Sex differences in the outcomes of stent implantation in mini-swine model.

Sex-related differences have been noted in cardiovascular anatomy, pathophysiology, and treatment responses, yet we continued to drive evaluation of vascular device development in animal models without consideration of animal sex. We aimed to understand sex-related differences in the vascular respon...

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Main Authors: Mie Kunio, Gee Wong, Peter M Markham, Elazer R Edelman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5788368?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-f9209bb9fc5445ddaaf403ecc1d8faa92020-11-25T02:33:15ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01131e019200410.1371/journal.pone.0192004Sex differences in the outcomes of stent implantation in mini-swine model.Mie KunioGee WongPeter M MarkhamElazer R EdelmanSex-related differences have been noted in cardiovascular anatomy, pathophysiology, and treatment responses, yet we continued to drive evaluation of vascular device development in animal models without consideration of animal sex. We aimed to understand sex-related differences in the vascular responses to stent implantation by analyzing the pooled data of endovascular interventions in 164 Yucatan mini-swine (87 female, 77 male). Bare metal stents (BMS) or drug-eluting stents (DES) were implanted in 212 coronary arteries (63 single BMS implantation, 68 single DES implantation, 33 overlapped BMS implantation, and 48 overlapped DES implantation). Histomorphological parameters were evaluated from vascular specimens at 3-365 days after stent implantation and evaluated values were compared between female and male groups. While neointima formation at all times after implantation was invariant to sex, statistically significant differences between female and male groups were observed in injury, inflammation, adventitial fibrosis, and neointimal fibrin deposition. These differences were observed independently, i.e., for different procedure types and at different follow-up timings. Only subtle temporal sex-related differences were observed in extent and timing of resolution of inflammation and fibrin clearance. These subtle sex-related differences may be increasingly important as interventional devices meld novel materials that erode and innovations in drug delivery. Erodible materials may act differently if inflammation has a different temporal sequence with sex, and drug distribution after balloon or stent delivery might be different if the fibrin clearance speaks to different modes of pharmacokinetics in male and female swine.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5788368?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mie Kunio
Gee Wong
Peter M Markham
Elazer R Edelman
spellingShingle Mie Kunio
Gee Wong
Peter M Markham
Elazer R Edelman
Sex differences in the outcomes of stent implantation in mini-swine model.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Mie Kunio
Gee Wong
Peter M Markham
Elazer R Edelman
author_sort Mie Kunio
title Sex differences in the outcomes of stent implantation in mini-swine model.
title_short Sex differences in the outcomes of stent implantation in mini-swine model.
title_full Sex differences in the outcomes of stent implantation in mini-swine model.
title_fullStr Sex differences in the outcomes of stent implantation in mini-swine model.
title_full_unstemmed Sex differences in the outcomes of stent implantation in mini-swine model.
title_sort sex differences in the outcomes of stent implantation in mini-swine model.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Sex-related differences have been noted in cardiovascular anatomy, pathophysiology, and treatment responses, yet we continued to drive evaluation of vascular device development in animal models without consideration of animal sex. We aimed to understand sex-related differences in the vascular responses to stent implantation by analyzing the pooled data of endovascular interventions in 164 Yucatan mini-swine (87 female, 77 male). Bare metal stents (BMS) or drug-eluting stents (DES) were implanted in 212 coronary arteries (63 single BMS implantation, 68 single DES implantation, 33 overlapped BMS implantation, and 48 overlapped DES implantation). Histomorphological parameters were evaluated from vascular specimens at 3-365 days after stent implantation and evaluated values were compared between female and male groups. While neointima formation at all times after implantation was invariant to sex, statistically significant differences between female and male groups were observed in injury, inflammation, adventitial fibrosis, and neointimal fibrin deposition. These differences were observed independently, i.e., for different procedure types and at different follow-up timings. Only subtle temporal sex-related differences were observed in extent and timing of resolution of inflammation and fibrin clearance. These subtle sex-related differences may be increasingly important as interventional devices meld novel materials that erode and innovations in drug delivery. Erodible materials may act differently if inflammation has a different temporal sequence with sex, and drug distribution after balloon or stent delivery might be different if the fibrin clearance speaks to different modes of pharmacokinetics in male and female swine.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5788368?pdf=render
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