This is a prospective randomized controlled trial to compare clinical improvement, cost effectiveness and patency rates between new and improved Nitinol stents and open bypass surgery in the superficial femoral artery disease. Secondary outcomes also include comparing quality of life, re-intervention rate, mortality, morbidity and time to return to work or regular activities. Patients with superficial femoral artery lesions will be considered. Patients with TASC II A lesions will not be randomized but treated with PTA/stenting as standard of care. Patients with TASC II B and C lesions will be prospectively randomized into either receiving open bypass or stenting. Patients with TASC D lesions will be treated with open bypass surgery after angiography. The investigators will collect pre-procedure, peri-procedural and clinical follow-up data on all enrolled the patients.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
29
Open Bypass Surgery with Autogenous vein or PTFE Graft
Angioplasty and Stenting of the superficial Femoral artery with Nitinol stent (Life Stent flexStar Stent System by Bard Inc. Tempe AZ).
Johns Hopkins Hospital
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Clinical improvement
Clinical Improvement is measured as at least 1 Rutherford category
Time frame: 12 Month Post Operatively
Patency rate
Primary, primary assisted and secondary at 6, 12 month
Time frame: 12 Month Post Operatively
Cost effectiveness
Cost Effectiveness factoring procedure and hospital admission costs
Time frame: 12 Month Post Operatively
Quality of Life improvement
Improvement of quality of life measured using VQL
Time frame: 12 Month Post Operatively
Re-intervention rate
Time frame: 12 Month Post Operatively
Technical success of both treatment modalities
Time frame: 12 Month Post Operatively
30-day operative mortality
Time frame: 12 Month Post Operatively
Time to return to work and regular activities
Time frame: 12 Month Post Operatively
Morbidity associated with both treatment modalities
Time frame: 12 Month Post Operatively
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