Background-Increased expression of the  2 integrin Mac-1 (CD11b/CD18, ␣ M  2 ), which is responsible for firm leukocyte adhesion to platelets and fibrinogen at injured vessels, is found in association with neointimal hyperplasia after coronary interventions. The role of Mac-1 in the pathophysiology of restenosis is incompletely defined. To clarify further the role of Mac-1, we determined whether coronary stenting induced activation of Mac-1, which is required for high-affinity receptor-ligand interactions. Methods and Results-Expression of CD11b (␣-subunit of Mac-1) and binding of 8B2 (monoclonal antibody against an activation-dependent neoepitope of Mac-1) on the surface of polymorphonuclear leukocytes were analyzed in 62 patients undergoing coronary stenting using flow cytometric analysis of whole blood obtained from the coronary sinus and femoral vein. Transcardiac CD11b expression increased significantly at 24 hours and maximally at 48 hours after stenting; 8B2 began to increase at 10 minutes and was maximally increased at 48 hours after stenting. These changes were more prominent in patients with subsequent restenosis. Multiple regression analysis showed that the late lumen loss by quantitative coronary angiographic analysis was independently correlated with the CD11b increase (Rϭ0.42, PϽ0.01) and the 8B2 increase (Rϭ0.55, PϽ0.001) 48 hours after the procedure. Mac-1 activation, as assessed by 8B2 binding, was the most powerful predictor of late lumen loss. Conclusion-Coronary stenting produced upregulation and early activation of the leukocyte integrin Mac-1, which is associated with late lumen loss and restenosis. These data support a role for inflammation in neointimal thickening and suggest the validity of targeting leukocyte recruitment for preventing clinical restenosis.
Background-The Cutting Balloon is a novel dilatation catheter for coronary angioplasty (InterVentional Technologies Inc). It produces longitudinal, microsurgical incisions in the vessel wall before the actual dilatation. It is assumed that these controlled surgical incisions relieve hoop stress and reduce vessel wall injury and eventually restenosis. However, no clinical indicator to support the theory of reduced injury has been described. Certain clusters of differentiation (eg, CD11, CD18 on the leukocytes) are implicated in leukocyte adhesion, increased permeability, and opsonization. Therefore, they might serve as clinical indicators of the injury level of the vessels after angioplasty. Methods and Results-We randomly selected 64 patients with isolated left anterior descending coronary artery disease for either Cutting Balloon angioplasty or conventional balloon angioplasty. The expression of CD18 and CD11b on the surface of neutrophils was determined by flow cytometric analysis. Serum levels of soluble intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (sICAM-1) were also measured. The expression of both the CD18 and CD11b in the coronary sinus blood gradually increased and reached its maximum at 48 hours after angioplasty. The sICAM-1 levels in the coronary sinus serum also increased after angioplasty. Percentage increases of CD18 and CD11b expression and the increase of the sICAM-1 levels at 48 hours after angioplasty (as ratios to baseline values before angioplasty) were less in the Cutting Balloon angioplasty group than in the conventional balloon angioplasty group (CD18, 1.10Ϯ0.05 versus 1.31Ϯ0.05, PϽ0.05; CD11b, 1.23Ϯ0.06 versus 1.72Ϯ0.10, PϽ0.001; sICAM-1, 1.12Ϯ0.05 versus 1.25Ϯ0.02, PϽ0.05). In all patients, the late lumen loss at follow-up angiogram positively correlated with the increased levels of CD11b (Rϭ0.59, PϽ0.001) and sICAM-1 (Rϭ0.38, PϽ0.05) at 48 hours after angioplasty. Conclusions-Balloon angioplasty upregulated Mac-1 (CD11b/CD18) on the surface of the neutrophils and increased sICAM-1 levels in association with late loss increase. These changes were significantly smaller in the Cutting Balloon angioplasty group than in the conventional balloon angioplasty group. This suggests that Cutting Balloon angioplasty may produce less vessel wall injury and, consequently, less neutrophil activation, which may account for the lower rate of restenosis.
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