Aims: There have been recent concerns regarding the long-term safety of the first generation of drug-eluting stents, which utilised a permanent polymer coating for drug delivery. SERIES I is a prospective, non-randomised, first-in-man open label study with the biodegradable polymer-based Supralimus sirolimus eluting stent (Sahajanand Medical Technologies Pvt. Ltd, India) for the treatment of patients with coronary artery lesions.
Methods and results: One hundred patients were treated with 126 Supralimus stents (mean lesion length 10.5 +/- 4.3 mm, mean reference vessel diameter 2.66 +/- 0.62 mm). The pre-specified primary endpoint was angiographic binary in-stent restenosis at six months. Secondary endpoints were device-orientated major adverse clinical events (MACE; defined as a composite of cardiac death, nonfatal myocardial infarction [Q-wave and Non-Q wave], or clinically-justified target vessel revascularisation) at 30 days, nine months and 30 months. Angiographic follow-up in a pre-specified subgroup of 60 patients at six months showed binary angiographic restenosis rates of 0% (in-stent) and 1.7% (in-segment). The in-stent late loss was 0.09 +/- 0.37 mm. MACE rates were 0% after one month, 6% at 9-month follow-up and 7% after 30 months follow-up.
Conclusions: The biodegradable-polymer-based sirolimus-eluting stent (Supralimus) is effective in inhibiting neointimal hyperplasia.