| Literature DB >> 35148653 |
Mary Jiayi Tao1, Akshat Gotra2, Kong Teng Tan1, Naomi Eisenberg3, Graham Roche-Nagle3, Sebastian Mafeld1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Endovascular therapy in the management of de novo common femoral disease remains controversial. Considerable interest has been generated in recent years due to recent technological advancement in the design of vascular stents. In particular, SUPERA (Abbot Vascular Inc, Santa Clara USA) stents are designed to offer increased flexibility and less adverse interactions with the arterial wall, thus making it potentially better suited for common femoral lesions. However, despite such theoretical advantages, there is lack of data in its use in clinical practice. This study provides illustrative examples of SUPERA stents in different clinical settings and contributes to important clinical data for the overall efficacy and safety profile of endovascular interventions in common femoral artery (CFA) disease.Entities:
Keywords: common femoral artery; endovascular therapy; revascularization; self-expanding stent; stents
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35148653 PMCID: PMC9003763 DOI: 10.1177/15385744211068648
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vasc Endovascular Surg ISSN: 1538-5744 Impact factor: 1.089
Figure 1.Classification of common femoral artery disease.
A: Type I lesions; B: Type II lesions; C: Type III lesions; D: Type IV lesions
CFA Stenting Outcomes.
| Patients | Age | Gender | Symptoms | Access Site | TASC | CFA | Pre-Procedure | Stent | Stent Placement | Complications | 30-day | Primary Patency | Post-Intervention | Post-Procedure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Score | Type | Duplex PSVR | (type, diameter x length in mm) | Mortality | (12-months) | Symptoms | Duplex PSVR | |||||||
|
| 57 | M | Tissue loss | Femoral retrograde | 2 | 2 | 0.50 | ZILVER 8 x 40 | Single, isolated CFA | N | N | Y | Asymptomatic | 0.79 |
|
| 83 | M | Tissue loss | Femoral retrograde | 1 | 3 | 0.42 | SUPERA (7 x 40) | Single, isolated CFA | Osteomyelitis | N | Y | Asymptomatic | 0.69 |
|
| 62 | M | Acute ischemia | Femoral retrograde | 2 | 4 | 27.9 | EPIC (8 x 40) | Single, jailed SFA | N | N | Y | Asymptomatic | 1.63 |
|
| 73 | M | Tissue loss | Femoral retrograde | 1 | 3 | 2.48 | SUPERA (7 x 40) | Single, isolated CFA | N | N | Y | Improved | 0.53 |
|
| 48 | F | Tissue loss | Brachial | 2 | 2 | 0.85 | SUPERA (5 x 80) | Single, jailed SFA | N | Y | N/A | N/A | N/A |
|
| 61 | M | Claudication (short distance) | Femoral retrograde | 3 | 1 | 1.57 | SUPERA (7 x 40) | Single, isolated CFA | N | N | Y | Worsen | 2.44 |
|
| 91 | F | Ischemic rest pain | Femoral retrograde | 2 | 2 | 0.71 | SUPERA (7 x 40) | Single, jailed profunda | N | N | Y | Asymptomatic | 0.58 |
|
| 93 | F | Acute ischemia | Femoral retrograde | 1 | 3 | 2.24 | SUPERA (4 x 40, 4 x 40) | Double, kissing | NSTEMI | N | Y | Improved | 1 |
|
| 59 | F | Acute ischemia tissue loss | Femoral retrograde | 1 | 4 | 1.26 | SUPERA (6x40) | Single, jailed profunda | N | N | Y | Worsen | None |
|
| 91 | M | Ischemic rest pain | Femoral retrograde | 1 | 2 | 5.49 | SUPERA (7 x 40, 7 x 40) | Double, kissing | N | N | Y | Improved | None |
|
| 70 | M | Ischemic rest pain | Femoral retrograde | 3 | 1 | 3.42 | SUPERA (6 x 40) | Single, isolated CFA | N | N | N/A | N/A | N/A |
|
| 65 | M | Ischemic rest pain | Brachial | 1 | 4 | N/A | SUPERA (7 x 60) | Single, isolated CFA | N | N | Y | Asymptomatic | 1.46 |
|
| 66 | M | Acute ischemia | Femoral retrograde | 2 | 1 | N/A | SUPERA (5 x 80) | Single, jailed profunda | N | N | Y | No change | Patent
|
|
| 71 | F | Tissue loss | Femoral retrograde | 1 | 3 | 1.03 | SUPERA (6 x 40) | Single, isolated CFA | GI Bleed | N | Y | Improved | 1.25 |
|
| 82 | F | Ischemic rest pain | Femoral retrograde | 1 | 3 | N/A | SUPERA (5 x 200) | Single, jailed profunda | No follow-up | No follow- | No follow-up | No follow-up | No follow-up |
|
| 52 | F | Ischemic rest pain | Brachial | 1 | 3 | 0.72 | INNOVA (7 x 150) | Single, isolated CFA | up | Y | Worsen | 0.90 |
Abbreviations: CFA, common femoral artery; PSVR, peak systolic velocity ratio; SFA, superficial femoral artery.
aVelocity not obtained † Patient 11 passed away within 12 months of the intervention due to nature causes.
Figure 2.Various endovascular techniques for femoral bifurcation lesions.
A: Kissing balloon; B: Kissing stents; C: CFA to profunda jailing the SFA; D: CFA to SFA jailing the profunda; E: Isolated CFA stent
Summary of Common Femoral Artery Stenting Studies.
| Study | Year | Study Period | Study Design | Sample Size | Stent Type | Outcomes | Complications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deloose et al. | 2018 | 2016ongoing | Prospective multicenter | n = 100 | Self-expandable Nitinol - | 100% cumulative PP and freedom from TLR at 6 months, up to 210 days | None |
| Stricker et al. | 2020 | 19952015 | Retrospective | n = 7994 limbs | Self-expandable stents | Mean ABI from 0.71 ± 0.17 to 1.03 ± 0.2 after 1 year (p < .001) | 23 limb restenosis |
| - | Cumulative PP after 1, 3, 5, and 8 years was 96, 90, 78, and 63%, respectively | 2 puncture site hematomas, 1 arteriovenous fistula (1), 1 cholesterol embolism, and 1 dissection of the access site artery | |||||
| - | |||||||
| - | |||||||
| Guoëffic et al. | 2017 | 20112013 | Randomized control trial | n = 56 stenting | Self-expandable Nitinol (Type 1, 2, and type 3 lesions with SFA occlusion)
| Morbidity/mortality 26% in the surgery group vs. 12.5% in the stenting group (OR 2.5, | 1 stent fracture |
| n = 61 surgery | Balloon-expandable (Type 3 lesions affecting the CFA bifurcation)
| Sustained clinical improvement, PP, TLR, and TER at 24 months similar in both groups | 3 patients in the stent group converted to surgery | ||||
| Siracuse et al. | 2016 | 20102015 | Retrospective | n = 1014 253 CFA stents |
| No difference in patency between PTA, PTA+stent, or stent alone at 1 year | Peri-procedural complications: access site hematoma (5.2%), arterial dissection (2.9%), distal embolization (0.7%), access site stenosis/occlusion (0.5%), and arterial perforation (0.6%) |
| 23 CFA stent-grafts | 23 CFA stent-grafts | ||||||
| Mehta et al. | 2016 | 20062013 | Prospective multicenter | n = 16715 CFA stents for failed atherectomy ± PTA | Self-expanding bare metal
| The CFA stent group 100% PP vs. CFA non-stent groups 77% PP (p = 0.0424), follow-up = 42.5 months | 1 case of distal embolization requiring bypass in the stenting group |
| Nasr et al. | 2016 | 20062008 | Prospective cohort | N = 3640 limbs | Self-expandable Nitinol | Primary sustained clinical improvement 77% (3 years) and 73% (5 years) | In-stent restenosis rate 28%—1 stent fracture |
| - | Freedom from TLR 79% and TER 73% | ||||||
| - | |||||||
| Balloon-expandable for Type 3 lesions— | |||||||
| Thiney et al. | 2015 | 20092013 | Prospective | n = 53 | Self-expandable Nitinol (33) or balloon-expandable (23)
| Absence of binary restenosis (> 50% re-obstruction of the CFA) 92.5% at 24 months | Stent fracture rate 9% at 1 year (n = 4) |
| 50 limbs primary stenting | - Freedom from TLR 97%, TER 11% | ||||||
| Linni et al. | 2014 | 20112013 | Randomized control trial | n = 40 stenting | Bioabsorbable stent implantation (BASI): balloon-expandable stent made from poly-L-lactide acid ( | 1-year PP 80% BASI and 100% CFE ( | 6 reconstruction failures in BASI vs. 0 in CFE ( |
| n = 40 surgery | 1-year SP 84% BASI and 100% CFE ( | ||||||
| Repeat TER rates, 2.5% BASI, and 7.5% CFE ( | |||||||
| Limb salvage equivalent | |||||||
| de Blic et al. | 2013 | 20082011 | Retrospective | n = 3523 CFA stents | Balloon-expandable stents (11) and self-expandable stents (12)
| Technical success 100% | No stent-specific complications specified |
| No restenosis in stent | |||||||
| Soga et al. | 2013 | 20012010 | Retrospective | n = 183 111 CFA lesions | Self-expandable - | No significant difference in CFA PP between angioplasty vs. stent placement | 1 stent deformity, 0 stent fracture in CFA |
| 10 CFA stents | - CFA SP lower in the stent group vs. angioplasty ( | ||||||
| Bonvini et al. | 2013 | 19962007 | Retrospective | n = 360 | Self-expandable
| Failures (> 30% residual stenosis) in 26 cases (7.2%) | Major complications’ rate (requiring surgery): 1.4% |
| 144 CFA stents | - TLR in 64 of 322 (19.9%) - Use of stents an independent protective factor against procedural failure (OR: 0.20), 1-year restenosis (OR: 0.53) and TLR (OR: 0.49) | Minor complications’ rate (treated percutaneously or conservatively): 5.0% | |||||
| Restenosis (> 50%) in 74 patients (27.6%) | |||||||
| Ahn et al. | 2012 | 20092011 | Retrospective | n = 61 | Self-expandable
| Cumulative PP 82% at 6 months, 67% at 12 and 24 months | Thirteen cases considered failures |
| - Assisted PP 100% at 21 months | |||||||
| - Twenty stents subsequently punctured for future endovascular access | |||||||
| Calligaro et al. | 2011 | 20052010 | Retrospective | n = 17 | Polytetrafluoroethylene-covered Nitinol stents | 2-year PP rate 93.8% | DFA deliberately sacrificed in 1 case (emergent bleeding from CFA) - 2 cases required additional procedure for inflow/outflow stenosis |
| - Assisted PP rate 100% | |||||||
| Azema et al. | 2011 | 20062008 | Prospective cohort | n = 36 | Self-expandable Nitinol | 1 year 1°/2° sustained clinical improvement: 80%, 90% - TLR-free survival: 85% | 20% in-stent restenosis - 1 stent fracture |
| - TER free survival: 80% | |||||||
| Paris et al. | 2011 | 19942009 | Retrospective | n = 26 | Self-expandable
| Maintained clinical success 100% (16/16) of claudication patients and 70% (7/10) of CLI at 12 and 31 months - ABI from 0.47 to 0.77 ( | In-stent restenosis during first year in two CLI patients (placement of additional stent) |
| Baumann et al. | 2011 | 19952009 | Retrospective review of prospectively managed database | n = 98 104 limbs, 28 CFA stents | Self-expandable (15) and balloon-expandable (13)
| ABI from 0.28 to 0.54 ( | 1 iatrogenic CFA dissection |
| - TLR of 46% and 73% in CLI and 17% and 28% in claudicants at 12/24 months | |||||||
| - TER of 35% and 56% in CLI and 24% and 28% in claudicants at 12/24 months | |||||||
| Silva et al. | 2004 | N/A | Retrospective | n = 207 CFA stents | Self-expandable
| Procedural success 90% | 1 patient required surgical revascularization |
| - Clinical success 81% | |||||||
| - Overall event-free survival 90% at 11.4 months |
Abbreviations: ABI, anklebrachial index; BASI, bioabsorbable stent implantation; CFE, common femoral endarartectomy; CLI, critical limb ischemia; PP, primary patency; PTA, percutaneous transluminal angioplasty; TER, target extremity revascularization; TLR, target lesion revascularization; CFA, common femoral artery.
atype of stent not specified.
Figure 3.Single stent, jailed superficial femoral artery in a 48-year-old female with history of bilateral lower limb critical limb ischemia, left above-the-knee amputation, and right foot tissue loss. Initial angiogram demonstrates severe left CFA stenosis with proximally patent SFA and multifocal profunda stenosis (A). Left CFA angioplasty to 5 mm and profunda angioplasty to 4 mm. Subsequent deployment of 5 mm x 80 mm SUPERA (B) stent from profunda into the common femoral artery with good angiographic result (C, D).
Figure 4.Single stent, jailed profunda femoral artery in a 59-year-old female with acute critical limb ischemia. Initial angiography demonstrated significant stenosis of the common femoral artery and main profunda trunk (A). The common femoral artery was treated with a 6-mm angioplasty balloon with deployment of a 6 x 40 mm SUPERA stent (B). Subsequently, a guidewire was advanced through the SUPERA stent, and the profunda femoral artery was treated with a 3 x 60 mm balloon (C, D) with good angiographic results (E).
Figure 5.Single stent, isolated common femoral artery. Initial angiogram demonstrated moderate stenosis in the common femoral artery with severe proximal stenosis in the proximal superficial femoral artery (A). The common femoral artery was pre-dilated with an 8-mm angioplasty balloon with subsequent deployment of a 7 x 40 mm SUPERA stent in the common femoral artery (B). Post-angioplasty angiogram revealed adequate angiographic results (C).
Figure 6.Double kissing stents in a 91-year-old female with critical limb ischemia. Initial angiography demonstrated high-grade stenosis at the origin of the profunda and superficial femoral arteries (A) with deployment of two SUPERA stents (4 x 40 mm and 4 x 40 mm) in a kissing fashion across the bifurcation (B, C) with angiographic improvement (D).
Figure 7.72-year-old female with history of right SUPERA stent placement with repeat angiogram at 13 months for nonhealing ulcer. Under fluoroscopic guidance, the stented right common femoral artery was accessed using a 21-G micropuncture needle. Of note, hemostasis was achieved with a 5-F Exoseal closure device.
Figure 8.16-month follow-up angiogram. Ultrasound-guided antegrade right CFA access through the SUPERA stent with a 19-G needle (A). Insertion of a 4-Fr dilator over a Bentson wire (B, C). Post-treatment angiogram demonstrated preserved integrity of the stent with no stent-related complications (D).