As presented for the first time at ISET and LINC in January, the Complete SE SFA study demonstrated a primary patency rate of 73.1 percent, a major adverse event rate of 11.0 percent and a target lesion revascularization (TLR) rate of 9.4 percent at 12 months of patient follow-up. The TLR rate, a patient-centric measure of symptom-driven reintervention, means that more than 90 percent of study subjects at the one-year time-point had not required another procedure to treat the target lesion.
The Complete SE SFA study was a prospective, single-arm trial that enrolled 196 subjects (with a total of 213 lesions) at 28 sites in
Approved by the
The principal investigators of the study are Dr.
“The strong performance of the Complete SE vascular stent in this rigorously conducted clinical trial is encouraging,” said Dr. Laird, who presented the results at this year’s International Symposium on Endovascular Therapy (ISET) in
Study subjects showed statistically significant improvements in all measures of clinical and functional effectiveness, such as Rutherford Category, mean ABI/TBI, and Walking Assessment. These improvements were achieved despite the enrollment of patients with moderately or severely calcified lesions (91.0%), diabetes (45.4%), and a Rutherford Category rating of 3 or higher (66.8%) at baseline.
More than 80 percent of study subjects had achieved a Rutherford Category value of 0 or 1, the favorable end of the 0–6 scale, at 30 days, and that benefit persisted through six months and one year of follow-up. Treatment with the Complete SE stent also resulted in highly significant positive shifts in mean ABI/TBI scores at six and 12 months, with more than 60 percent of study subjects improving by at least 0.15 over the follow-up period. On Walking Assessment measures, impairment improved by 36.8 percent, distance by 32.4 percent, speed by 21.8 percent and stair climbing by 23.3 percent.
The Complete SE stent, which is commercially approved by the
“Our commitment to building the clinical evidence to advance peripheral interventional therapies takes many forms,” said
The superficial femoral artery (SFA) runs under the skin of the upper leg and carries blood to the lower extremities, from the thigh to the toes. In patients whose SFA narrows (usually due to the accumulation along the inner wall of the artery of fatty deposits called plaque), the flow of oxygenated blood to the lower extremities becomes restricted, with consequences ranging from leg pain while walking (claudication) to limb loss (amputation).
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