The purpose of this study is to assess the clinical outcomes and radiation of the use of off-the-shelf and custom-made devices (CMDs) for the endovascular repair of juxtarenal, suprarenal, thoracoabdominal and arch aortic aneurysms in patients having appropriate anatomy. The study consists of three cohorts. The first 2 cohorts are the continuation of the current IDE study. The first cohort is aimed to assess the use of custom-made devices (CMDs) for the endovascular repair of juxtarenal, suprarenal and type IV thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms in standard and high-risk patients having appropriate anatomy (Fenestrated-CMD cohort). The second cohort (Type I-III thoracoabdominal cohort) includes standard and high-risk patients with type I- III thoracoabdominal aneurysms that require the use of branched/fenestrated CMDs, or, in selected cases, the Zenith Thoracoabdominal Branch (Zenith® t-Branch™) device. Finally, the third cohort (the Arch cohort) will include 25 high-risk patients with aortic arch aneurysms treated by patient-specific stent-grafts with one to three inner branches or a scallop
This study is a prospective, single center, non-randomized, triple-cohort study. For the Fenestrated-CMD cohort a total of 350 patients will be enrolled. For the type I-III thoracoabdominal cohort, a total of 250 patients will be enrolled. For the Arch cohort, 25 patients will be enrolled. CMDs will be used primarily. Off-the-shelf devices will be used in urgent cases and when the waiting period for design and manufacturing of a CMD may not be considered acceptable. Staged endovascular repair will be used for type I, II and III TAAAs and for concurrent arch and TAAAs, unless the condition of the patient requires a single stage endovascular repair. A separate subgroup analysis of patients undergoing procedures with off-the-shelf devices will be performed.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
625
The CMD that will be used in this IDE is structurally the same as the commercially available Zenith Fenestrated AAA Endovascular Graft. In general, the Zenith® Fenestrated AAA Endovascular Graft is a modular system constructed of full- thickness woven polyster fabric sewn to self-expanding stainless steel z-stents with braided polyster and monofilament polypropylene sutures. In this study, fenestrated grafts with usually up to 4 fenestrations may be used. Device implantation will be performed using standardized endosvacular techniques used in the treatment of abdominal aortic aneurysms.
Device implantation will be performed using standardized endosvacular techniques used in the treatment of abdominal aortic aneurysms. Devices will be implanted in patients with type I-III thoracic abdominal aneurysms. The branches in this study will be constructed as internal/external cuffs, axially oriented and caudally or cranially directed, as necessary . Branch position will be determined by the anatomic location of the target vessels using a consistent craniocaudal and circumferential cuff position.
Arch branched devices may be designed using one of two configurations: (1) Zone 0 device with two inner antegrade branches for the innominate artery and the left common carotid artery with or without a retrograde left subclavian artery branch and (2) Zone 1-2 device with a single retrograde subclavian artery branch with double or triple wide scallop for the left common carotid artery. These devices are designed for a of proximal landing/fixation zone of at least 20 mm of healthy aortic segment or a previous graft.
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Dallas, Texas, United States
Evaluate safety endovascular treatment of juxtarenal, suprarenal, thoracoabdominal and arch aortic aneurysms using fenestrated/branched investigational devices.
Primary safety will be defined as the proportion of subjects who experience a major adverse event (MAE) at 30-days or during hospitalization if this exceeds 30 days.
Time frame: 30 days
Evaluate effectiveness endovascular treatment of juxtarenal, suprarenal, thoracoabdominal and arch aortic aneurysms using fenestrated/branched investigational devices.
For primary effectiveness endpoint, treatment success will be analyzed as the proportion of patients to achieve treatment success at 12-months.
Time frame: 12-months
Rate of Grafts deployed at intended site with successful and patent stenting of target vessels (technical success)
Technical success is defined as successful access of the aneurysm site and deployment of endovascular graft in the intended location. The endovascular graft and all vessels targeted with fenestrations must be patent at the time of deployment completion as evidenced by intraoperative angiography.
Time frame: 30 days
Number of Major adverse events
Major adverse events are defined as the occurrence of any of the following: death, aneurysm rupture, or conversion to open surgical repair; Q wave myocardial infarction (MI); cardiac ischemia requiring intervention; renal failure requiring dialysis; bowel obstruction or bowel ischemia requiring intensification of medical therapy or surgical therapy; aorto-enteric fistula; stroke; paralysis.
Time frame: 5 years
Number of participants with adverse events from the use of bare metal stents as a measure of safety
When bare metal balloon expandable or self-expandable stents are required to be used distally to covered stents, target vessel events (kink, stenosis or occlusion) will be analyzed separately at 30 days, 6 months and annually up to five years.
Time frame: 5 years
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