Comparison of the polymer-free biolimus-coated BioFreedom stent with the thin-strut biodegradable polymer sirolimus-eluting Orsiro stent in an all-comers population treated with percutaneous coronary intervention: Rationale and design of the randomized SORT OUT IX trial

Lisette Okkels Jensen, Michael Maeng, Bent Raungaard, Thomas Engstrøm, Henrik Steen Hansen, Svend Eggert Jensen, Hans Erik Bøtker, Johnny Kahlert, Jens Flensted Lassen, Evald Høj Christiansen

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

7 Citations (Scopus)
29 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In patients with increased bleeding risk during dual antiplatelet therapy, the biolimus A9-coated BioFreedom, a stainless steel drug-coated stent devoid of polymer, has shown superiority compared to a bare-metal stent. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the polymer-free biolimus A9-coated BioFreedom is noninferior to a modern thin-strut biodegradable polymer cobalt-chromium sirolimus-eluting Orsiro stent in an all-comers patient population treated with percutaneous coronary intervention.

METHODS: The multicenter SORT OUT IX trial (NCT02623140) randomly assigned all-comers patients to treatment with the BioFreedom drug-coated stent or the biodegradable polymer Orsiro stent in 4 Danish University Hospitals. The primary end point target lesion failure is a composite of cardiac death, myocardial infarction (not related to other than index lesion), or target lesion revascularization within 12 months. Clinically driven event detection based on Danish registries will be used and continue through 5 years. Assuming an event rate of 4.2% in each stent group, 1,563 patients in each treatment arm will provide 90% power to detect noninferiority of the drug-coated BioFreedom stent with a noninferiority margin of 2.1%.

RESULTS: A total of 3,150 patients have been randomized and enrolled in the study.

CONCLUSIONS: The SORT OUT IX trial will determine whether the drug-coated BioFreedom stent is noninferior to a modern biodegradable polymer Orsiro stent.

Original languageEnglish
JournalAmerican Heart Journal
Volume213
Pages (from-to)1-7
Number of pages7
ISSN0002-8703
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2019

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Comparison of the polymer-free biolimus-coated BioFreedom stent with the thin-strut biodegradable polymer sirolimus-eluting Orsiro stent in an all-comers population treated with percutaneous coronary intervention: Rationale and design of the randomized SORT OUT IX trial'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this