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Dive into the research topics where Paul Underwood is active.

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Featured researches published by Paul Underwood.


European Heart Journal | 2014

Coronary artery bypass grafting vs. percutaneous coronary intervention for patients with three-vessel disease: final five-year follow-up of the SYNTAX trial

Stuart J. Head; Piroze Davierwala; Patrick W. J. C. Serruys; Simon Redwood; Antonio Colombo; Michael J. Mack; Marie Claude Morice; David R. Holmes; Ted Feldman; Elisabeth Ståhle; Paul Underwood; Keith D. Dawkins; A. Pieter Kappetein; Friedrich W. Mohr

AIMS Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) has been considered the standard of care for patients with three-vessel disease (3VD), but long-term comparative results from randomized trials of CABG vs. percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) using drug-eluting stents (DES) remain limited. METHODS AND RESULTS Patients with de novo 3VD or left main disease were randomly assigned to PCI with the paclitaxel-eluting first-generation stent or CABG in the SYNTAX trial. This pre-specified analysis presents the 5-year outcomes of patients with 3VD (n = 1095). The rate of major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events (MACCE) was significantly higher in patients with PCI compared with CABG (37.5 vs. 24.2%, respectively; P < 0.001). Percutaneous coronary intervention as opposed to CABG resulted in significantly higher rates of the composite of death/stroke/myocardial infarction (MI) (22.0 vs. 14.0%, respectively; P < 0.001), all-cause death (14.6 vs. 9.2%, respectively; P = 0.006), MI (9.2 vs. 4.0%, respectively; P = 0.001), and repeat revascularization (25.4 vs. 12.6%, respectively; P < 0.001); however, stroke was similar between groups at 5 years (3.0 vs. 3.5%, respectively; P = 0.66). Results were dependent on lesion complexity (P for interaction = 0.12); in patients with a low (0-22) SYNTAX score, PCI vs. CABG resulted in similar rates of MACCE (33.3% vs. 26.8%, respectively; P = 0.21) but significantly more repeat revascularization (25.4% vs. 12.6%, respectively; P = 0.038), while in intermediate (23-32) or high (≥ 33) SYNTAX score terciles, CABG demonstrated clear superiority in terms of MACCE, death, MI, and repeat revascularization. Differences in MACCE between PCI and CABG were larger in diabetics [hazard ratio (HR) = 2.30] than non-diabetics (HR = 1.51), although the P for interaction failed to reach significance for MACCE (P for interaction = 0.095) or any of the other endpoints. CONCLUSION Five-year results of patients with 3VD treated with CABG or PCI using the first-generation paclitaxel-eluting DES suggest that CABG should remain the standard of care as it resulted in significantly lower rates of death, MI, and repeat revascularization, while stroke rates were similar. For patients with low SYNTAX scores, PCI is an acceptable revascularization strategy, although at a price of significantly higher rates of repeat revascularization. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION NCT00114972.


Eurointervention | 2011

A prospective evaluation of the safety and efficacy of TAXUS Element paclitaxel-eluting coronary stent implantation for the treatment of de novo coronary artery lesions in small vessels: the PERSEUS Small Vessel trial.

Louis Cannon; Tift Mann; Jeffrey J. Popma; Michael Mooney; Gregory Mishkel; Tommy Lee; Bryan Wilson; Thomas Stuckey; Steven Orlow; Thomas F. McGarry; Michael Ring; Mirle A. Kellett; Paul Underwood; Keith D. Dawkins

AIMS Small reference vessel diameter predicts adverse outcomes following coronary stenting. TAXUS Express and TAXUS Liberté paclitaxel-eluting stents (PES) reduce restenosis compared to bare metal stents (BMS) in small diameter vessels. TAXUS Element is a novel thin-strut, platinum chromium stent designed to enhance visibility, conformability, and drug delivery in small diameter vessels. METHODS AND RESULTS The PERSEUS Small Vessel (SV) prospective, single-arm, superiority trial evaluates the TAXUS Element PES in 224 subjects with target lesion length≤20 mm and vessel diameter≥2.25 to <2.75 mm, compared to 125 lesion-matched historical Express BMS control subjects from the TAXUS V trial. The primary endpoint was nine-month in-stent late loss. The secondary endpoint was 12-month target lesion failure (TLF) compared to a pre-specified performance goal (PG). Outcomes were analysed with and without propensity-score adjustment. TAXUS Element was superior to the Express BMS for late loss (0.38±0.51 versus 0.80±0.53 mm respectively; P<0.001), and TLF (7.3%) was significantly less than the 19.5% PG (P<0.001). No differences in mortality, myocardial infarction, or stent thrombosis were observed through 12 months. Results were similar after adjustment. CONCLUSIONS PERSEUS SV supports the efficacy and safety of the platinum chromium, thin-strut TAXUS Element stent in small coronary vessels.


Cardiovascular Revascularization Medicine | 2015

Primary endpoint results of the OMEGA Study: One-year clinical outcomes after implantation of a novel platinum chromium bare metal stent.

John Wang; Didier Carrié; Monica Masotti; Andrejs Erglis; David Mego; Matthew W. Watkins; Paul Underwood; Dominic J. Allocco; Christian W. Hamm

BACKGROUND/PURPOSE Bare metal stents (BMS) have similar rates of death and myocardial infarction (MI) compared to drug-eluting stents (DES). DES lower repeat revascularization rates compared to BMS, but may have higher rates of late stent thrombosis (ST) potentially due to impaired endothelialization requiring longer dual anti-platelet therapy (DAPT). OMEGA evaluated a novel BMS designed to have improved deliverability and radiopacity, in comparison to currently available platforms. METHODS/MATERIALS OMEGA was a prospective, multicenter, single-arm study enrolling 328 patients at 37 sites (US and Europe). Patients received the OMEGA stent (bare platinum chromium element stent) for the treatment of de novo native coronary artery lesions (≤28 mm long; diameter ≥2.25 mm to ≤4.50mm). The primary endpoint was 9-month target lesion failure (TLF: cardiac death, target vessel-related MI, target lesion revascularization [TLR]) compared to a prespecified performance goal (PG) based on prior generation BMS. All major cardiac events were independently adjudicated. DAPT was required for a minimum of 1 month post procedure. RESULTS In the OMEGA study, the mean age was 65; 17% had diabetes mellitus. The primary endpoint was met; 9 month TLF rate was 11.5%, and the upper 1-sided 95% confidence bound of 14.79% was less than the prespecified PG of 21.2% (p<0.0001). One-year event rates were low including a TLF rate of 12.8% and an ST rate of 0.6% at 12 months. CONCLUSIONS One-year outcomes of OMEGA show low rates of TLF, revascularization and ST. This supports safety and efficacy of the OMEGA BMS for the treatment of coronary artery disease.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2011

Propensity-Matched Patient-Level Comparison of the TAXUS Liberté and TAXUS Element (ION) Paclitaxel-Eluting Stents

Louis Cannon; John A. Ormiston; Mark Turco; Tift Mann; Gregory Mishkel; Thomas J. McGarry; Hong Wang; Paul Underwood; Keith D. Dawkins

Stent design, metal alloy composition, and strut thickness may influence late lumen loss and clinical outcomes after bare metal stent deployment; however, their impact on outcomes after drug-eluting stent deployment is unknown. Although the TAXUS Liberté and ION paclitaxel-eluting stents use similar polymer and drug, the ION stent incorporates a novel thin-strut platinum chromium metal alloy and cell design. We therefore compared patient-level data from 2,298 subjects enrolled into the TAXUS ATLAS (TAXUS Liberté) and PERSEUS (ION) clinical trials. Propensity-score (1:1) matching was performed to adjust for covariate imbalance between stent types. Twelve-month major adverse cardiac events were less frequent after use of the ION compared to the TAXUS Liberté (12.7% vs 8.3%, p <0.001, unadjusted; 12.0% vs 7.5%, p = 0.007, propensity matched) largely because of decreased non-Q-wave myocardial infarction (MI; 2.9% vs 1.4%, p = 0.01, unadjusted; 3.2% vs 0.9%, p = 0.004, propensity matched). The MI difference was predominantly periprocedural and in patients treated with a single stent. In conclusion, this exploratory post hoc analysis demonstrated that the ION was associated with fewer adverse clinical events than the TAXUS Liberté because of decreased non-Q-wave MI. Stent platform-related variables may influence clinical outcomes after drug-eluting stent use despite similar polymer and drug elution. Differences in adjunctive pharmacotherapy and/or stenting technique may also be contributory.


Coronary Artery Disease | 2013

Final 5-year results of the TAXUS ATLAS, TAXUS ATLAS Small Vessel, and TAXUS ATLAS Long Lesion clinical trials of the TAXUS Liberté paclitaxel-eluting stent in de-novo coronary artery lesions.

John Ormiston; O’Shaughnessy Charles; Tift Mann; Jack J. Hall; Thomas J. McGarry; Louis Cannon; Mark Webster; Gregory Mishkel; Paul Underwood; Keith D. Dawkins

ObjectiveTo report the final, cumulative, 5-year outcomes from the TAXUS ATLAS program, which studied the use of the TAXUS Liberté paclitaxel-eluting stent in de-novo coronary artery lesions. MethodsTAXUS ATLAS Workhorse, Small Vessel, and Long Lesion are nonrandomized studies comparing TAXUS Liberté (N=871), TAXUS Liberté 2.25 mm (N=261), and TAXUS Liberté 38 mm (N=150) stents, respectively, with case-matched TAXUS Express historical controls. ResultsIn the unadjusted analysis, TAXUS Liberté showed comparable 5-year rates of major adverse cardiac events (27.1% TAXUS Express vs. 26.2% TAXUS Liberté, P=0.70) in workhorse lesions and greater 5-year cumulative freedom from target lesion revascularization (78.4 vs. 87.3%, P=0.03) in small vessels. In addition, a lower periprocedural myocardial infarction rate (MI, 4.1 vs. 0.0%; P=0.01) was observed in long lesions versus TAXUS Express. After propensity score adjustment, no statistically significant effect of TAXUS Liberté on the 5-year rates of TLR in small vessels (17.9 vs. 13.3%, P=0.36) or MI in long lesions (9.1 vs. 7.0%, P=0.53) was found, although the rates remained numerically lower with TAXUS Liberté. ConclusionCumulative 5-year results of the TAXUS ATLAS studies suggest that the TAXUS Liberté stent provides similar safety and effectiveness in workhorse lesions, and may provide lower revascularization rates in small vessels and lower periprocedural MI rates in long lesions compared with the TAXUS Express stent, although no statistically significant differences were found following propensity adjustment.


Catheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions | 2015

Long-term follow-up of the platinum chromium TAXUS Element (ION) stent: The PERSEUS Workhorse and Small Vessel trial five-year results.

Louis Cannon; Ira M. Dauber; Michael W. Ball; Barry D. Bertolet; Michael Foster; Andrey Nersesov; Paul Underwood; Dominic J. Allocco; Keith D. Dawkins

The TAXUS Element (ION) platinum chromium paclitaxel‐eluting stent (PtCr‐PES) incorporates a thin (81 μm) strut design with a similar polymer and drug dose density as prior PES. The pivotal PERSEUS trial program consisted of two studies: PERSEUS Workhorse (WH) and PERSEUS Small Vessel (SV). The PERSEUS WH trial demonstrated the PtCr‐PES to be non‐inferior to the predicate TAXUS Express PES (TE‐PES) for target lesion failure (TLF) at 1 year and in‐segment angiographic percent diameter stenosis at 9 months. The PERSEUS SV trial demonstrated the PtCr‐PES to be superior to a historical bare metal stent (BMS) for angiographic late lumen loss at 9 months. Long‐term (5‐year) clinical outcomes following PtCr‐PES have not been previously reported.


JAMA Cardiology | 2017

Outcomes in women and minorities compared with white men 1 year after everolimus-eluting stent implantation: Insights and results from the PLATINUM diversity and PROMUS element plus post-approval study pooled analysis

Wayne Batchelor; David E. Kandzari; Scott Davis; Luis Tami; John Wang; Islam Othman; Osvaldo Gigliotti; Amir Haghighat; Sarabjeet Singh; Mario Lopez; Gregory R. Giugliano; Phillip A. Horwitz; Jaya Chandrasekhar; Paul Underwood; Craig A. Thompson; Roxana Mehran

Importance There exist limited outcomes data for women and minorities after contemporary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Objective To examine 1-year outcomes in women and minorities vs white men after PCI with everolimus-eluting stents. Design, Settings, and Participants The PLATINUM Diversity study was a single-arm study enrolling women and minorities. Patient-level pooling with the PROMUS Element Plus Post-Approval Study was prespecified. Data on social determinants of health and language were collected in the PLATINUM Diversity cohort, which included 1501 patients at 52 US sites. The PROMUS Element Plus Post-Approval study enrolled 2681 patients at 52 US sites with some site overlap and included an “all-comers” population. All patients were enrolled beginning in October 2014 and were followed for 12 months. Analyses began in August 2016. Interventions Patients received 1 or more everolimus-eluting stent implantation. Main Outcomes and Measures The primary end point was 1-year major adverse cardiac events (MACE), which included death/myocardial infarction (MI)/target vessel revascularization. Secondary ischemic end points were also evaluated. Results The pooled study consisted of 4182 patients: 1635 white men (39.1%), 1863 women (white and minority) (44.5%), and 1059 minority patients (women and men) (25.3%). Women and minorities had a higher prevalence of diabetes, prior stroke, hypertension, renal disease, and congestive heart failure than white men but lower rates of multivessel disease, prior coronary artery bypass graft surgery, prior MI, and smoking. Unadjusted 1-year MACE rates (white men, 7.6%; women, 8.6%; minorities, 9.6%) were similar between groups with no significant differences after risk adjustment. The adjusted risk of death/MI was higher among women (odds ratio, 1.6; 95% CI, 1.1-2.4) and minorities (odds ratio, 1.9; 95% CI, 1.2-2.8) compared with white men and the adjusted risk of MI was higher in minorities (odds ratio, 2.6; 95% CI, 1.4-4.8). These differences were driven primarily by nonstent-related MIs. Within the PLATINUM Diversity cohort, the independent predictors of MACE were cardiogenic shock, renal disease, history of peripheral vascular disease, multivessel disease, widowhood, and lack of private insurance. Conclusions and Relevance After contemporary everolimus-eluting stent implantation, women and minorities experience a similar risk of 1-year MACE but a higher adjusted risk of recurrent ischemic events primarily because of nonstent-related MIs. Both clinical and angiographic factors and social determinants of health, including widowhood and insurance status, contribute to 1-year MACE among women and minorities.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2010

Clinical and angiographic outcomes after treatment of de novo coronary stenoses with a novel platinum chromium thin-strut stent: primary results of the PERSEUS (Prospective Evaluation in a Randomized Trial of the Safety and Efficacy of the Use of the TAXUS Element Paclitaxel-Eluting Coronary Stent System) trial.

Louis Cannon; Robert L. Feldman; Jeffrey J. Popma; Raymond D. Magorien; Robert Whitbourn; Ira Dauber; Abram C. Rabinowitz; Michael W. Ball; Barry D. Bertolet; Ameer Kabour; Michael Foster; John C. Wang; Paul Underwood; Keith D. Dawkins


Eurointervention | 2015

One-year outcomes in 1,010 unselected patients treated with the PROMUS Element everolimus-eluting stent: the multicentre PROMUS Element European Post-Approval Surveillance Study

Martyn Thomas; Ralf Birkemeyer; Peter Schwimmbeck; Victor Legrand; Raul Moreno; Carlo Briguori; Nikos Werner; Ezio Bramucci; Imre Ungi; Gert Richardt; Paul Underwood; Keith D. Dawkins


Circulation | 2011

Long-Term Benefit of the TAXUS Liberté Stent in Small Vessels and Long Lesions

John A. Ormiston; Mark Turco; Jack J. Hall; Louis Cannon; Steven J. Yakubov; Michael J. Lucca; Gregg W. Stone; Charles O'Shaughnessy; Joseph A. Kozina; Ian C. Gilchrist; Barry D. Bertolet; Stephen G. Worthley; Paul Underwood; Keith D. Dawkins

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Dominic J. Allocco

Columbia University Medical Center

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Michael W. Ball

St. Vincent's Health System

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