Three-Year Results from the Venovo Venous Stent Study for the Treatment of Iliac and Femoral Vein Obstruction
-
Published:2021-09-20
Issue:12
Volume:44
Page:1918-1929
-
ISSN:0174-1551
-
Container-title:CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol
Author:
Dake Michael D.,O’Sullivan Gerard,Shammas Nicolas W.,Lichtenberg Michael,Mwipatayi Bibombe P.,Settlage Richard A.,
Abstract
Abstract
Purpose
To assess safety and patency of the Venovo venous stent for the treatment of iliofemoral vein obstruction.
Materials and Methods
Twenty-two international centers enrolled 170 patients in the VERNACULAR study (93 post-thrombotic syndrome; 77 non-thrombotic iliac vein lesions). Primary outcome measures were major adverse events at 30 days and 12-month primary patency (freedom from target vessel revascularization, thrombotic occlusion, or stenosis > 50%). Secondary outcomes included the Venous Clinical Severity Score Pain Assessment and Chronic Venous Quality-of-Life Questionnaire assessments (hypothesis tested). Secondary observations included primary patency, target vessel and lesion revascularization (TVR/TLR), and assessment of stent integrity through 36 months.
Results
Freedom from major adverse events through 30 days was 93.5%, statistically higher than a pre-specified performance goal of 89% (p = 0.032) while primary patency at 12 months was 88.6%, also statistically higher than a performance goal of 74% (p < 0.0001). Mean quality-of-life measures were statistically improved compared to baseline values at 12 months (p < 0.0001). Primary patency at 36 months was 84% (Kaplan–Meier analysis) while freedom from TVR/TLR was 88.1%. There was no stent embolization/migration, and no core laboratory assessed stent fractures reported through 36 months. Six deaths were reported; none adjudicated as device or procedure related.
Conclusion
The Venovo venous stent was successfully deployed in obstructive iliofemoral vein lesions and met the pre-specified primary outcome measures through 12 months. At 3 years, primary patency was 84%, reintervention rates were low, standardized quality-of-life and pain measures improved from baseline, and there was no stent migration or fractures.
Level of Evidence
Level 2—prospective, multicenter, controlled clinical study without a concurrent control or randomization. Pre-specified endpoints were hypothesis-tested to performance goals derived from peer-reviewed clinical literature.
Registration clinicaltrials.gov
Unique Identifier NCT02655887.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging
Reference46 articles.
1. Enden T, Haig Y, Klow NE, Slagsvold CE, Sandvik L, Ghanima W, Hafsahl G, Holme PA, Holmen LO, Njaastad AM, Sandbaek G, Sandset PM, CaVenT Study Group. Long-term outcome after additional catheter-directed thrombolysis versus standard treatment for acute iliofemoral deep vein thrombosis (the CaVenT study): a randomized controlled trial. Lancet. 2012;379:31–8. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(11)61753-4. 2. Haig Y, Enden T, Grotta O, Klow NE, Slagsvold CE, Ghanima W, Sandvik L, Hafsahl G, Holme PA, Holmen LO, Njaastad AM, Sandbaek G, Sandset PM, CaVenT Study Group. Post-thrombotic syndrome after catheter-directed thrombolysis for deep vein thrombosis (CaVenT): 5-year follow-up results of an open-label randomized controlled trial. Lancet Haematol. 2016;3:e64–71. https://doi.org/10.1016/S2352-3026(15)00248-3. 3. Vedantham S, Goldhaber SZ, Julian JA, Kahn SR, Jaff MR, Cohen DJ, Magnuson E, Razavi MK, Comerota AJ, Gornik HL, Murphy TP, Lewis L, Duncan JR, Nieters P, Derfler MC, Filion M, Gu CS, Kee S, Schnieder J, Saad N, Blander M, Moll S, Sacks D, Lin J, Rundback J, Garcia M, Razdan R, Vander-Woude E, Marques V, Kearon C, ATTRACT Trial Investigators. Pharmacomechanical catheter-directed thrombolysis for deep vein thrombosis. N Eng J Med. 2017;377:2240–52. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa1615066. 4. Jost CJ, Gloviczki P, Cherry KJ Jr, McKusick MA, Harmsen WS, Jenkins GD, Bower TC. Surgical reconstruction of iliofemoral veins and the inferior vena cava for nonmalignant occlusive disease. J Vasc Surg. 2001;33:320–8. https://doi.org/10.1067/mva.2001.112805. 5. Gutzeit A, Zollikofer CHL, Dettling-Pizzolato M, Graf N, Largiade`r J, Binkert CA. Endovascular stent treatment for symptomatic benign iliofemoral venous occlusive disease: Long-term results 1987–2009. Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol. 2011;34:542–9. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00270-010-9927-6.
Cited by
51 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|