Femoropopliteal Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
IntravasCular Imaging-Guided Versus AngiogRaphy-GUided Drug-Eluting Stent Implantation for Fermoropopliteal Artery Disease (ICARUS Trial); A Feasibility Study
Objectives: 1) To evaluate the feasibility of using intravascular ultrasound to assess lesion morphology, select an appropriate stent size and landing zone 2) To compare the primary patency rates after intra vascular imaging-guided versus angiography-guided stent implantation for the treatment of fermoropopliteal artery segment lesions. Hypothesis: One of the key determinants of the device failure is inappropriate landing zone, selection of smaller stent relative to the reference vessel diameter, and lack of high-pressure post-dilatation in a necessary post-stent segment. Therefore, intravascular ultrasound-guided selection of appropriate landing zone, stent size and balloon size for high pressure post-dilation may maximize the benefits of stent use and improve patency duration. the investigators hypothesize that intravascular ultrasound-guided stent implantation is superior to angiography-guided stent implantation with respect to 12 months primary patency in patients with significant femoropopliteal disease
This is a prospective, open-label, randomized comparison feasibility trial involving patients with significant femoropopliteal disease who are undergoing drug-eluting stent (paclitaxel-eluting, durable-polymer-coated Eluvia stent) implantation. Patients with symptoms attributable to limb ischemia are eligible for enrollment if the culprit lesions are suitable for stent implantation based on angiographic findings. The detailed information for inclusion and exclusion criteria is described below in session 7. Patients meeting inclusion criteria without any exclusion criteria will be randomized to either intravascular ultrasound-guided or angiography-guided group immediately before the endovascular intervention. In the intravascular ultrasound-guided group, intravascular ultrasound will be either automatically (1 mm/sec) or manually (5-10 mm/sec) pulled back at a constant speed according to the lesion length. Stent size and length are selected by information acquired from on-line intravascular ultrasound examination, and adjunct high-pressure dilation is performed to achieve stent optimization based on the intravascular ultrasound finding. For the selection of the landing zone and stent length, intravascular ultrasound and fluoroscopy images should be recorded simultaneously to link intravascular ultrasound images with location preferably using a ruler. For the selection of stent size and assessment of stent optimization, external elastic membrane area (EEM) before ballooning and minimal stent area (MSA) (i.e, the smallest cross-sectional area within the stent) after post-dilation are assessed. intravascular ultrasound is used at any step of the procedure before, during, or after stenting. However, image examination is mandatory before and after stenting. In the angiography-guided group, stent size and length are chosen by visual estimation, and adjunctive high-pressure dilation is performed if an optimal result, defined as angiographic residual diameter stenosis of less than 30% by visual estimation and the absence of angiographically detected dissection, was not achieved. Stent size is chosen at the operator's discretion in both groups, with diameters 1 or 2 mm larger than the reference diameter assessed either by intravascular ultrasound or visual estimation. ;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
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Completed |
NCT00798850 -
Trial of Nonsurgical Treatment of Intermittent Claudication Due to Femoro-popliteal Disease
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N/A |