Trial of a Paclitaxel-Coated Balloon for Femoropopliteal Artery Disease
Massachusetts General Hospital · Ochsner Medical Center · +10 more institutions
Abstract
The treatment of peripheral artery disease with percutaneous transluminal angioplasty is limited by the occurrence of vessel recoil and restenosis. Drug-coated angioplasty balloons deliver antiproliferative agents directly to the artery, potentially improving vessel patency by reducing restenosis.
In this single-blind, randomized trial conducted at 54 sites, we assigned, in a 2:1 ratio, 476 patients with symptomatic intermittent claudication or ischemic pain while at rest and angiographically significant atherosclerotic lesions to angioplasty with a paclitaxel-coated balloon or to standard angioplasty. The primary efficacy end point was primary patency of the target lesion at 12 months (defined as freedom from binary restenosis or from the need for target-lesion revascularization). The primary safety end point was a composite of freedom from perioperative death from any cause and freedom at 12 months from limb-related death (i.e., death from a medical complication related to a limb), amputation, and reintervention.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 64.72
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 26
Authors
15Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Angioplasty
- Restenosis
- Balloon
- Surgery
- Amputation
- Claudication
- Revascularization
- Good health and well-being