rather than cell proliferation contribute to later stages of in-stent restenosis. Balloon angioplasty of in-stent restenosis may, therefore, fail due to ECM changes during: 1) additional stent expansion, 2) tissue extrusion out of the stent, or 3) tissue compression.

Abbreviations

ECM
extracellular matrix
HABP
hyaluronan binding protein
PBS
phosphate buffered saline
PCNA
proliferating cell nuclear antigen
SMC
smooth muscle cell
TGF-β1
transforming growth factor-β1

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Supported by NIH grant HL-41103 (M.R.) and HL-18645 (T.W.).