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Assessment of Sirolimus- vs. paCLitaxEl-coated balloon angioPlasty In atherosclerotic femoropopliteal lesiOnS (ASCLEPIOS Study): preliminary results. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • There is a concern linking paclitaxel-coated devices to increased mortality over five years, prompting a study on alternative treatments.
  • The study involves patients with specific arterial disease being randomly assigned to either paclitaxel or sirolimus-coated balloon therapy, measuring outcomes like procedural success and complications.
  • Preliminary results with six patients show safety and potential effectiveness for sirolimus-coated balloons, indicating a need for further analysis with a larger sample size.

Article Abstract

Background: There appears to be an association between paclitaxel-coated devices and increased 5-year all-cause mortality.

Methods: We are conducting a prospective, randomized, controlled, single-center, noninferiority study. All consecutive patients with femoropopliteal arterial disease who fulfilled the inclusion/exclusion criteria are sequentially and consecutively assigned to either paclitaxel (Ranger, Boston Scientific) or sirolimus (MagicTouch, Concept Medical) coated balloon angioplasty treatment. The primary outcome are procedural success and primary vessel patency at index procedure. The secondary outcomes are 30-day and 12-month freedom from MAEs (amputation, death, TLR/TVR, MI, distal embolization that requires a separate intervention or hospitalization), procedural success (≤30% residual diameter stenosis or occlusion after the procedure), Rutherford category improvement (reduction ≤1 category) and ABI improvement (increase ≥0.10 from baseline).

Results: A total of six patients have been enrolled in the present study up to now. The mean age was 72.6 years old and five were male. All patients had angiographic evidence of isolated occlusion in the transition segment of the distal femoral superficial artery in the popliteal artery. The mean length was 109 mm. Three patients were treated by sirolimus-coated (group A) and three by paclitaxel coated balloon angioplasty (group B). The primary patency and procedural success was in two of three and three of three patients, for group A and B, respectively.

Conclusions: Preliminary results show safety and feasibility of the Sirolimus-coated balloon angioplasty. Further investigation and increase of sample size will allow for more sustained conclusions regarding patency and procedural success of this type of balloons for the endovascular treatment of peripheral arterial disease.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.23736/S0021-9509.21.12169-XDOI Listing

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