Abstract

Endovascular therapy for aortoiliac (AI) lesions using stents is widely accepted. However, the long-term outcome of 2 different types of nitinol stents for AI lesions is unknown. The aim of this study was to examine the long-term outcome of the SMART and Luminexx nitinol stents for the treatment of de novo AI lesions. This study was a multicenter retrospective analysis of a prospectively maintained database. The study enrolled consecutive patients undergoing primary stenting for de novo AI artery stenosis between January 2005 and December 2009. A total of 1503 lesions in 1229 patients treated with SMART or Luminexx primary stenting were enrolled. The primary end point was primary patency, secondary end points were the primary assisted patency, secondary patency, and major adverse limb events (MALEs), which included major amputation and major reintervention. To minimize the differences between the groups, a propensity score matching analysis was performed, and 284 lesions per group were analyzed to identify outcomes. After the propensity score matching analysis, the lesion length was 60 ± 37 and 57 ± 31 mm (P = .275), and the reference vessel diameter was 8.2 ± 1.5 and 8.3 ± 1.5 mm (P = .482) in the SMART and Luminexx groups, respectively. The primary patency at 3 years was not significantly different between the groups (83.5% vs 82.2%, P = .842, respectively). The assisted primary patency and secondary patency rates were also not significantly different (91.7% vs 93.2%, P = .340, 99.2% vs 98.8%, P = .922). In addition, the MALE rate was not significantly different between the groups (98.3% vs 97.3%, P = .821). The current data suggest that the use of nitinol stents for the AI artery provided good long-term patency and freedom from MALE for 3 years of follow-up, regardless of whether SMART or Luminexx stents were used.

Full Text
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