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Combined use of directional atherectomy and drug-coated balloon for the endovascular treatment of common femoral artery disease: immediate and one-year outcomes

Authors :
Fortunato Iacovelli
Giovanni Esposito
Enrico Coscioni
Bruno Trimarco
Armando Pucciarelli
Eugenio Stabile
Grigore Popusoi
Tullio Tesorio
Angelo Cioppa
Luigi Salemme
Antonella Arcari
Cioppa, Angelo
Stabile, Eugenio
Salemme, Luigi
Popusoi, Grigore
Pucciarelli, Armando
Iacovelli, Fortunato
Arcari, Antonella
Coscioni, Enrico
Trimarco, Bruno
Esposito, Giovanni
Tesorio, Tullio
Source :
EuroIntervention. 12:1789-1794
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Europa Digital & Publishing, 2017.

Abstract

Aims Surgical endarterectomy is the therapy of choice for atherosclerotic common femoral artery (CFA) obstruction. Recently, some large single-centre series have shown encouraging results for the percutaneous treatment of CFA obstructions. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the safety, feasibility, and one-year efficacy of the endovascular treatment of CFA obstructions with combined use of directional atherectomy (DA) and a paclitaxel-coated balloon (DCB). Methods and results Between January 2012 and July 2014, 30 consecutive patients with severely calcified obstructions of the common femoral artery were treated in our centre using DA followed by DCB dilatation. Provisional stenting was allowed in the case of a suboptimal result. Twenty cases (66%) were isolated CFA interventions, whereas five (17%) and five (17%) also involved inflow and outflow vessels, respectively. Chronic total CFA occlusions (CTO) were recanalised in six cases (20%). Procedural success was achieved in all cases; stenting was needed in three cases (10%). At one year, restenosis and target lesion revascularisation were observed in two of 30 (6.6%) and one of 30 (3.3%) patients, respectively. The secondary patency rate was 96.7%. Conclusions This single-centre prospective study suggests that the combined use of DA and DCB is a safe and effective alternative to surgery, a treatment option for common femoral artery lesions and provides encouraging results in this setting.

Details

ISSN :
1774024X
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
EuroIntervention
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....937b979125fae909e1c4ba7dbafc44e4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4244/eij-d-15-00187