Japanese Patients Treated in the IMPERIAL Randomized Trial Comparing Eluvia and Zilver PTX Stents.
Aged
Drug-Eluting Stents
Female
Femoral Artery
/ diagnostic imaging
Humans
Japan
Male
Peripheral Arterial Disease
/ diagnostic imaging
Popliteal Artery
/ diagnostic imaging
Prospective Studies
Treatment Outcome
Ultrasonography, Doppler, Duplex
/ methods
Ultrasonography, Interventional
/ methods
Vascular Patency
/ drug effects
Drug-eluting stents
Paclitaxel
Peripheral arterial disease
Superficial femoral artery
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
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