Alexander Sheehy
Erasmus University Rotterdam
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Jacc-cardiovascular Imaging | 2010
Akira Murata; David Wallace-Bradley; Armando Tellez; Carlos L. Alviar; Michael S. Aboodi; Alexander Sheehy; Leslie Coleman; Laura Perkins; Gaku Nakazawa; Gary S. Mintz; Greg L. Kaluza; Renu Virmani; Juan F. Granada
OBJECTIVES This study aimed to evaluate the accuracy of optical coherence tomography (OCT) in analyzing the neointimal response to several drug-eluting stent (DES) types by comparing OCT images acquired in vivo with corresponding histological specimens using a nondiseased porcine injury model. BACKGROUND Optical coherence tomography is emerging as a promising endovascular imaging tool for the evaluation of neointimal response after DES implantation. METHODS A total of 84 stents were implanted-22 ML Vision (Abbott Vascular, Santa Clara, California), 22 Xience V (Abbott Vascular), 20 Endeavor (Medtronic, Minneapolis, Minnesota), and 20 Taxus Liberté (Boston Scientific, Natick, Massachusetts) stents-in normal porcine coronary arteries and were harvested at 28 (n=42) and 90 (n=42) days, with the different stent types equally distributed between the 2 follow-up periods. At termination, morphometric evaluation using OCT imaging was performed in all stented arteries. Histological morphometric analysis was performed and correlated with OCT. RESULTS A total of 622 OCT-histology matched frames acquired from all stent designs were analyzed. The luminal (13.7%) and stent (6.1%) areas were consistently larger by OCT compared with histology. The mean neointimal thickness was very similar between techniques (approximately 3.27% variation). There was a high correlation between OCT and histology for the evaluation of neointimal area (R2=0.804), luminal area (R2=0.825), and neointimal thickness (R2=0.789). Correlation for total stent area was poor (R2=0.352). Although the proportion of individual struts determined to be uncovered by OCT and histology was similar, there was significant variation in the estimation of strut coverage between OCT and histology when the neointimal thickness was between 20 and 80 microm. This variation converged for neointimal thicknesses between 80 and 100 microm. CONCLUSIONS Subtle differences in neointimal formation induced by current DES can be reproducibly analyzed in vivo by OCT. However, OCT measurement of stent area seems to have less correlation with histology.
Jacc-cardiovascular Interventions | 2014
Jennifer P. Lane; Laura Perkins; Alexander Sheehy; Erica Pacheco; Michael Frie; Byron Lambert; Richard Rapoza; Renu Virmani
OBJECTIVES Using intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) and histomorphometry, this study sought to evaluate the potential of nonatherosclerotic porcine coronary arteries to undergo progressive lumen gain and a return of pulsatility after implantation with an everolimus-eluting bioresorbable vascular scaffold (BVS). BACKGROUND Unique benefits such as lumen gain and restored vasomotion have been demonstrated clinically after treatment with BVS; however, a more rigorous demonstration of these benefits with a randomized clinical trial has not yet been conducted. METHODS Seventy nonatherosclerotic swine received 109 everolimus-eluting BVS and 70 everolimus-eluting metal stents randomized among the main coronary arteries. Arteries were evaluated in vivo by angiography and IVUS and post-mortem by histomorphometry at time points from 1 to 42 months. RESULTS From 1 to 6 months, both BVS- and everolimus-eluting metal stent-implanted arteries demonstrated stable lumen areas (LAs). From 12 months to 42 months, there was a progressive increase in the LA of arteries implanted with a BVS as assessed by histomorphometry and IVUS. This lumen gain in the implanted segment corresponded to an increase in the reference vessel LA. Normalization in the in-segment LA (LA:reference vessel LA) was observed qualitatively by angiography and quantitatively by IVUS. Additionally, BVS-implanted arteries demonstrated restored in-segment pulsatility on the basis of IVUS assessment of the differences in the mid-scaffold area between end-diastole to end-systole. CONCLUSIONS Starting at 12 months, BVS-implanted porcine coronary arteries underwent progressive lumen gain and showed restored pulsatility. These benefits demonstrated preclinically may translate into improvements in long-term clinical outcomes for patients treated with BVS compared with conventional drug-eluting stents.
Jacc-cardiovascular Interventions | 2015
Fumiyuki Otsuka; Qi Cheng; Kazuyuki Yahagi; Eduardo Acampado; Alexander Sheehy; Saami K. Yazdani; Kenichi Sakakura; Kristina Euller; Laura Perkins; Frank D. Kolodgie; Renu Virmani; Michael Joner
OBJECTIVES This study sought to evaluate whether the permanent fluoropolymer-coated Xience Xpedition everolimus-eluting stent (Xience-EES) exhibits lower acute thrombogenicity compared with contemporary drug-eluting stents (DES) with biodegradable polymer coatings in an acute swine shunt model. BACKGROUND Previous pre-clinical and clinical experience suggests that several factors may influence the predisposition for acute thrombus formation of polymer-coated DES, including stent design and the polymer coating technology. It remains unclear whether relevant differences exist with respect to acute thrombogenicity, particularly between current commercial stent designs using permanent polymers and those using biodegradable polymers. METHODS An ex vivo carotid to jugular arteriovenous porcine shunt model involving a test circuit of 3 in-line stents, was used to test acute thrombogenicity, where Xience-EES (n = 24) was compared with 4 CE-marked DES with biodegradable polymer coatings (BioMatrix Flex, Synergy, Nobori, and Orsiro [n = 6 each]). After 1 h of circulation, platelet aggregation in whole mount stents was evaluated by confocal microscopy with immunofluorescent staining against dual platelet markers (CD61/CD42b) along with scanning electron microscopy. RESULTS Xience-EES showed the least percentage of thrombus-occupied area as compared with the biodegradable polymer-coated DES, with a significant difference compared with BioMatrix Flex and Synergy (mean differences: [BioMatrix Flex: 15.54, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 11.34 to 19.75, p < 0.001; Synergy: 8.64, 95% CI: 4.43 to 12.84, p < 0.001; Nobori: 4.22, 95% CI: -0.06 to 8.49, p = 0.055; Orsiro: 2.95, 95% CI: -1.26 to 7.15, p = 0.286). The number of cell nuclei on strut surfaces was also the least in Xience-EES, with a significant difference relative to BioMatrix Flex, Nobori, and Orsiro (mean ratios: BioMatrix Flex: 4.73, 95% CI: 2.46 to 9.08, p < 0.001; Synergy: 1.44, 95% CI: 0.75 to 2.76, p = 0.51; Nobori: 5.97, 95% CI: 3.11 to 11.44, p < 0.001; Orsiro: 5.16, 95% CI: 2.69 to 9.91, p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS Xience-EESs overall design confers acute thromboresistance relative to contemporary DES with biodegradable coatings, with less platelet aggregation versus BioMatrix Flex and Synergy, and less inflammatory cell attachment versus BioMatrix Flex, Nobori, and Orsiro, in an ex vivo swine shunt model, which lends support to reported clinical findings of lower early stent thrombosis.
Eurointervention | 2015
Christos V. Bourantas; Patrick W. Serruys; Shimpei Nakatani; Yao-Jun Zhang; Vasim Farooq; Roberto Diletti; Jurgen Ligthart; Alexander Sheehy; Robert-Jan van Geuns; Dougal McClean; Bernard Chevalier; Stephan Windecker; Jacques J. Koolen; John Ormiston; Robert Whitbourn; Richard Rapoza; Susan Veldhof; Yoshinobu Onuma; Hector M. Garcia-Garcia
AIMS To evaluate the implications of an Absorb bioresorbable vascular scaffold (Absorb BVS) on the morphology of the superficial plaques. METHODS AND RESULTS Forty-six patients who underwent Absorb BVS implantation and 20 patients implanted with bare metal stents (BMS) who had serial optical coherence tomographic examination at baseline and follow-up were included in this analysis. The thin-capped fibroatheromas (TCFA) were identified in the device implantation regions and in the adjacent native coronary segments. Within all regions, circumferential locations of TCFA and calcific tissues were identified, and the neointimal thickness was measured at follow-up. At six to 12-month follow-up, only 8% of the TCFA detected at baseline were still present in the Absorb BVS and 27% in the BMS implantation segment (p=0.231). Sixty percent of the TCFA in native segments did not change their phenotype at follow-up. At short-term follow-up, significant reduction in the lumen area of the BMS was noted, which was higher compared to that reported in the Absorb BVS group (-2.11±1.97 mm2 vs. -1.34±0.99 mm2, p=0.026). In Absorb BVS, neointima tissue continued to develop at midterm follow-up (2.17±0.48 mm2 vs. 1.38±0.52 mm2, p<0.0001) and covered the underlying tissues without compromising the luminal dimensions (5.93±1.49 mm2 vs. 6.14±1.49 mm2, p=0.571) as it was accommodated by the expanded scaffold (8.28±1.74 mm2 vs. 7.67±1.28 mm2, p<0.0001). CONCLUSIONS Neointimal tissue develops following either Absorb BVS or BMS implantation and shields lipid tissues. The neointimal response in the BMS causes a higher reduction of luminal dimensions compared to the Absorb BVS. Thus, Absorb BVS may have a value in the invasive re-capping of high-risk plaques.
Cardiovascular Diabetology | 2012
Alexander Sheehy; Steven Hsu; Amelie Bouchard; Pablo Lema; Claudine Savard; Louis-Georges Guy; Julie Tai; Igor Polyakov
BackgroundDiabetes remains a significant risk factor for restenosis/thrombosis following stenting. Although vascular healing responses following drug-eluting stent (DES) treatment have been characterized previously in healthy animals, comparative assessments of different DES in a large animal model with isolated features of diabetes remains limited. We aimed to comparatively assess the vascular response to paclitaxel-eluting (PES) and everolimus-eluting (EES) stents in a porcine coronary model of streptozotocin (STZ)-induced type I diabetes.MethodTwelve Yucatan swine were induced hyperglycemic with a single STZ dose intravenously to ablate pancreatic β-cells. After two months, each animal received one XIENCE V® (EES) and one Taxus Liberte (PES) stent, respectively, in each coronary artery. After three months, vascular healing was assessed by angiography and histomorphometry. Comparative in vitro effects of everolimus and paclitaxel (10-5 M–10-12 M) after 24 hours on carotid endothelial (EC) and smooth muscle (SMC) cell viability under hyperglycemic (42 mM) conditions were assayed by ELISA. Caspase-3 fluorescent assay was used to quantify caspase-3 activity of EC treated with everolimus or paclitaxel (10-5 M, 10-7 M) for 24 hours.ResultsAfter 3 months, EES reduced neointimal area (1.60 ± 0.41 mm, p < 0.001) with trends toward reduced % diameter stenosis (11.2 ± 9.8%, p = 0.12) and angiographic late-loss (0.28 ± 0.30 mm, p = 0.058) compared to PES (neointimal area: 2.74 ± 0.58 mm, % diameter stenosis: 19.3 ± 14.7%, late loss: 0.55 ± 0.53 mm). Histopathology revealed increased inflammation scores (0.54 ± 0.21 vs. 0.08 ± 0.05), greater medial necrosis grade (0.52 ± 0.26 vs. 0.0 ± 0.0), and persistently elevated fibrin scores (1.60 ± 0.60 vs. 0.63 ± 0.41) with PES compared to EES (p < 0.05). In vitro, paclitaxel significantly increased (p < 0.05) EC/SMC apoptosis/necrosis at high concentrations (≥10-7 M), while everolimus did not affect EC/SMC apoptosis/necrosis within the dose range tested. In ECs, paclitaxel (10-5 M) significantly increased caspase-3 activity (p < 0.05) while everolimus had no effect.ConclusionAfter 3 months, both DES exhibited signs of delayed healing in a STZ-induced diabetic swine model. PES exhibited greater neointimal area, increased inflammation, greater medial necrosis, and persistent fibrin compared to EES. Differential effects of everolimus and paclitaxel on vascular cell viability may potentially be a factor in regulating delayed healing observed with PES. Further investigation of molecular mechanisms may aid future development of stent-based therapies in treating coronary artery disease in diabetic patients.
Circulation | 2014
Shimpei Nakatani; Yoshinobu Onuma; Yuki Ishibashi; Jeroen Eggermont; Yao-Jun Zhang; Carlos M. Campos; Yun Kyeong Cho; Shengnan Liu; Jouke Dijkstra; Johan H. C. Reiber; Laura Perkins; Alexander Sheehy; Susan Veldhof; Richard Rapoza; Gerrit-Anne van Es; Hector M. Garcia-Garcia; Robert-Jan van Geuns; Patrick W. Serruys; Stephan Windecker
BACKGROUND Quantitative light intensity analysis of the strut core by optical coherence tomography (OCT) may enable assessment of changes in the light reflectivity of the bioresorbable polymeric scaffold from polymer to provisional matrix and connective tissues, with full disappearance and integration of the scaffold into the vessel wall. The aim of this report was to describe the methodology and to apply it to serial human OCT images post procedure and at 6, 12, 24 and 36 months in the ABSORB cohort B trial. METHODS AND RESULTS In serial frequency-domain OCT pullbacks, corresponding struts at different time points were identified by 3-dimensional foldout view. The peak and median values of light intensity were measured in the strut core by dedicated software. A total of 303 corresponding struts were serially analyzed at 3 time points. In the sequential analysis, peak light intensity increased gradually in the first 24 months after implantation and reached a plateau (relative difference with respect to baseline [%Dif]: 61.4% at 12 months, 115.0% at 24 months, 110.7% at 36 months), while the median intensity kept increasing at 36 months (%Dif: 14.3% at 12 months, 75.0% at 24 months, 93.1% at 36 months). CONCLUSIONS Quantitative light intensity analysis by OCT was capable of detecting subtle changes in the bioresorbable strut appearance over time, and could be used to monitor the bioresorption and integration process of polylactide struts.
Circulation | 2014
Shimpei Nakatani; Yoshinobu Onuma; Yuki Ishibashi; Jeroen Eggermont; Yao-Jun Zhang; Carlos M. Campos; Yun Kyeong Cho; Shengnan Liu; Jouke Dijkstra; Johan H. C. Reiber; Laura Perkins; Alexander Sheehy; Susan Veldhof; Richard Rapoza; Gerrit-Anne van Es; Hector M. Garcia-Garcia; Robert-Jan van Geuns; Patrick W. Serruys
BACKGROUND Quantitative light intensity analysis of the strut core by optical coherence tomography (OCT) may enable assessment of changes in the light reflectivity of the bioresorbable polymeric scaffold from polymer to provisional matrix and connective tissues, with full disappearance and integration of the scaffold into the vessel wall. The aim of this report was to describe the methodology and to apply it to serial human OCT images post procedure and at 6, 12, 24 and 36 months in the ABSORB cohort B trial. METHODS AND RESULTS In serial frequency-domain OCT pullbacks, corresponding struts at different time points were identified by 3-dimensional foldout view. The peak and median values of light intensity were measured in the strut core by dedicated software. A total of 303 corresponding struts were serially analyzed at 3 time points. In the sequential analysis, peak light intensity increased gradually in the first 24 months after implantation and reached a plateau (relative difference with respect to baseline [%Dif]: 61.4% at 12 months, 115.0% at 24 months, 110.7% at 36 months), while the median intensity kept increasing at 36 months (%Dif: 14.3% at 12 months, 75.0% at 24 months, 93.1% at 36 months). CONCLUSIONS Quantitative light intensity analysis by OCT was capable of detecting subtle changes in the bioresorbable strut appearance over time, and could be used to monitor the bioresorption and integration process of polylactide struts.
Jacc-cardiovascular Interventions | 2016
Bill D. Gogas; James J. Benham; Steve Hsu; Alexander Sheehy; David J. Lefer; Traci Goodchild; David J. Polhemus; Yasir Bouchi; Olivia Y. Hung; Sang-Yong Yoo; Udit Joshi; Don P. Giddens; Alessandro Veneziani; Arshed A. Quyyumi; Richard Rapoza; Spencer B. King; Habib Samady
OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to assess and compare in vivo the restoration of vasomotor function following Absorb bioresorbable vascular scaffold (BVS) (Abbott Vascular, Santa Clara, California) and metallic Xience V (XV) (Abbott Vascular, Santa Clara, California) stent implantations in porcine coronary arteries at 1 and 2 years. BACKGROUND Drug-eluting metallic coronary stents induce sustained vasomotor dysfunction, and preliminary observations from arteries with bioresorbable scaffolds have indicated partially restored vasoreactivity. METHODS A total of 15 Absorb BVS (3.0 × 18.0 mm) and 14 XV (3.0 × 18.0 mm or 3.0 × 12.0 mm) stents were randomly implanted in the main coronaries of 12 nonatherosclerotic swine. The effect of implant on vasomotor performance (constrictive and expansive) was measured in the stented/scaffolded segments and the 5-mm proximal and distal adjacent segments in vivo by angiography assessing mean luminal diameter changes following infusion of vasoactive agents at 1 year (n = 6) and 2 years (n = 6) as well as ex vivo at 2 years using a tissue chamber apparatus. Endothelial cell function and smooth muscle cell phenotype gene marker levels were evaluated with quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction. RESULTS The scaffolded Absorb BVS segments showed fully restored constrictive response compared with XV implanted vessels at 1 year: -24.30 ± 14.31% versus -1.79 ± 6.57% (p < 0.004) and at 2 years: -28.13 ± 14.60% versus -3.90 ± 6.44% (p < 0.004). The early restoration of vasomotor function within the scaffolded segments reached a peak at 1 year and did not significantly change up to 2 years. The vasoactive responses of Absorb BVS-implanted vessels within the scaffolded segments were similar to those observed within the proximal and distal edge segments at both time points. Conversely, the stented XV segments demonstrated significantly impaired constrictive response compared with the distal XV edges at 1 year: -1.79 ± 6.57% versus -21.89 ± 7.17% (p < 0.0002) and at 2 years: -3.90 ± 6.44% versus -21.93 ± 15.60% (p < 0.03). Ex vivo assessment of contraction induced by PGF2α and relaxation induced by substance P of isolated BVS segments compared with XV-treated segments generated greater contraction force of 3.94 ± 0.97 g versus 1.83 ± 1.03 g (p < 0.05), and endothelial-dependent relaxation reached 35.91 ± 24.74% versus 1.20 ± 3.79% (p < 0.01). Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction gene analysis at 2 years demonstrated increased Connexin 43 messenger ribonucleic acid levels of Absorb BVS-treated vessels compared with XV-treated vessels: 1.92 ± 0.23 versus 0.77 ± 12 (p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS Absorb BVS-implanted coronary arteries demonstrate early functional restoration of the scaffolded and adjacent segments at 1 year, which is preserved up to 2 years.
Eurointervention | 2012
Alexander Sheehy; Roberto Diletti; James P. Oberhauser; Thierry Glauser; Robert A. Harrington; Mary Beth Kossuth; Richard Rapoza; Yoshinobu Onuma; Patrick W. Serruys
AIMS Optical coherence tomography (OCT) of a bioresorbable vascular scaffold (BVS) produces a highly reflective signal outlining struts. This signal interferes with the measurement of strut thickness, as the boundaries cannot be accurately identified, and with the assessment of coverage, because the neointimal backscattering convolutes that of the polymer, frequently making them indistinguishable from one another. We hypothesise that Gaussian line spread functions (LSFs) can facilitate identification of strut boundaries, improving the accuracy of strut thickness measurements and coverage assessment. METHODS AND RESULTS Forty-eight randomly selected BVS struts from 12 patients in the ABSORB Cohort B clinical study and four Yucatan minipigs were analysed at baseline and follow-up (six months in humans, 28 days in pigs). Signal intensities from the raw OCT backscattering were fit to Gaussian LSFs for each interface, from which peak intensity and full-width-at-half-maximum (FWHM) were calculated. Neointimal coverage resulted in significantly different LSFs and higher FWHM values relative to uncovered struts at baseline (p<0.0001). Abluminal polymer-tissue interfaces were also significantly different between baseline and follow-up (p=0.0004 in humans, p<0.0001 in pigs). Using the location of the half-max of the LSF as the polymer-tissue boundary, the average strut thickness was 158±11 µm at baseline and 152±20 µm at six months (p=0.886), not significantly different from nominal strut thickness. CONCLUSIONS Fitting the raw OCT backscattering signal to a Gaussian LSF facilitates identification of the interfaces between BVS polymer and lumen or tissue. Such analysis enables more precise measurement of the strut thickness and an objective assessment of coverage.
Cardiovascular Revascularization Medicine | 2014
Steven Hsu; Eugen Koren; Yen Chan; Mirna Koscec; Alexander Sheehy; Frank D. Kolodgie; Renu Virmani; Debra Feder
PURPOSE The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of everolimus on foam cell (FC) viability, mRNA levels, and inflammatory cytokine production to better understand its potential inhibitory effects on atheroma progression. METHODS AND MATERIALS Human THP1 macrophage-derived FC were formed using acetylated LDL (acLDL, 100 μg/mL) for 72 hours, followed by everolimus treatment (10(-5)-10(-11) M) for 24 hours. FC viability was quantified using fluorescent calcein AM/DAPI staining. FC lysates and media supernatants were analyzed for apoptosis and necrosis using a Cell Death ELISA(PLUS) assay. FC lysates and media supernatants were also analyzed for inflammatory cytokine (IL1β, IL8, MCP1, TNFα) mRNA levels and protein expression using quantitative reverse transcription real-time polymerase chain reaction (QPCR) and a Procarta® immunoassay, respectively. mRNA levels of autophagy (MAP1LC3), apoptosis (survivin, clusterin), and matrix degradation (MMP1, MMP9) markers were evaluated by Quantigene® Plex assay and verified with QPCR. Additionally, hypercholesterolemic rabbits received everolimus-eluting stents (EES) for 28 or 60 days. RAM-11 immunohistochemical staining was performed to compare %RAM-11 positive area between stented sections and unstented proximal sections. Statistical significance was calculated using one-way ANOVA (p≤0.05). RESULTS Calcein AM/DAPI staining showed that FC exposed to everolimus (10(-5) M) had significantly decreased viability compared to control. FC apoptosis was significantly increased at a high dose of everolimus (10(-5)M), with no necrotic effects at any dose tested. Everolimus did not affect endothelial (HUVEC) and smooth muscle (HCASMC) cell apoptosis or necrosis. Everolimus (10(-5)M) significantly increased MAP1LC3, caused an increased trend in clusterin (p=0.10), and significantly decreased survivin and MMP1 mRNA levels in FC. MCP1 cytokine mRNA levels and secreted protein expression was significantly decreased by everolimus (10(-5) M) in FC. Percentage of RAM-11 positive area exhibited a reduction trend within sections stented with EES compared to unstented proximal sections at 60 days (p=0.09). CONCLUSION Everolimus, a potent anti-proliferative agent used in drug-eluting stents and bioresorbable vascular scaffolds, may inhibit atheroma progression and/or promote atheroma stabilization through diminished viability of FC, decreased matrix degradation, and reduced pro-inflammatory cytokine secretion. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY We explored the effects of everolimus on the behavior of human THP1 macrophage-derived foam cells in culture, including cell viability, mRNA levels, and pro-inflammatory cytokine production. We conclude that everolimus, a potent anti-proliferative agent used in drug-eluting stents/bioresorbable vascular scaffolds, may potentially inhibit atheroma progression and/or promote atheroma stabilization through diminished viability of foam cells, decreased matrix degradation, and reduced pro-inflammatory cytokine secretion.