Review Article


Understanding and managing in-stent restenosis: a review of clinical data, from pathogenesis to treatment

Dario Buccheri, Davide Piraino, Giuseppe Andolina, Bernardo Cortese

Abstract

The lumen diameter reduction after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is well known as “restenosis”. This phenomenon is due to vessel remodeling/recoil in case of no-stent strategy or, in case of stent employ, “neointimal proliferation” that consists in an excessive tissue proliferation in the luminal surface of the stent otherwise by a further new-occurring atherosclerotic process called “neoatherosclerosis”. The exact incidence of in-stent restenosis (ISR) is not easy to determine caused by different clinical, angiographic and operative factors. In the pre-stent era the occurrence of restenosis ranged between 32–55% of all angioplasties, and drop to successively 17–41% in the bare metal stents (BMS) era. The advent of drug-eluting stent (DES), especially 2nd generation, and drug-coated balloon (DCB) further reduce restenosis rate until <10%. We here review the main characteristics of this common complication of coronary interventions, from its pathogenesis to the most appropriate treatment strategy.

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