The fluoropolymer-based PES showed promising 1-year clinical and angiographic outcomes in real-world long femoropopliteal lesions. The long-term impact of aneurysm formation remains to be further investigated.
Purpose: To evaluate the safety and feasibility of treating calcified, stenotic common femoral arteries (CFAs) using the Peripheral Intravascular Lithotripsy (IVL) System. Methods: An analysis was performed of 21 patients (mean age 71.9±10.1 years; 16 men) across 3 sites with calcified CFA stenoses treated with the Peripheral IVL System. The outcomes of interest were the ability to deliver IVL to the target lesion, the increase in acute gain, the reduction in diameter stenosis, the rate of provisional stenting, and angiographically defined complications. Results: Access to the target lesion and delivery of treatment by the IVL catheter were successful in all 21 patients. Post treatment mean diameter stenosis was 21.3%, representing an acute mean lumen gain of 3.1±1.3 mm (range 0.7–5.2). Vascular complications were minimal, with only 5 type B (non-flowing-limiting) dissections reported. The profunda femoris artery was patent in all patients following IVL, and none of the subjects experienced a perforation, distal embolization, thrombus, no reflow, or abrupt closure. Conclusion: These early results demonstrate that calcified, stenotic CFA lesions can be safely and successfully treated using the Peripheral IVL System.
Purpose: To report the outcomes from the observational SURPASS registry, which was created to assess the performance of the Conformable TAG (CTAG) stent-graft with the Active Control System (ACS) in patients undergoing thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR) in a real-world setting. Materials and Methods: The SURPASS registry ( ClinicalTrials.gov; identifier NCT03286400) was an observational, prospective, single-arm, post-market, international study that enrolled patients undergoing TEVAR using the CTAG with ACS for both acute and chronic thoracic aortic disease between October 2017 and July 2018. The CTAG with ACS features 2-stage deployment of the stent-graft and an optional angulation mechanism that modifies only the proximal end of the stent-graft. During the observation period, 127 patients (mean age 67.1±12.1 years, range 27–86; 92 men) were enrolled and treated for an array of aortic pathologies, including chronic and acute lesions and 4 ruptured descending thoracic aneurysms. The primary outcome of this study was technical success; secondary outcomes were clinical success and major adverse events at 30 days and 12 months. The numbers of 2-stage device deployments and applications of the angulation mechanism were recorded, along with the reasons for use. Results: Technical success of the TEVAR was 97.6% owing to unintentional partial coverage of supra-aortic branches in 3 cases (the vessels were patent on imaging). The stent-graft was repositioned at its intermediate diameter in 79 patients (62.2%), and the angulation feature was applied in 64 cases (50.4%), mainly to improve proximal wall apposition and orthogonality in the aorta. The desired effect was achieved in 60 cases (93.8%). There was no device compression, bird-beak configuration, fracture, or graft occlusion. The 30-day and 12-month clinical success rates were 97.6% and 92.9%, respectively. There were 3 aorta-related deaths at 30 days and a further 3 at 12 months. Fatalities were due to a retrograde type A dissection (0.8%), paraplegia, bowel ischemia, sepsis in the setting of a mycotic aneurysm, aneurysm rupture post aortoesophageal fistula, and multiorgan dysfunction syndrome. Three endoleaks (2 type Ia and 1 type III) required reintervention. Conclusion: In the SURPASS registry, the use of the CTAG device with ACS showed promising outcomes despite the challenging pathologies. The new delivery system enables a controlled staged delivery with in situ adjustments during positioning, facilitating the treatment of complex aortic disease.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.