Pathological mechanisms of fatal late coronary stent thrombosis in humans

A Farb, AP Burke, FD Kolodgie, R Virmani - Circulation, 2003 - Am Heart Assoc
A Farb, AP Burke, FD Kolodgie, R Virmani
Circulation, 2003Am Heart Assoc
Background—Coronary stent deployment is associated with a low incidence of acute
thrombosis. However, late stent thrombosis (LST) has likely been underrecognized clinically,
and pathological descriptions are lacking. Methods and Results—LST was defined as an
acute thrombus within a stent that had been in place≥ 30 days. Cases of LST were selected
from a registry of human coronary stents submitted for analysis. Thirteen cases of LST (9
men, 4 women) were identified. The mean duration from implantation to thrombosis was …
Background— Coronary stent deployment is associated with a low incidence of acute thrombosis. However, late stent thrombosis (LST) has likely been underrecognized clinically, and pathological descriptions are lacking.
Methods and Results— LST was defined as an acute thrombus within a stent that had been in place ≥30 days. Cases of LST were selected from a registry of human coronary stents submitted for analysis. Thirteen cases of LST (9 men, 4 women) were identified. The mean duration from implantation to thrombosis was 3.6±3.5 months (range, 1 to 11.9 months). The causes of death were sudden cardiac death (n=10), acute myocardial infarction (n=2), and heart failure (n=1). The pathological mechanisms of LST were as follows: (1) stenting across ostia of major arterial branches (5 cases); (2) exposure to radiation therapy (3 cases); (3) plaque disruption in the nonstented arterial segment within 2 mm of the stent margin (2 cases); (4) stenting of markedly necrotic, lipid-rich plaques with extensive plaque prolapse (2 cases); and (5) diffuse in-stent restenosis (1 case). Twelve cases demonstrated a failure to form a completely healed neointimal layer overlying stent struts. Underlying in-stent restenosis was present in only 4 (31%) of 13 cases.
Conclusions— LST is a potentially fatal complication of coronary stenting. Stenting across branch ostia, disruption of adjacent vulnerable plaques, radiation therapy, and extensive plaque prolapse can precipitate LST. Impaired intimal healing (ie, the failure to form a complete neointimal layer over stent struts) extends the window during which stents are prone to thrombosis.
Am Heart Assoc