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Coronary stents, both bare and drug-eluting (DES), have become the predominant therapy for coronary artery disease when revascularization is appropriate. However, concerns about late adverse events have prompted manufacturers to develop stents with bioresorbable components.
In ABSORB III, a manufacturer-funded trial, investigators randomized 2008 patients in a 2:1 ratio to receive a fully bioresorbable vascular scaffold (BVS) or a standard DES; both were everolimus-eluting devices. The primary endpoint, target-lesion failure at 1 year (cardiac death, target-vessel myocardial infarction [MI], or ischemia-driven revascularization), occurred in 7.8% of patients treated with BVS and 6.1% of patients treated with DES. This difference was consider…