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Dive into the research topics where Marco Borghesi is active.

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Featured researches published by Marco Borghesi.


Circulation | 2012

Short- Versus Long-Term Duration of Dual-Antiplatelet Therapy After Coronary Stenting A Randomized Multicenter Trial

Marco Valgimigli; Gianluca Campo; Monia Monti; Pascal Vranckx; Gianfranco Percoco; Carlo Tumscitz; Fausto Castriota; Federico Colombo; Matteo Tebaldi; Giuseppe Fucà; Moh'd Kubbajeh; Elisa Cangiano; Monica Minarelli; Antonella Scalone; Caterina Cavazza; Alice Frangione; Marco Borghesi; Jlenia Marchesini; Giovanni Parrinello; Roberto Ferrari

Background— The optimal duration of dual-antiplatelet therapy and the risk-benefit ratio for long-term dual-antiplatelet therapy after coronary stenting remain poorly defined. We evaluated the impact of up to 6 versus 24 months of dual-antiplatelet therapy in a broad all-comers patient population receiving a balanced proportion of Food and Drug Administration–approved drug-eluting or bare-metal stents. Methods and Results— We randomly assigned 2013 patients to receive bare-metal, zotarolimus-eluting, paclitaxel-eluting, or everolimus-eluting stent implantation. At 30 days, patients in each stent group were randomly allocated to receive up to 6 or 24 months of clopidogrel therapy in addition to aspirin. The primary end point was a composite of death of any cause, myocardial infarction, or cerebrovascular accident. The cumulative risk of the primary outcome at 2 years was 10.1% with 24-month dual-antiplatelet therapy compared with 10.0% with 6-month dual-antiplatelet therapy (hazard ratio, 0.98; 95% confidence interval, 0.74–1.29; P=0.91). The individual risks of death, myocardial infarction, cerebrovascular accident, or stent thrombosis did not differ between the study groups; however, there was a consistently greater risk of hemorrhage in the 24-month clopidogrel group according to all prespecified bleeding definitions, including the recently proposed Bleeding Academic Research Consortium classification. Conclusions— A regimen of 24 months of clopidogrel therapy in patients who had received a balanced mixture of drug-eluting or bare-metal stents was not significantly more effective than a 6-month clopidogrel regimen in reducing the composite of death due to any cause, myocardial infarction, or cerebrovascular accident. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00611286.


European Heart Journal | 2013

Should duration of dual antiplatelet therapy depend on the type and/or potency of implanted stent? A pre-specified analysis from the PROlonging Dual antiplatelet treatment after Grading stent-induced Intimal hyperplasia studY (PRODIGY)

Marco Valgimigli; Marco Borghesi; Matteo Tebaldi; Pascal Vranckx; Giovanni Parrinello; Roberto Ferrari

AIMS The purpose of this pre-specified analysis of the PROlonging Dual antiplatelet treatment after Grading stent-induced Intimal hyperplasia studY (PRODIGY) was to assess device-specific outcomes relative to different duration of dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) after Everolimus- (EES), Paclitaxel (PES), Zotarolimus- (ZES-S) eluting, or bare metal stents (BMS). METHODS AND RESULTS We randomized 2013 patients to BMS, ZES-S, PES, or EES implantation. At 30 days, each stent group underwent up to 6 or 24 months clopidogrel therapy. The primary endpoint, which was a composite of death, myocardial infarction, or cerebrovascular accident, did not differ in patients receiving BMS [HR: 0.89 (95% CI: 0.54-1.45)], PES [HR: 0.74 (95% CI: 0.43-1.25)], or EES [HR: 0.63 (95% CI: 0.33-1.21)] implantation across DAPT groups, whereas it was significantly higher in ZES-S patients undergoing long when compared with short-term DAPT therapy (HR: 2.85, P = 0.0018), with positive interaction testing (P-value = 0.004). At the 6-month landmark analysis, heterogeneity across stent types persisted for the primary study endpoint and other secondary clinical outcomes, whereas patients receiving PES showed a significantly higher rate of definite, probable and definite, probable, possible stent thrombosis in the short DAPT regimen. No association in absolute or relative terms was noted between stent potency in inhibiting intimal hyperplasia and greater vulnerability to shorter DAPT therapy. CONCLUSION Our study suggests that optimal duration of DAPT may be stent-specific and it does not support a clear association between stent potency and vulnerability to shorter DAPT therapy. Trial Registration clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00611286. http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00611286?term=prodigy&rank=2.


American Heart Journal | 2010

Randomized comparison of 6- versus 24-month clopidogrel therapy after balancing anti-intimal hyperplasia stent potency in all-comer patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention: Design and rationale for the PROlonging Dual-antiplatelet treatment after Grading stent-induced Intimal hyperplasia study (PRODIGY)

Marco Valgimigli; Gianluca Campo; Gianfranco Percoco; Monia Monti; Fabrizio Ferrari; Carlo Tumscitz; Andrea Zuffi; Federico Colombo; Moh'd Kubbajeh; Caterina Cavazza; Elisa Cangiano; Matteo Tebaldi; Monica Minarelli; Chiara Arcozzi; Antonella Scalone; Alice Frangione; Marco Borghesi; Jlenia Marchesini; Giovanni Parrinello; Roberto Ferrari

BACKGROUND The optimal duration of clopidogrel therapy after coronary stenting is debated because of the scarcity of randomized controlled trials and inconsistencies arising from registry data. Although prolonged clopidogrel therapy after bare metal stenting is regarded as an effective secondary prevention measure, the safety profile of drug-eluting stents itself has been questioned in patients not receiving ≥ 12 months of dual-antiplatelet therapy. HYPOTHESIS Twenty-four months of clopidogrel therapy after coronary stenting reduces the composite of death, myocardial infarction, or stroke compared with 6 months of treatment. STUDY DESIGN PRODIGY is an unblinded, multicenter, 4-by-2 randomized trial. All-comer patients with indication to coronary stenting are randomly treated-balancing randomization-with bare metal stent (no active late loss inhibition), Endeavor Sprint zotarolimus-eluting stent (Medtronic, Santa Rosa, CA) (mild late loss inhibition), Taxus paclitaxel-eluting stent (Boston Scientific, Natick, MA) (moderate late loss inhibition), or Xience V everolimus-eluting stent (Abbott Vascular, Santa Clara, CA) (high late loss inhibition). At 30 days, patients in each stent group are randomly allocated to receive 24 or up to 6 months of clopidogrel therapy-primary end point randomization. With 1,700 individuals, this study will have >80% power to detect a 40% difference in the primary end point after sample size augmentation of 5% and a background event rate of 8%. SUMMARY The PRODIGY trial aims to assess whether 24 months of clopidogrel therapy improves cardiovascular outcomes after coronary intervention in a broad all-comer patient population receiving a balanced mixture of stents with various anti-intimal hyperplasia potency.


Jacc-cardiovascular Interventions | 2014

Two-Year Outcomes After First- or Second-Generation Drug-Eluting or Bare-Metal Stent Implantation in All-Comer Patients Undergoing Percutaneous Coronary Intervention : A Pre-Specified Analysis From the PRODIGY Study (PROlonging Dual Antiplatelet Treatment After Grading stent-induced Intimal hyperplasia studY)

Marco Valgimigli; Matteo Tebaldi; Marco Borghesi; Pascal Vranckx; Gianluca Campo; Carlo Tumscitz; Elisa Cangiano; Monica Minarelli; Antonella Scalone; Caterina Cavazza; Jlenia Marchesini; Giovanni Parrinello; Prodigy Investigators

OBJECTIVES This study sought to assess device-specific outcomes after implantation of bare-metal stents (BMS), zotarolimus-eluting Endeavor Sprint stents (ZES-S), paclitaxel-eluting stents (PES), or everolimus-eluting stents (EES) (Medtronic Cardiovascular, Santa Rosa, California) in all-comer patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention. BACKGROUND Few studies have directly compared second-generation drug-eluting stents with each other or with BMS. METHODS We randomized 2,013 patients to BMS, ZES-S, PES, or EES implantation. At 30 days, each stent group received up to 6 or 24 months of clopidogrel therapy. The key efficacy endpoint was the 2-year major adverse cardiac event (MACE) including any death, myocardial infarction, or target vessel revascularization, whereas the cumulative rate of definite or probable stent thrombosis (ST) was the key safety endpoint. RESULTS Clinical follow-up at 2 years was complete for 99.7% of patients. The MACE rate was lowest in EES (19.2%; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 16.0 to 22.8), highest in BMS (32.1%; 95% CI: 28.1 to 36.3), and intermediate in PES (26.2%; 95% CI: 22.5 to 30.2) and ZES-S (27.8%; 95% CI: 24.1 to 31.9) groups (chi-square test = 18.9, p = 0.00029). The 2-year incidence of ST in the EES group (1%; 95% CI: 0.4 to 2.2) was similar to that in the ZES-S group (1.4%; 95% CI: 0.7 to 2.8), whereas it was lower compared with the PES (4.6%, 95% CI: 3.1 to 6.8) and BMS (3.6%; 95% CI: 2.4 to 5.6) groups (chi-square = 16.9; p = 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS Our study shows that cumulative MACE rate, encompassing both safety and efficacy endpoints, was lowest for EES, highest for BMS, and intermediate for PES and ZES-S groups. EES outperformed BMS also with respect to the safety endpoints with regard to definite or probable and definite, probable, or possible ST. (PROlonging Dual antiplatelet treatment after Grading stent-induced Intimal hyperplasia studY [PRODIGY]; NCT00611286).


Archive | 2017

Gender Differences in CAS

Marco Borghesi; Luca Dozza; Roberto Nerla; Antonio Micari; Chiara Grattoni; Fausto Castriota; Alberto Cremonesi

Ischemic stroke is now the third most common cause of death in the Western world [1] (Fig. 18.1). In addition, the morbidity related to cerebrovascular disease is particularly disabling, because it causes neurological deficits leading to a loss of autonomy and disability in performing normal daily activities, due to enormous costs for the national health system and society [2]. The incidence of stroke was 0.2 % per year in the general population but rises significantly in the presence of multiple risk factors [3].


Circulation | 2012

Short- Versus Long-Term Duration of Dual-Antiplatelet Therapy After Coronary StentingClinical Perspective: A Randomized Multicenter Trial

Marco Valgimigli; Gianluca Campo; Monia Monti; Pascal Vranckx; Gianfranco Percoco; Carlo Tumscitz; Fausto Castriota; Federico Colombo; Matteo Tebaldi; Giuseppe Fucà; Moh'd Kubbajeh; Elisa Cangiano; Monica Minarelli; Antonella Scalone; Caterina Cavazza; Alice Frangione; Marco Borghesi; Jlenia Marchesini; Giovanni Parrinello; Roberto Ferrari

Background— The optimal duration of dual-antiplatelet therapy and the risk-benefit ratio for long-term dual-antiplatelet therapy after coronary stenting remain poorly defined. We evaluated the impact of up to 6 versus 24 months of dual-antiplatelet therapy in a broad all-comers patient population receiving a balanced proportion of Food and Drug Administration–approved drug-eluting or bare-metal stents. Methods and Results— We randomly assigned 2013 patients to receive bare-metal, zotarolimus-eluting, paclitaxel-eluting, or everolimus-eluting stent implantation. At 30 days, patients in each stent group were randomly allocated to receive up to 6 or 24 months of clopidogrel therapy in addition to aspirin. The primary end point was a composite of death of any cause, myocardial infarction, or cerebrovascular accident. The cumulative risk of the primary outcome at 2 years was 10.1% with 24-month dual-antiplatelet therapy compared with 10.0% with 6-month dual-antiplatelet therapy (hazard ratio, 0.98; 95% confidence interval, 0.74–1.29; P=0.91). The individual risks of death, myocardial infarction, cerebrovascular accident, or stent thrombosis did not differ between the study groups; however, there was a consistently greater risk of hemorrhage in the 24-month clopidogrel group according to all prespecified bleeding definitions, including the recently proposed Bleeding Academic Research Consortium classification. Conclusions— A regimen of 24 months of clopidogrel therapy in patients who had received a balanced mixture of drug-eluting or bare-metal stents was not significantly more effective than a 6-month clopidogrel regimen in reducing the composite of death due to any cause, myocardial infarction, or cerebrovascular accident. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00611286.


Circulation | 2012

Short- Versus Long-Term Duration of Dual-Antiplatelet Therapy After Coronary StentingClinical Perspective

Marco Valgimigli; Gianluca Campo; Monia Monti; Pascal Vranckx; Gianfranco Percoco; Carlo Tumscitz; Fausto Castriota; Federico Colombo; Matteo Tebaldi; Giuseppe Fucà; Moh'd Kubbajeh; Elisa Cangiano; Monica Minarelli; Antonella Scalone; Caterina Cavazza; Alice Frangione; Marco Borghesi; Jlenia Marchesini; Giovanni Parrinello; Roberto Ferrari

Background— The optimal duration of dual-antiplatelet therapy and the risk-benefit ratio for long-term dual-antiplatelet therapy after coronary stenting remain poorly defined. We evaluated the impact of up to 6 versus 24 months of dual-antiplatelet therapy in a broad all-comers patient population receiving a balanced proportion of Food and Drug Administration–approved drug-eluting or bare-metal stents. Methods and Results— We randomly assigned 2013 patients to receive bare-metal, zotarolimus-eluting, paclitaxel-eluting, or everolimus-eluting stent implantation. At 30 days, patients in each stent group were randomly allocated to receive up to 6 or 24 months of clopidogrel therapy in addition to aspirin. The primary end point was a composite of death of any cause, myocardial infarction, or cerebrovascular accident. The cumulative risk of the primary outcome at 2 years was 10.1% with 24-month dual-antiplatelet therapy compared with 10.0% with 6-month dual-antiplatelet therapy (hazard ratio, 0.98; 95% confidence interval, 0.74–1.29; P=0.91). The individual risks of death, myocardial infarction, cerebrovascular accident, or stent thrombosis did not differ between the study groups; however, there was a consistently greater risk of hemorrhage in the 24-month clopidogrel group according to all prespecified bleeding definitions, including the recently proposed Bleeding Academic Research Consortium classification. Conclusions— A regimen of 24 months of clopidogrel therapy in patients who had received a balanced mixture of drug-eluting or bare-metal stents was not significantly more effective than a 6-month clopidogrel regimen in reducing the composite of death due to any cause, myocardial infarction, or cerebrovascular accident. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00611286.


Circulation | 2012

Short- Versus Long-Term Duration of Dual-Antiplatelet Therapy After Coronary Stenting

Marco Valgimigli; Gianluca Campo; Monia Monti; Pascal Vranckx; Gianfranco Percoco; Carlo Tumscitz; Fausto Castriota; Federico Colombo; Matteo Tebaldi; Giuseppe Fucà; Moh'd Kubbajeh; Elisa Cangiano; Monica Minarelli; Antonella Scalone; Caterina Cavazza; Alice Frangione; Marco Borghesi; Jlenia Marchesini; Giovanni Parrinello; Roberto Ferrari


Archive | 2015

Interventional Cardiology Short- Versus Long-Term Duration of Dual-Antiplatelet Therapy After Coronary Stenting A Randomized Multicenter Trial

Marco Valgimigli; Gianluca Campo; Monia Monti; Pascal Vranckx; Gianfranco Percoco; Carlo Tumscitz; Fausto Castriota; Federico Colombo; Matteo Tebaldi; Elisa Cangiano; Monica Minarelli; Antonella Scalone; Caterina Cavazza; Alice Frangione; Marco Borghesi; Jlenia Marchesini; Giovanni Parrinello; Roberto Ferrari


/data/revues/00028703/v160i5/S0002870310007271/ | 2011

Randomized comparison of 6- versus 24-month clopidogrel therapy after balancing anti-intimal hyperplasia stent potency in all-comer patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention : Design and rationale for the PROlonging Dual-antiplatelet treatment after Grading stent-induced Intimal hyperplasia study (PRODIGY)

Marco Valgimigli; Gianluca Campo; Gianfranco Percoco; Monia Monti; Fabrizio Ferrari; Carlo Tumscitz; Andrea Zuffi; Federico Colombo; Moh'd Kubbajeh; Caterina Cavazza; Elisa Cangiano; Matteo Tebaldi; Monica Minarelli; Chiara Arcozzi; Antonella Scalone; Alice Frangione; Marco Borghesi; Jlenia Marchesini; Giovanni Parrinello; Roberto Ferrari

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Carlo Tumscitz

Cardiovascular Institute of the South

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Gianluca Campo

Cardiovascular Institute of the South

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