Japanese Patients Treated in the IMPERIAL Randomized Trial Comparing Eluvia and Zilver PTX Stents.


Journal

Cardiovascular and interventional radiology
ISSN: 1432-086X
Titre abrégé: Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 8003538

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Feb 2020
Historique:
received: 09 07 2019
accepted: 03 10 2019
pubmed: 7 11 2019
medline: 2 10 2020
entrez: 7 11 2019
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

The purpose of the study is to report 12-month efficacy and safety results from the subgroup of Japanese patients in the prospective IMPERIAL 2:1 randomized controlled trial (RCT). The global IMPERIAL RCT was designed to compare performance of the Eluvia Drug-Eluting Vascular Stent System (Boston Scientific, Marlborough, MA, USA) with the Zilver PTX Drug-Eluting Peripheral Stent (Cook Medical, Bloomington, IN, USA) for treatment of femoropopliteal artery lesions. Patients with symptomatic (Rutherford category 2-4) disease were included. Post-procedural technical success was defined as delivery and deployment of the assigned study stent to the target lesion to achieve residual angiographic stenosis no greater than 30% by visual assessment. Twelve-month assessments included primary patency (core laboratory-assessed duplex ultrasound peak systolic velocity ratio ≤ 2.4 in the absence of clinically driven TLR or bypass of the target lesion) and major adverse events (MAEs). Fifty-six patients in the Eluvia group and 28 in the Zilver PTX group were treated at Japanese centers. Mean lesion length was 91.8 ± 38.0 mm for Eluvia and 87.4 ± 41.7 mm for Zilver PTX. Technical success was 100% for both groups. At 12 months, the observed primary patency rate was 90.9% for Eluvia and 84.6% for Zilver PTX. The 12-month MAE rate was 1.8% for Eluvia and 7.7% for Zilver PTX. All MAEs were clinically driven TLRs. The results show excellent vessel patency and a good safety profile up to 1 year in the subgroup of Japanese patients in IMPERIAL treated with Eluvia for femoropopliteal artery disease. Level 3; subgroup analysis of randomized trial. ClinicalTrials.gov, identifier NCT02574481.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31690980
doi: 10.1007/s00270-019-02355-x
pii: 10.1007/s00270-019-02355-x
doi:

Banques de données

ClinicalTrials.gov
['NCT02574481']

Types de publication

Comparative Study Journal Article Multicenter Study Randomized Controlled Trial

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

215-222

Auteurs

Yoshimitsu Soga (Y)

Kokura Memorial Hospital, 3-2-1 Asano, Kokurakita-ku, Kitakyushu, Fukuoka, 802-0001, Japan. soga@circulation.jp.

Masahiko Fujihara (M)

Kishiwada Tokushukai Hospital, Osaka, Japan.

Osamu Iida (O)

Kansai Rosai Hospital, Amagasaki, Japan.

Daizo Kawasaki (D)

Morinomiya Hospital, Osaka, Japan.

Keisuke Hirano (K)

Saiseikai Yokohama-City Eastern Hospital, Yokohama, Japan.

Hiroyoshi Yokoi (H)

Fukuoka Sanno Hospital, Fukuoka, Japan.

Akira Miyamoto (A)

Takatsu General Hospital, Kawasaki, Japan.

Kimihiko Kichikawa (K)

Nara Medical University Hospital, Kashihara, Japan.

Masato Nakamura (M)

Toho University Ohashi Medical Center, Tokyo, Japan.

Takao Ohki (T)

The Jikei University Hospital, Tokyo, Japan.

Juan Diaz-Cartelle (J)

Boston Scientific, Marlborough, MA, USA.

William A Gray (WA)

Lankenau Heart Institute, Wynnewood, PA, USA.

Stefan Müller-Hülsbeck (S)

Ev. Luth. Diakonissenanstalt Flensburg, Flensburg, Germany.

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Classifications MeSH