Excellence in Peripheral Arterial Disease Treatment of Superficial Femoral Artery Disease With Drug-eluting Stents
NCT ID: NCT03671655
Last Updated: 2018-09-14
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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TERMINATED
NA
4 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2014-01-31
2015-08-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Study subjects will be recruited from the group of patients who are referred for clinically indicated endovascular treatment of SFA for claudication at the Dallas VA Medical Center and at other participating study sites. The study the investigators propose is significant because: (a) it would affect many veterans, (b) the consequences of early SFA stent failure are grave, (c) treatment of SFA lesions is challenging, and (d) outcomes after treatment of SFA lesions are poor and may be improved with DES. In summary, failure of stent patency after initial revascularization with stenting is common and carries significant morbidity. If restenosis rates of SFA stents can be reduced with DES, it could significantly improve procedural success, durability of treatment, quality of life of patients, reduce the need for repeat revascularization procedures, and potentially reduce healthcare costs.
The proposed study is a phase 3, randomized controlled, parallel-group study in patients with long SFA lesions and SFA CTO, undergoing clinically indicated stent-based percutaneous revascularization.
End points :
The primary study end point is binary restenosis, as assessed by duplex ultrasonography performed at 12 months post-procedure or earlier if clinically indicated. Binary restenosis is defined as ≥2.5 fold increase in PSVR within the stented segment and within 10 mm of its proximal and distal edges to that recorded proximal to the stented segment or by the presence of an occluded stent with no flow. Secondary endpoints included change of resting ankle-brachial index (ABI) and symptoms (Rutherford-Becker stages), at 12 months post-procedure. Patients will be asked to complete a walking impairment questionnaire (score range: 0 to 14,080) pre-intervention, and then at 12 months for the first year post-procedure.19 All analyses will be performed in a blinded fashion at the Veterans Affairs North Texas Clinical Angiographic and Ultrasound Core Laboratory and clinical adjudication and adverse events monitoring will be performed by an independent data oversight and safety monitoring board.
Statistical analysis :
The investigators calculated a priori that 55 vascular segments would be needed in each study arm to have 80% power to detect a reduction in binary restenosis from 40% in the BMS arm to 15% in the DES arm, assuming 10% attrition and an alpha of 0.05. Continuous variables will be summarized as mean ± standard deviation and compared using the t-test or the Wilcoxon rank-sum test, as appropriate. Discrete variables will be presented as frequencies and group percentages compared using the chi-square test or Fisher's Exact Test, as appropriate. Freedom from restenosis will be assessed using Kaplan-Meier curves and log-rank test. For all comparisons a two-sided probability of \<0.05 will be considered statistically significant. All analyses will be performed using SAS 9.1 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, North Carolina).
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Drug-eluting stent
Drug-eluting stent is nitinol stent coated with Paclitaxel drug Other Names: Zilver PTX stent Zilver Paclitaxel stent
Drug-eluting stent
Drug eluting stent which are nitinol stent coated with Paclitaxel drug
Bare metal stent
Bare metal stentis Nitinol alloy self expandable stent. Other Names: Bare metal stent Nitinol stent SMART Stent Viabahn stent
Bare metal stent
Bare metal stent is Nitinol alloy self expandable stent. Other Names: Bare metal stent Nitinol stent SMART Stent Viabahn stent
Interventions
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Drug-eluting stent
Drug eluting stent which are nitinol stent coated with Paclitaxel drug
Bare metal stent
Bare metal stent is Nitinol alloy self expandable stent. Other Names: Bare metal stent Nitinol stent SMART Stent Viabahn stent
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Referred for clinically indicated lower extremity angiography and peripheral arterial intervention
3. Willing and able to give informed consent. The patients must be able to comply with study procedures and follow-up.
4. Absence of allergy to both clopidogrel and aspirin
5. Negative pregnancy test or breast-feeding
6. No coexisting conditions that limit life expectancy to less than 12 months or that could affect a patient's compliance with the protocol as per the site investigator
7. Serum creatinine \<2.5 mg/dL
8. Baseline hemoglobin \>9 g/dl
9. Baseline platelet count \>80,000/L
10. Absence of prior stroke or transient ischemic attack within 3 months
11. ≥30 days from any prior surgical or endovascular procedure
Angiographic enrollment criteria:
1. Undergoing SFA revascularization with the intention for stent implantation
2. De novo SFA lesion ≥60 mm in length by visual estimation
3. Successfully crossed de novo SFA CTO of any length by visual estimation
Exclusion Criteria
2. SFA lesion extending below the medial femoral epicondyle
3. \<1 vessel below-the knee (BTK) run-off
\-
18 Years
90 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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North Texas Veterans Healthcare System
FED
Responsible Party
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Subhash Banerjee
Chief of Cardiology
Principal Investigators
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Subhash Banerjee, MD
Role: STUDY_CHAIR
North Texas Veterans Health Care System, Dallas, TX
Locations
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North Texas Veterans Affairs Health Care System
Dallas, Texas, United States
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Dallas, Texas, United States
Countries
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References
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Scheinert D, Scheinert S, Sax J, Piorkowski C, Braunlich S, Ulrich M, Biamino G, Schmidt A. Prevalence and clinical impact of stent fractures after femoropopliteal stenting. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2005 Jan 18;45(2):312-5. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2004.11.026.
Rocha-Singh KJ, Jaff MR, Crabtree TR, Bloch DA, Ansel G; VIVA Physicians, Inc. Performance goals and endpoint assessments for clinical trials of femoropopliteal bare nitinol stents in patients with symptomatic peripheral arterial disease. Catheter Cardiovasc Interv. 2007 May 1;69(6):910-9. doi: 10.1002/ccd.21104.
Krankenberg H, Schluter M, Steinkamp HJ, Burgelin K, Scheinert D, Schulte KL, Minar E, Peeters P, Bosiers M, Tepe G, Reimers B, Mahler F, Tubler T, Zeller T. Nitinol stent implantation versus percutaneous transluminal angioplasty in superficial femoral artery lesions up to 10 cm in length: the femoral artery stenting trial (FAST). Circulation. 2007 Jul 17;116(3):285-92. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.107.689141. Epub 2007 Jun 25.
Dake MD, Ansel GM, Jaff MR, Ohki T, Saxon RR, Smouse HB, Zeller T, Roubin GS, Burket MW, Khatib Y, Snyder SA, Ragheb AO, White JK, Machan LS; Zilver PTX Investigators. Paclitaxel-eluting stents show superiority to balloon angioplasty and bare metal stents in femoropopliteal disease: twelve-month Zilver PTX randomized study results. Circ Cardiovasc Interv. 2011 Oct 1;4(5):495-504. doi: 10.1161/CIRCINTERVENTIONS.111.962324. Epub 2011 Sep 27.
Schillinger M, Sabeti S, Loewe C, Dick P, Amighi J, Mlekusch W, Schlager O, Cejna M, Lammer J, Minar E. Balloon angioplasty versus implantation of nitinol stents in the superficial femoral artery. N Engl J Med. 2006 May 4;354(18):1879-88. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa051303.
Banerjee S, Das TS, Abu-Fadel MS, Dippel EJ, Shammas NW, Tran DL, Zankar A, Varghese C, Kelly KC, Weideman RA, Little BB, Reilly RF, Addo T, Brilakis ES. Pilot trial of cryoplasty or conventional balloon post-dilation of nitinol stents for revascularization of peripheral arterial segments: the COBRA trial. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2012 Oct 9;60(15):1352-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2012.05.042. Epub 2012 Sep 12.
Other Identifiers
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Dallas VA IRB #13-098
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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