Polymer-based drug-eluting stent treatment extends the time to reintervention for patients with symptomatic femoropopliteal artery disease: clinical evidence and potential economic value

Author:

Gray William A12ORCID,Soga Yoshimitsu3ORCID,Fujihara Masahiko4,Iida Osamu5ORCID,Babaev Anvar6,Kawasaki Daizo7,Zeller Thomas8ORCID,O'Connor David9,Jaff Michael R10ORCID,Chavez Anna M10,Müller-Hülsbeck Stefan11

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Sidney Kimmel School of Medicine, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA 19107, USA

2. Division of Cardiology, Main Line Health, Wynnewood, PA, USA & Lankenau Heart Institute, Wynnewood, PA 19096, USA

3. Department of Cardiology, Kokura Memorial Hospital, Kitakyushu, Japan

4. Department of Cardiology, Kishiwada Tokushukai Hospital, Osaka, Japan

5. Kansai Rosai Hospital, Cardiovascular Center, Amagasaki, Japan

6. New York University Medical Center, New York, NY 10016, USA

7. Department of Cardiology, Morinomiya Hospital, Osaka, Japan

8. Department of Angiology, Universitäts-Herzzentrum Freiburg-Bad Krozingen, Bad Krozingen, Germany

9. Hackensack University Medical Center, Hackensack, NJ 07061, USA

10. Peripheral Interventions, Boston Scientific, Marlborough, MA 01752, USA

11. Institut Für Diagnostische und Interventionelle Radiologie und Neuroradiologie, Diako Hospital gGmbH, Flensburg, Germany

Abstract

Aim: Use long-term follow-up data from the IMPERIAL study to determine whether drug-eluting polymer-based nitinol stent treatment can delay the time to repeat intervention for femoropopliteal artery disease and how such a delay may result in cost savings in a value-based episode of care. Patients & methods: The IMPERIAL randomized controlled trial was an international study of a paclitaxel-eluting polymer-coated stent (Eluvia, Boston Scientific, MA, USA) versus a polymer-free paclitaxel-coated stent (Zilver PTX, Cook Corporation, IN, USA) for treating lesions of the femoropopliteal arterial segment. Study patients (n = 465) had symptomatic lower limb ischemia. Safety and efficacy assessments were performed through 5 years. Mean time to first reintervention was calculated in post-hoc analysis for patients who underwent a clinically driven target lesion revascularization (CD-TLR) through 3 or 5 years following the index procedure. To simulate potential cost savings associated with differential CD-TLR burden over time, a cost-avoidance analysis using input parameters from IMPERIAL and US 100% Medicare standard analytical files was developed. Results: Among patients with a first CD-TLR through 3 years of follow-up, mean time to reintervention was 5.5 months longer (difference 166 days, 95% CI: 51, 282 days; p = 0.0058) for patients treated with Eluvia (n = 56) than for those treated with Zilver PTX (n = 30). Through the 5-year study follow-up period, CD-TLR rates were 29.3% (68/232) for Eluvia and 34.2% (39/114) for Zilver PTX (p = 0.3540) and mean time to first reintervention exceeded 2 years for patients treated with Eluvia at 737 days versus 645 days for the Zilver PTX group (difference 92 days, 95% CI: -85, 269 days; p = 0.3099). Simulated savings considering reinterventions occurring over 1 and 5 years following initial use of Eluvia over Zilver PTX were US $1,395,635 and US $1,531,795, respectively, when IMPERIAL CD-TLR rates were extrapolated to 1000 patients. Conclusion: IMPERIAL data suggest initial treatment with Eluvia extends the time patients spend without undergoing reintervention. This extension may be associated with cost savings in relevant time frames.

Publisher

Becaris Publishing Limited

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