Peripheral Vascular Disease Clinical Trial
The objective of this clinical investigation is to evaluate the early and mid-term outcome (after 6 and 12 months) and the long-term (up to 24 months) outcome of the Zilver PTX paclitaxel-eluting stent (Cook) versus bypass surgery for the treatment of TASC C&D femoropopliteal lesions.
A global noticeable tendency is the increasing prevalence of peripheral artery disease (PAD).
Approximately 27 million people in Europe and North America are affected by PAD. Risk factors
attaining this high prevalence include age, obesity, nicotine abuse, hypertension,
hyperlipidemia, diabetes and family history. PAD can present itself asymptomatically or
symptomatically by intermittent claudication (IC) or critical limb ischemia (CLI).
The conservative treatment of PAD comprises of smoking cessation, exercise and management of
other risk factors associated with the disease. However, a medical intervention is indicated
in those patients presenting with disabling IC, CLI or in cases where conservative treatment
does not afford relief.
The Inter-Society Consensus for the Management of PAD (TASC II) published an overview of the
different categories of PAD. The TASC II recommendations for the treatment of femoral
popliteal lesions are shown in Figure 1. For TASC A & B lesions, the endovascular treatment
is preferred and for TASC C & D lesions, the surgical treatment is preferred.
The surgical treatment with prosthetic bypasses yielded good results in numerous trials.
Berglund, Björck and Elfström (2005) conducted a retrospective study in which 499 patients
were assessed. These patients received an above-knee femoropopliteal bypass with a saphenous
vein graft (139 subjects) or an ePTFE graft (360 subjects). Primary patency after 12 months
was 87% and 75% for the venous bypass and prosthetic bypass respectively. Jensen et al.
(2007) investigated 427 patients in a randomized trial with patients who underwent an
above-knee femoropopliteal bypass. Eventually, 205 patients received a PTFE bypass graft and
208 received a Dacron bypass graft (14 patients were excluded). The primary patency rates
after 12 months were 70% and 78% for PTFE and Dacron respectively. Kedora et al. (2007)
compared 86 patients (100 limbs) with femoropopliteal artery occlusive disease in their
randomized trial. 50 limbs were treated with angioplasty and one or more self-expanding stent
grafts, the other 50 limbs were treated with a synthetic Dacron or ePTFE bypass graft. After
12 months, the primary patency for the bypass group was 74.2%. In a similar study setup,
McQuade, Gable, Hohman, Pearl & Theune (2009) studied 100 limbs in 86 patients with
superficial femoral artery occlusive disease. 50 limbs were treated with angioplasty and one
or more stent grafts, the other randomized 50 limbs were treated with a synthetic Dacron or
ePTFE bypass graft. The bypass arm of this study had a primary patency after 12 months of
77%. A total of 27 patients with TASC D lesions in the superficial femoral artery were
analyzed by Hines, Wain, Montecalvo & Feuerman (2010). All patients received a bypass with an
endoscopic saphenous vein. After 12 months the primary patency was 73.2%.
At the LINC congress Bosiers (2012) presented an analysis on 100 surgical primary patent
bypasses. Surgical primary patency is measured by assessing flow through the bypass.
Endovascular primary patency is measured by the absence of binary restenosis (PSV≥2.4),
assessed at the proximal and distal anastomoses. A total of 89% of the surgical primary
patent bypasses was evaluated as endovascular patent. This analysis shows a margin of
approximately 10% which can be taken into account when interpreting the primary patency of
surgical bypasses.
Dake et al. (2011) examined 900 lesions in the superficial and popliteal arteries treated
with one or more Zilver PTX drug-eluting stents. The mean lesion length was 99.5 (±82.1) mm
and the primary patency after 12 months was 86.2%.
Comparison of the surgical bypass with an endovascular approach in femoropopliteal lesions is
been a study set-up that has been used many times. To date, a randomized control between
bypass and the new drug-eluting technology as not been conducted. The purpose of this trial
is to compare the results of a prosthetic bypass treatment with the Zilver PTX drug-eluting
stent treatment. Historical data of the primary patency bypass results, taken the 10%
difference between surgical and endovascular patencies into account, gives an endovascular
primary patency of approximately 70%. In this non-inferiority trial, the proposed primary
patency of the Zilver PTX drug-eluting stent is set at 80% to show that the treatment with a
drug-eluting stent is comparable to the treatment with a prosthetic bypass.
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