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High-Dose Drug-Coated Balloon Versus Polymer-Based Drug-Eluting Stent for Femoropopliteal Artery Disease Treatment. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • High-dose drug-coated balloons (HD-DCB) and polymer-based drug-eluting stents (PB-DES) are both treatments for femoropopliteal artery disease, showing favorable outcomes in clinical trials, but their comparative effectiveness was unclear.
  • This study analyzed data from 2 large registries with 2470 patients, focusing on the 1-year restenosis rate as the primary endpoint, and additional outcomes like reocclusion rate and major adverse events as secondary endpoints.
  • Results indicated that the 1-year restenosis rate was notably lower for the PB-DES group (16.0%) compared to the HD-DCB group (22.0%), but no significant differences were found in other clinical outcomes

Article Abstract

Purpose: Clinical trials have demonstrated that high-dose drug-coated balloon (HD-DCB) and polymer-based drug-eluting stent (PB-DES) treatments for femoropopliteal (FP) artery disease have favorable outcomes. However, which one would be better remained unrevealed.

Methods: This study used the databases of 2 large-scale multicenter prospective drug-coated balloon (DCB) and drug-eluting stent (DES) registries. The study included 2470 patients with symptomatic FP lesion treated with IN.PACT Admiral DCB or Eluvia DES at 69 centers. A propensity-score-based paired analysis was conducted. Primary endpoint was 1-year restenosis rate. Secondary endpoints were 1-year reocclusion rate, target lesion revascularization (TLR), acute thrombosis, bypass conversion, major amputation, major adverse limb event (MALE), and all-cause death.

Results: A total of 1535 patients were treated with HD-DCB, and 935 patients were treated with PB-DES. The propensity-score matching extracted 678 pairs, with no remarkable intergroup difference in baseline characteristics. The 1-year restenosis rate was significantly lower in the PB-DES group than in the HD-DCB group (16.0% vs 22.0%, p=0.016). The other endpoints (reocclusion rate, TLR, acute thrombosis, bypass conversion, major amputation, MALE, and all-cause death) did not differ between the groups. No baseline characteristics had any significant interaction effect on the association of HD-DCB vs PB-DES with restenosis risk (all p>0.05).

Conclusions: This study demonstrated that the 1-year TLR, reocclusion rate, and other endpoints did not differ between the PB-DES group and the HD-DCB group despite the lower restenosis in the PB-DES group.

Clinical Impact: One-year restenosis rate was significantly lower in the polymer-based DES group than in the high-dose DCB group for foemoropopliteal disease. However, there is no difference in the other endpoints between two groups.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/15266028241267759DOI Listing

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