Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of the study is to report 24-month efficacy and safety results for the Japanese patient cohort in a prospective randomized controlled trial (RCT) of drug-eluting stent (DES) use for peripheral artery disease.Materials and methodsPatients in the global IMPERIAL RCT had femoropopliteal lesions treated with either the Eluvia DES (Boston Scientific, Marlborough, MA, USA) or the Zilver PTX drug-coated stent (Cook Medical, Bloomington, IN, USA). At 24 months, assessments included duplex ultrasound imaging for core laboratory vessel patency measurement, target lesion revascularization (TLR) rates, and clinical outcome measures.ResultsThe Japanese cohort included 84 patients (56 treated with Eluvia and 28 with Zilver PTX). The clinically driven TLR rates were 5.6% (3/54) and 18.5% (5/27) for patients treated with Eluvia and Zilver PTX, respectively (difference -13.0%, 95%CI -28.8, 2.9%; p = 0.11). The Kaplan–Meier estimates for freedom from clinically driven TLR at 24 months were 94.3% for patients who received Eluvia and 80.4% for those who received Zilver PTX (log rank p = 0.05), and for primary patency they were 88.5% and 80.4%, respectively (log rank p = 0.28). Mortality rates were 5.6% (3/54) and 11.1% (3/27); p = 0.39. Rutherford classification improved by at least one category without TLR for 91.8% (45/49) and 68.2% (15/22) of patients (p = 0.03). Walking impairment score improvements were sustained over time.ConclusionThe results at 24 months support the efficacy and safety of DES in Japanese patients, with sustained clinical improvements and numerically fewer reinterventions for those treated with Eluvia.Clinical trial RegistrationClinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT02574481.https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02574481Level of EvidenceEBM Level III; cohort analysis of randomized trial.

Highlights

  • The ability of drug-eluting endovascular treatment of femoropopliteal disease to reduce the need for reinterventions has been well described, in the short term and for Caucasian populations [1,2,3,4,5,6]

  • The results at 24 months support the efficacy and safety of drugeluting stent (DES) in Japanese patients, with sustained clinical improvements and numerically fewer reinterventions for those treated with Eluvia

  • Mean lesion length was 91.8 ± 38.0 mm for patients treated with Eluvia and 87.4 ± 41.7 mm for patients treated with Zilver PTX

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Summary

Introduction

The ability of drug-eluting endovascular treatment of femoropopliteal disease to reduce the need for reinterventions has been well described, in the short term and for Caucasian populations [1,2,3,4,5,6]. Longer-term prospective data are important to characterize the outcomes expected for patients over time [7,8,9,10], and large randomized studies provide opportunity to explore clinical outcomes over time for various patient cohorts [11]. One-year results in the cohort of patients from Japan showed outstanding patency and safety [14], and we sought to determine whether the 2-year outcomes for Japanese patients were likewise reflective of the overall trial findings. This report presents the primary patency, freedom from clinically driven target lesion revascularization (CD-TLR), patient outcome assessments, and safety for Japanese patients in the IMPERIAL randomized trial through 24 months

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