TY - JOUR
T1 - Comparative assessment of patient outcomes with intraluminal or subintimal crossing of infrainguinal peripheral artery chronic total occlusions
AU - Kondapalli, Ananya
AU - Jeon-Slaughter, Haekyung
AU - Lu, Hua
AU - Xu, Hao
AU - Khalili, Houman
AU - Prasad, Anand
AU - Armstrong, Ehrin J.
AU - Brilakis, Emmanouil S
AU - Banerjee, Subhash
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors of this manuscript would like to acknowledge the contributions of Nicolas W Shammas, MD, Mazin Foteh, MD, Shirling Tsai, MD, Mujtaba Ali, MD, Mazen Abu-Fadel, MD, Osvaldo S Gigliotti, MD, Ian Cawich, MD, Gerardo Rodriguez, MD, PhD, Dharam Kumbhani, MD, Tayo Addo, MD; and Michael Luna, MD and Tony S Das, MD for their contributions to the XLPAD registry. We also acknowledge the support of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center for their support in establishing and managing the REDCap database software utilized in the XLPAD registry (Academic Information Systems NIH grant UL1-RR024982).
Funding Information:
The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: the registry received funding through a research grant from Boston Scientific Corporation.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017, © The Author(s) 2017.
PY - 2018/2/1
Y1 - 2018/2/1
N2 - This study compares procedural complications and clinical outcomes between subintimal crossing versus intraluminal crossing during endovascular treatment of infrainguinal peripheral artery chronic total occlusions (CTO). We identified 1335 CTO interventions in 1001 patients from the multicenter Excellence in Peripheral Artery Disease (XLPAD) registry from January 2005 to October 2015. Outcomes included 30-day and 12-month all-cause death, non-fatal myocardial infarction or stroke, peripheral artery stent, or vessel, thrombosis (ST), need for any target limb endovascular or surgical revascularization, target limb major amputation and procedural complications. A subintimal crossing technique was necessary in 388 lesions (27% overall in 1335 lesions; 34% (n=351) in 1023 femoropopliteal lesions, and 12% (n=37) in 312 infrapopliteal lesions, p<0.01) with a lower procedural (p<0.01) and technical (p<0.01) success than the intraluminal in both femoropopliteal and infrapopliteal interventions. There were no significant differences in procedural complications, major adverse cardiac events, or clinically driven target limb revascularization at 1 year between the two groups, except a higher residual dissection rate in the subintimal crossing group than the intraluminal group in femoropopliteal target vessels (p = 0.04).
AB - This study compares procedural complications and clinical outcomes between subintimal crossing versus intraluminal crossing during endovascular treatment of infrainguinal peripheral artery chronic total occlusions (CTO). We identified 1335 CTO interventions in 1001 patients from the multicenter Excellence in Peripheral Artery Disease (XLPAD) registry from January 2005 to October 2015. Outcomes included 30-day and 12-month all-cause death, non-fatal myocardial infarction or stroke, peripheral artery stent, or vessel, thrombosis (ST), need for any target limb endovascular or surgical revascularization, target limb major amputation and procedural complications. A subintimal crossing technique was necessary in 388 lesions (27% overall in 1335 lesions; 34% (n=351) in 1023 femoropopliteal lesions, and 12% (n=37) in 312 infrapopliteal lesions, p<0.01) with a lower procedural (p<0.01) and technical (p<0.01) success than the intraluminal in both femoropopliteal and infrapopliteal interventions. There were no significant differences in procedural complications, major adverse cardiac events, or clinically driven target limb revascularization at 1 year between the two groups, except a higher residual dissection rate in the subintimal crossing group than the intraluminal group in femoropopliteal target vessels (p = 0.04).
KW - chronic total occlusions
KW - endovascular intervention
KW - one-year outcomes
KW - peripheral artery disease (PAD)
KW - subintimal crossing technique
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U2 - 10.1177/1358863X17735192
DO - 10.1177/1358863X17735192
M3 - Article
C2 - 29105577
AN - SCOPUS:85042877482
SN - 1358-863X
VL - 23
SP - 39
EP - 45
JO - Vascular Medicine (United Kingdom)
JF - Vascular Medicine (United Kingdom)
IS - 1
ER -