Oct (optical coherence tomography) ...
Document type :
Article dans une revue scientifique: Article original
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Title :
Oct (optical coherence tomography) contribution assessment in the revascularisation of long femoro-popliteal occlusive lesions (tasc c and d): a randomised trial
Author(s) :
Dubosq, Maxime [Auteur]
Institut Coeur Poumon [CHU Lille]
Goueffic, Yann [Auteur]
Centre hospitalier Saint-Joseph [Paris]
Duhamel, Alain [Auteur]
METRICS : Evaluation des technologies de santé et des pratiques médicales - ULR 2694
Denies, Fanette [Auteur]
Evaluation des technologies de santé et des pratiques médicales - ULR 2694 [METRICS]
Dervaux, Benoit [Auteur]
Evaluation des technologies de santé et des pratiques médicales - ULR 2694 [METRICS]
METRICS : Evaluation des technologies de santé et des pratiques médicales - ULR 2694
Goyault, Gilles [Auteur]
Department vascular, oncologic ans interventional radiology (CHU de Dijon)
Sobocinski, Jonathan [Auteur]
Advanced Drug Delivery Systems (ADDS) - U1008
Institut Coeur Poumon [CHU Lille]
Institut Coeur Poumon [CHU Lille]
Goueffic, Yann [Auteur]
Centre hospitalier Saint-Joseph [Paris]
Duhamel, Alain [Auteur]
METRICS : Evaluation des technologies de santé et des pratiques médicales - ULR 2694
Denies, Fanette [Auteur]
Evaluation des technologies de santé et des pratiques médicales - ULR 2694 [METRICS]
Dervaux, Benoit [Auteur]
Evaluation des technologies de santé et des pratiques médicales - ULR 2694 [METRICS]
METRICS : Evaluation des technologies de santé et des pratiques médicales - ULR 2694
Goyault, Gilles [Auteur]
Department vascular, oncologic ans interventional radiology (CHU de Dijon)
Sobocinski, Jonathan [Auteur]
Advanced Drug Delivery Systems (ADDS) - U1008
Institut Coeur Poumon [CHU Lille]
Journal title :
Annals of Vascular Surgery
Abbreviated title :
Ann Vasc Surg
Volume number :
70
Pages :
362-369
Publication date :
2020-07-04
ISSN :
1615-5947
HAL domain(s) :
Sciences du Vivant [q-bio]
English abstract : [en]
BACKGROUND: Endovascular treatment has become the first-line revascularization technique for femoropopliteal lesions. This technique lacks reliable and accurate morphological control of the arterial segment treated. ...
Show more >BACKGROUND: Endovascular treatment has become the first-line revascularization technique for femoropopliteal lesions. This technique lacks reliable and accurate morphological control of the arterial segment treated. Intraoperative 2-dimensional angiogram consumes iodinated contrast media and increases X-ray exposure; this subsequently provides no 3-dimensional information on the quality of the revascularization completed, what could explain some of the early and late failures of the technique. We evaluated whether intraoperative optical coherence tomography (OCT) control in addition to standard angiogram could improve the primary patency rate at 12 months in comparison to standard angiogram alone in patients with occlusive femoropopliteal lesions. METHODS: The tomography by optical coherence in femoral artery trial is a multicentric, prospective, randomized, controlled, and single-blind study including patients with long de novo occlusive femoropopliteal lesions. The randomization will be achieved in 2 balanced groups of patients after crossing successfully the lesion: group 1 with intraoperative OCT control in addition to standard angiogram and group 2 with standard angiogram alone. The randomization will be stratified by center. The protocol has been submitted and approved by a French ethic's committee under reference number CPP2019-12-098. The study has been registered under the reference number NCT04434586 on the Web site of clinicaltrials.gov. RESULTS: The primary outcome of the study is the primary patency at 12 months. The number of patients who need to be treated is 166 (83 in each group) considering 5% of no workable data. Symptoms' improvement, target lesion revascularization, target vessel revascularization, quality-of-life questionnaires, cost utility, and cost effectiveness will be analyzed as secondary end-point variables at 12 months. CONCLUSIONS: The present study is to evaluate the potential benefit for patients on the result of endovascular revascularization of long occlusive femoropopliteal lesion at 12 months when using intraoperative OCT control.Show less >
Show more >BACKGROUND: Endovascular treatment has become the first-line revascularization technique for femoropopliteal lesions. This technique lacks reliable and accurate morphological control of the arterial segment treated. Intraoperative 2-dimensional angiogram consumes iodinated contrast media and increases X-ray exposure; this subsequently provides no 3-dimensional information on the quality of the revascularization completed, what could explain some of the early and late failures of the technique. We evaluated whether intraoperative optical coherence tomography (OCT) control in addition to standard angiogram could improve the primary patency rate at 12 months in comparison to standard angiogram alone in patients with occlusive femoropopliteal lesions. METHODS: The tomography by optical coherence in femoral artery trial is a multicentric, prospective, randomized, controlled, and single-blind study including patients with long de novo occlusive femoropopliteal lesions. The randomization will be achieved in 2 balanced groups of patients after crossing successfully the lesion: group 1 with intraoperative OCT control in addition to standard angiogram and group 2 with standard angiogram alone. The randomization will be stratified by center. The protocol has been submitted and approved by a French ethic's committee under reference number CPP2019-12-098. The study has been registered under the reference number NCT04434586 on the Web site of clinicaltrials.gov. RESULTS: The primary outcome of the study is the primary patency at 12 months. The number of patients who need to be treated is 166 (83 in each group) considering 5% of no workable data. Symptoms' improvement, target lesion revascularization, target vessel revascularization, quality-of-life questionnaires, cost utility, and cost effectiveness will be analyzed as secondary end-point variables at 12 months. CONCLUSIONS: The present study is to evaluate the potential benefit for patients on the result of endovascular revascularization of long occlusive femoropopliteal lesion at 12 months when using intraoperative OCT control.Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Audience :
Internationale
Popular science :
Non
Collections :
Submission date :
2021-01-20T15:58:56Z
2024-02-23T09:02:40Z
2024-02-23T09:02:40Z
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