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Publication
Featured researches published by Hajime Kusano.
European Heart Journal | 2015
Takeshi Kimura; Ken Kozuma; Kengo Tanabe; Sunao Nakamura; Masahisa Yamane; Toshiya Muramatsu; Shigeru Saito; Junji Yajima; Nobuhisa Hagiwara; Kazuaki Mitsudo; Jeffrey J. Popma; Patrick W. Serruys; Yoshinobu Onuma; Shihwa S. Ying; Sherry S. Cao; Peter Staehr; Wai-Fung Cheong; Hajime Kusano; Gregg W. Stone
AIMS Theoretically, bioresorbable vascular scaffolds (BVSs) may provide superior long-term results compared with permanent metallic drug-eluting stents (DESs). However, whether BVSs are as safe and effective as metallic DESs prior to complete bioresorption is unknown. METHODS AND RESULTS ABSORB Japan was a single-blind, multicentre, active-controlled, randomized trial designed to support regulatory approval of the Absorb BVS in Japan. Eligible patients with one or two de novo lesions in different epicardial vessels were randomized at 38 Japanese sites in a 2:1 ratio to Absorb BVS vs. cobalt-chromium everolimus-eluting stents (CoCr-EESs). The primary endpoint was target lesion failure [TLF: a composite of cardiac death, myocardial infarction attributable to target vessel, or ischaemia-driven target lesion revascularization (ID-TLR)] at 12 months, powered for non-inferiority. The major secondary endpoint was angiographic in-segment late lumen loss (LLL) at 13 months. A total of 400 patients were randomized to BVSs (266 patients and 275 lesions) or CoCr-EESs (134 patients and 137 lesions). TLF through 12 months was 4.2% with BVSs and 3.8% with CoCr-EESs [difference (upper one-sided 95% confidence limit) = 0.39% (3.95%); Pnon-inferiority < 0.0001]. Definite/probable stent/scaffold thrombosis at 12 months occurred in 1.5% of the patients with both devices (P = 1.0), and ID-TLR for restenosis was infrequent (1.1% with BVSs and 1.5% with CoCr-EESs, P = 1.0). With 96.0% angiographic follow-up, in-segment LLL at 13 months was 0.13 ± 0.30 mm with BVSs and 0.12 ± 0.32 mm with CoCr-EESs [difference (upper one-sided 95% confidence limit) = 0.01 (0.07); Pnon-inferiority < 0.0001). CONCLUSION In the ABSORB Japan randomized trial, 12-month clinical and 13-month angiographic outcomes of BVSs were comparable to CoCr-EESs. CLINICAL REGISTRATION ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01844284.
Eurointervention | 2016
Yoshinobu Onuma; Yohei Sotomi; Hiroki Shiomi; Yukio Ozaki; Atsuro Namiki; Satoshi Yasuda; Takafumi Ueno; Kenji Ando; Jungo Furuya; Keiichi Igarashi; Ken Kozuma; Kengo Tanabe; Hajime Kusano; Richard Rapoza; Jeffrey J. Popma; Gregg W. Stone; Charles A. Simonton; Patrick W. Serruys; Takeshi Kimura
AIMS We sought to investigate two-year clinical and serial optical coherence tomography (OCT) outcomes after implantation of a fully bioresorbable vascular scaffold (BVS) or a cobalt-chromium everolimus-eluting stent (CoCr-EES). METHODS AND RESULTS In the ABSORB Japan trial, 400 patients were randomised in a 2:1 ratio to BVS (N=266) or CoCr-EES (N=134). A pre-specified OCT subgroup (N=125, OCT-1 group) underwent angio-graphy and OCT post procedure and at two years. Overall, the two-year TLF rates were 7.3% and 3.8% in the BVS and CoCr-EES arms (p=0.18), respectively. Very late scaffold thrombosis (VLST) beyond one year was observed in 1.6% (four cases: all in non-OCT-1 subgroups) of the BVS arm, while there was no VLST in the CoCr-EES arm. In three cases, OCT at the time of or shortly after VLST demonstrated strut discontinuities, malapposition and/or uncovered struts. However, the vessel healing by two-year OCT was nearly complete in both BVS and CoCr-EES arms with almost fully covered struts, and minimal malapposition. The flow area by two-year OCT was smaller in the BVS arm than in the CoCr-EES arm, mainly due to tissue growth inside the device. However, there were no differences between the BVS and CoCr-EES with regard to the quality of homogenous tissues growing inside the devices. CONCLUSIONS The rate of TLF was numerically higher in the BVS arm than in the CoCr-EES arm, although this difference was not statistically significant. VLST was observed only in the BVS arm at a rate of 1.6% between one and two years. Further studies are mandatory to investigate the risk of BVS relative to metallic stents for VLST, and the underlying mechanisms of BVS VLST.
Catheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions | 2012
Louis Cannon; Daniel I. Simon; Jennifer Jones; Roxana Mehran; Hajime Kusano; Zhen Zhang; William Lombardi; F. James Fleischhauer; Marco Costa
Objectives: The SPIRIT Small Vessel (SV) was designed to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the 2.25‐mm XIENCE V everolimus eluting coronary stent system (EECSS), known as the XIENCE nano EECSS, in subjects with SVs and ischemic heart disease. Background: The core sizes of XIENCE V EECSS are associated with low rates of restenosis and thrombosis in the general population, but the XIENCE nano EECSS has not been tested in the United States. Methods: This prospective, single‐arm, open‐label study was conducted at 33 centers and in 150 patients in the United States. The primary endpoint was the target lesion failure (TLF) rate at 1 year, required to meet the prespecified performance goal (PG) of 20.4%, derived from historical data. Results: The mean patient age was 63 years, 38% were women, 39.2% were diabetic, 49.3% had multivessel disease, and the reference vessel diameter was 2.13 ± 0.23 mm. The 1‐year TLF rate was 8.1% in with an upper limit of the one‐sided 95% confidence interval of 13.0%, which met the PG of 20.4% (P < 0.0001). At 1 year, the rate of cardiac death was 1.5%, the target vessel myocardial infarction rate was 1.5%, and clinically indicated target lesion revascularization rate was 5.1%. The 8‐month angiographic in‐stent late loss was 0.2 ± 0.4 mm, respectively. The 1‐year academic research consortium defined definite/probable stent thrombosis rate was 1.5%. Conclusions: Based on the 1‐year clinical and 8‐month angiographic SPIRIT SV data, the XIENCE nano EECSS is considered safe and effective in the treatment of SVs.
American Journal of Cardiology | 2010
Takao Shimohama; Junya Ako; Masao Yamasaki; Hiromasa Otake; Ichizo Tsujino; Takao Hasegawa; Daisaku Nakatani; Ryota Sakurai; Hyeonsoo Chang; Hajime Kusano; Katsuhisa Waseda; Yasuhiro Honda; Gregg W. Stone; Shigeru Saito; Peter J. Fitzgerald; Krishnankutty Sudhir
The aim of this study was to evaluate the vascular response after everolimus-eluting stent (EES) implantation in the SPIRIT III Japan Registry (JAPAN) compared to EES implantation in the SPIRIT III United States (USA) trial using serial intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) analysis. Data were obtained from the JAPAN and the randomized EES arm of the USA trial. Serial (postprocedure and 8-month follow-up) IVUS analysis was available in 199 lesions (JAPAN 82, USA 117) of 183 patients (JAPAN 73, USA 110). Although no difference was observed in vessel size in the reference segment between the 2 groups, postprocedure minimum lumen area and stent volume index were significantly greater in the JAPAN arm (minimum lumen area 5.8 +/- 2.2 vs 5.1 +/- 1.5 mm(2), p = 0.03; stent volume index 7.0 +/- 2.4 vs 6.3 +/- 1.7 mm(3)/mm, p = 0.03). Postprocedure incomplete stent apposition (ISA) was less frequently observed in the JAPAN arm (15.9% vs 33.3%, p = 0.006), possibly related to higher maximum balloon pressure and/or more postdilatation without excess tissue prolapse or edge dissection. In the JAPAN arm, percent neointimal obstruction and maximum percent cross-sectional narrowing were significantly lower at 8-month follow-up (percent neointimal obstruction 3.5 +/- 4.2% vs 6.8 +/- 6.4%, p = 0.0004). Late acquired ISA was infrequent in the 2 arms. In conclusion, comparative IVUS analysis between the JAPAN and USA arms showed more optimal stent deployment in the JAPAN arm as evidenced by the lower incidence of postprocedure ISA and larger minimum lumen area after the procedure. Moreover, there was less neointimal hyperplasia in patients with EES implants from the JAPAN arm compared to the USA arm.
Circulation | 2016
Jiro Aoki; Ken Kozuma; Masaki Awata; Mamoru Nanasato; Nobuo Shiode; Kengo Tanabe; Junichi Yamaguchi; Hajime Kusano; Hong Nie; Takeshi Kimura; Promus Pms Investigators
BACKGROUND The Cobalt-Chromium Everolimus-Eluting Stent (CoCr-EES) Post-marketing Surveillance (PMS) is a prospective multicenter registry designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of XIENCE V/PROMUS everolimus-eluting stents in routine clinical practice at 47 centers representative of the clinical environment in Japan. METHODSANDRESULTS We enrolled 2,010 consecutive patients (2,649 lesions) who underwent PCI using CoCr-EES. Clinical outcomes were evaluated for up to 3 years. Clinical follow-up was available in 1,930 patients (96%) at 3 years. Major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) occurred in 6.8% of patients, including cardiac death (1.7%), myocardial infarction (1.5%), and clinically driven target lesion revascularization (CD-TLR, 4.2%). Late CD-TLR rate was 0.8% from 1 to 2 years, and 0.5% from 2 to 3 years. Definite or probable stent thrombosis occurred in 7 patients (0.3%) up to 1 year. There was no very late definite or probable stent thrombosis from 1 to 3 years. Significant independent predictors for MACE were hemodialysis, prior coronary intervention, triple-vessel coronary artery disease, and age >70 years. CONCLUSIONS Three-year clinical outcomes from the CoCr-EES PMS demonstrated a low incidence of clinical events. There was no major concern about very late stent thrombosis or late catch-up phenomenon in patients treated with EES in routine clinical practice in Japan.
Eurointervention | 2017
Masanobu Ohya; Kazushige Kadota; Yohei Sotomi; Ken Kozuma; Kengo Tanabe; Masaaki Uematsu; Tomohiro Kawasaki; Yoshihiro Morino; Tetsuya Tobaru; Koichi Nakao; Kouichi Tachibana; Koichi Kishi; Yoshisato Shibata; Shih-Wa Ying; Hajime Kusano; Gregg W. Stone; Jeffery J. Popma; Yoshinobu Onuma; Patrick W. Serruys; Takeshi Kimura
AIMS We aimed to investigate the impact of lesion calcification on angiographic outcomes after Absorb everolimus-eluting bioresorbable vascular scaffold (BVS) implantation in comparison with those after cobalt-chromium everolimus-eluting stent (CoCr-EES) implantation. METHODS AND RESULTS The present post hoc analysis of the ABSORB Japan randomised trial compared post-procedure and 13-month angiographic outcomes between patients implanted with BVS and CoCr-EES based on the presence or absence of calcification, excluding extremely heavily calcified lesions or lesions requiring rotational atherectomy. The study population comprised 384 patients with 384 lesions (including 114 lesions [29.7%] with moderate or severe calcification), classified into two subgroups: calcification, 114 (BVS: n=72 and CoCr-EES: n=42) and non-calcification, 270 (BVS: n=181 and CoCr-EES: n=89). Follow-up angiography was performed in 94.8% of patients. Both post-procedure and follow-up in-device minimal lumen diameters were comparable in both the BVS arm (calcification vs. non-calcification: 2.43±0.32 mm vs. 2.43±0.39 mm, p=0.91 and 2.17±0.49 mm vs. 2.27±0.47 mm, p=0.17) and in the CoCr-EES arm (2.68±0.34 mm vs. 2.65±0.42 mm, p=0.62 and 2.57±0.52 mm vs. 2.47±0.53 mm, p=0.36). CONCLUSIONS Moderate or severe lesion calcification (excluding patients with extremely heavily calcified lesions or lesions requiring rotational atherectomy) does not negatively affect angiographic outcomes at both post-procedure and 13-month follow-up after BVS implantation.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2018
Kozo Okada; Yasuhiro Honda; Hideki Kitahara; Masayasu Ikutomi; Ryo Kameda; M. Brooke Hollak; Paul G. Yock; Hajime Kusano; Wai-Fung Cheong; Sudhir K; Peter J. Fitzgerald; Takeshi Kimura
Scaffold under-expansion is associated with late adverse outcomes after polymeric scaffold (BVS) implantation, while underlying mechanism of this association remains unknown. The IVUS cohort of ABSORB JAPAN trial was designed to characterize detailed device performance and long-term vessel response
Jacc-cardiovascular Interventions | 2018
Kozo Okada; Yasuhiro Honda; Hideki Kitahara; Kyuhachi Otagiri; Shigemitsu Tanaka; M. Brooke Hollak; Paul G. Yock; Jeffrey J. Popma; Hajime Kusano; Wai-Fung Cheong; Krishnankutty Sudhir; Peter J. Fitzgerald; Takeshi Kimura
Cardiovascular Intervention and Therapeutics | 2018
Jiro Aoki; Ken Kozuma; Masaki Awata; Mamoru Nanasato; Nobuo Shiode; Kengo Tanabe; Junichi Yamaguchi; Hajime Kusano; Hong Nie; Takeshi Kimura; Promus Pms Investigators
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2018
Ryo Kameda; Kozo Okada; Hideki Kitahara; M. Brooke Hollak; Paul G. Yock; Jeffrey J. Popma; Hajime Kusano; Wai-Fung Cheong; Krishna Sudhir; Yasuhiro Honda; Takeshi Kimura