Abstract

The aim of this study was to appraise 1-year outcomes after percutaneous treatment of long femoropoplitealartery disease using paclitaxel-coated balloons. Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty with paclitaxel-coated balloons for TransAtlantic Inter-Society Consensus types A and B femoropopliteal artery disease has provided favorable results. Consecutive patients with Rutherford class 2 to 4 disease due to femoropopliteal lesions >15 cm long and with 4- to 7-mm reference vessel diameter were prospectively enrolled in a multicenter study. The primary study endpoint was primary patency at 12 months. Secondary endpoints included major adverse events (the composite of death, major target limb amputation, thrombosis at the target lesion site, or clinically driven non-target lesion target vessel revascularization), changes in Rutherford class, ankle-brachial index, and quality of life up to 24 months post-procedure. A total of 105 patients (mean age 68 ± 9 years, 81.9% men) treated with paclitaxel-coated balloons and provisional stenting were enrolled, and final procedural success was obtained in all. The mean treated lesion length was 251 ± 71 mm, including 63.4% moderate to severely calcified lesions and 49.5% total occlusions. The bailout stent rate was 10.9%. Follow-up after 12 months was obtained in 101 patients (96.2%), showing that primary patency was maintained in 84 (83.2%), and major adverse events had occurred in 7 (6.2%), with persistently significant clinical benefits in Rutherford class. Paclitaxel-coated balloons are associated with favorable functional and clinical outcomes at 1 year in patients with long femoropopliteal artery disease requiring percutaneous revascularization. (Drug Eluting Balloon [DEB] and Long Lesions of Superficial Femoral Artery [SFA] Ischemic Vascular Disease [DEB-SFA-LONG]; NCT01658540).

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