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Reduced stent strategy versus conventional percutaneous coronary revascularization in patients presenting with STEMI: the COPERNICAN trial.

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Primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with drug-eluting stent implantation (DES) is the standard of treatment in patients presenting with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). However, target lesion failure can occur due to stent underexpansion, malapposition, hypersensitivity, fracture, and neoatherosclerosis. Drug-coated balloons (DCB) represent a potential alternative supported by the concept of "leaving nothing behind." The aim is to compare a reduced stent strategy based on DCB- with DES-PCI in patients presenting with STEMI. Prospective, pragmatic, multicenter, noninferiority, randomized clinical trial. A total of 1 272 patients presenting with STEMI will be randomized to any paclitaxel-DCB vs any sirolimus-DES (both with CE approval) for all culprit and nonculprit lesions during PCI. The primary endpoint will be target-lesion failure: cardiac death, target-vessel myocardial infarction, or ischemia-driven target lesion revascularization at 12-month follow-up. An independent clinical events committee masked to treatment allocation will adjudicate all suspected events. Clinical follow-up will be performed after 1 month (30 days±5 days) and 1 year (365 days±30 days). An extended follow-up at 3, 5, and 10 years is planned. The COPERNICAN trial will be the first randomized study comparing clinical outcomes of DCB vs DES in STEMI patients.

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Rev Esp Cardiol (Engl Ed). 2025 May 22:S1885-5857(25)00150-1.

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