| Literature DB >> 26739146 |
Matthew A Popplewell1, Huw Davies2, Hugh Jarrett3, Gareth Bate4, Margaret Grant5, Smitaa Patel6, Samir Mehta7, Lazaros Andronis8, Tracy Roberts9, Jon Deeks10, Andrew Bradbury11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Severe limb ischaemia is defined by ischaemic rest/night pain, tissue loss, or both, secondary to arterial insufficiency and is increasingly caused by infra-popliteal (below the knee) disease, mainly as a result of the increasing worldwide prevalence of diabetes. Currently, it is unknown whether vein bypass surgery or the best endovascular treatment (angioplasty or stenting) represents the optimal revascularisation strategy in terms of amputation-free survival, overall survival, relief of symptoms, quality of life and cost-effective use of health care resources. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26739146 PMCID: PMC4704263 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-015-1114-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1The BASIL-2 CONSORT diagram
BASIL-2 secondary outcomes
| Overall survival |
| In-hospital and 30-day morbidity and mortality |
| Major adverse limb event – amputation (transtibial and above) or any major vascular re-intervention (thrombectomy, thrombolysis, balloon angioplasty, stenting or surgery) |
| Major adverse cardiovascular event – (severe limb ischaemia and amputation affecting the contralateral limb, acute coronary syndrome, or stroke) |
| Relief of ischaemic pain (visual analogue scale and medication usage) |
| Psychological morbidity (Hospital Anxiety and Deprivation Score) |
| Quality of life using generic (European Quality of life 5 level questionnaire, Short Form-12, ICEpop CAPability for older people and disease specific Vascular Quality of Life) tools |
| Re- and cross-over intervention rates |
| Healing of tissue loss (ulcers, gangrene) of presumed arterial aetiology as assessed by the Perfusion Extent Depth Infection Sensation [ |
| Extent and healing of minor (toe and forefoot) amputations (also using the above wound scoring systems) |
| Haemodynamic changes: absolute ankle and toe pressure, (ankle brachial pressure index and toe brachial pressure index). |
BASIL-2 inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| Have severe limb ischaemia due to infra-popliteal, +/− femoropopliteal disease | Have an anticipated life expectancy of < 6 months |
| Be judged by responsible clinicians (consultant vascular surgeon, interventional radiologist, and diabetologists) working as part of a multi-disciplinary team to require early revascularisation in addition to best medical therapy, foot and wound care. | Are unable to provide consent due to incapacity |
| Have adequate inflow to support the randomised infra-popliteal intervention (if not, patients can be randomised to have their allocated infra-popliteal intervention at the same time or after the inflow procedure). | Are a non-English speaker where translation services are inadequate to provide informed consent |
| Be judged suitable for both vein bypass and best endovascular treatment following diagnostic imaging and a formal documented multi-disciplinary team meeting. | Are judged unsuitable for either revascularisation strategy by the responsible clinician |
| Tissue loss considered to be primarily of venous aetiology |
Fig. 2The BASIL-2 assessment schedule
BASIL-2 sub-group analysis
| Rest pain versus tissue loss versus both |
| Diabetes mellitus |
| CKD |
| Haemodynamic measurements |
| Alternative endovascular options |
| Differences in resource usage and outcome between alternative endovascular options |