Back to Search Start Over

Three-Year Sustained Clinical Efficacy of Drug-Coated Balloon Angioplasty in a Real-World Femoropopliteal Cohort

Authors :
Torsello, Giovanni
Stavroulakis, Konstantinos
Brodmann, Marianne
Micari, Antonio
Tepe, Gunnar
Veroux, Pierfrancesco
Benko, Andrew
Choi, Donghoon
Vermassen, Frank E. G.
Jaff, Michael R.
Guo, Jia
Dobranszki, Reka
Zeller, Thomas
Zeller, Thomas
Torsello, Giovanni
Tepe, Gunnar
Peeters, Patrick
Scheinert, Dierk
Bosiers, Marc
Maene, Lieven
Micari, Antonio
Do, Dai-Do
Hendriks, Jeroen
Keirse, Koen
Brodmann, Marianne
Merkely, Bela
Lardenoije, Jan-Willem
Ruzsa, Zoltan
Vogel, Britta
Veroux, Pierfrancesco
Albuquerque e Castro, Joao
Periard, Daniel
Ludyga, Tomasz
Midy, Dominique
Choi, Donghoon
Lansink, Wouter
Ketelsen, Dominik
Dubenec, Steven
Banyai, Martin
Chakfe, Nabil
Xaver Roithinger, Franz
Trani, Carlo
Mansour, Hossam
Rha, Seung-Woon
Vermassen, Frank
Belenky, Alexander
Spak, Lubomir
Chalmers, Nicholas
Benko, Andrew
Kum, Steven
Won, Je Hwan
Vozar, Matej
Teng Tan, Kong
Labib, Mamdouh
Borst, Gert-Jan de
Do, Young-Soo
Teijink, Joep
Gomez, Juan Fernando
Falkowski, Aleksander
Ferreira, Luis
Matela, Jozef
Lee, Seung-Whan
Verhoeven, Bart
Mannheim, Dalit
Nessi, Franco
Vulev, Ivan
Vries, Jean-Paul de
Maly, Radovan
Kavteladze, Zaza
Turner, Douglas
Mendiz, Oscar
Kolvenbach, Ralf
Karnabatidis, Dimitrios
Cuellar, Cesar
Venermo, Maarit
Velicka, Linas
Lundberg, Goran
Source :
Journal of Endovascular Therapy; October 2020, Vol. 27 Issue: 5 p693-705, 13p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Purpose:To report the 36-month outcomes from the prospective, multicenter, single-arm IN.PACT Global Study (ClinicalTrials.govidentifier NCT01609296) evaluating the performance of the IN.PACT Admiral drug-coated balloon (DCB) in real-world patients with femoropopliteal occlusive disease. Materials and Methods:The IN.PACT Global Study was conducted at 64 international sites and enrolled 1535 patients with complex lesions, which included bilateral disease, multiple lesions, de novo in-stent restenosis, long lesions, and chronic total occlusions. The predefined full clinical cohort included 1406 patients (mean age 68.6 years; 67.8% men) with claudication or rest pain treated with the study DCB. Mean lesion length was 12.09±9.54 cm; 18.0% had in-stent restenosis, 35.5% were totally occluded, and 68.7% were calcified. Freedom from clinically-driven target lesion revascularization (CD-TLR) was evaluated through 36 months. The safety composite endpoint was freedom from device- and procedure-related death through 30 days and freedom from major target limb amputation and clinically-driven target vessel revascularization within 36 months. All safety and revascularization events were reviewed by an independent clinical events committee. Results:The Kaplan-Meier estimate of freedom from CD-TLR through 36 months was 76.9%. The composite safety endpoint was achieved in 75.6% of patients. The 36-month all-cause mortality rate was 11.6%, and the major target limb amputation rate was 1.0%. The Kaplan-Meier estimate of freedom from CD-TLR through 36 months was significantly lower in patients with chronic limb-threatening ischemia (CLTI) compared with claudicants (67.6% vs 78.0%; p=0.003). Lesions affecting both the superficial femoral artery (SFA) and popliteal artery had lower Kaplan-Meier freedom from CD-TLR through 36 months (69.2%) than either isolated SFA (79.7%) or popliteal artery lesions (76.5%; log- rank p<0.001). Predictors of CD-TLR through 36 months included increased lesion length, reference vessel diameter ≤4.5 mm, in-stent restenosis, bilateral disease, CLTI, and hyperlipidemia. Conclusion:DCB angioplasty with the IN.PACT Admiral DCB for femoropopliteal disease in a diverse and complex real-world population is associated with sustained clinical efficacy and low rates of reinterventions at 3 years after the initial procedure.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15266028 and 15451550
Volume :
27
Issue :
5
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of Endovascular Therapy
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs53621882
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/1526602820931477