Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02570113

The Peregrine Post-Market Study for the Treatment of Hypertension

A Post-Market Study of Transcatheter Perivascular Renal Denervation for the Treatment of Hypertension Using the Ablative Solutions Inc. Peregrine System™ Infusion Catheter

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
45 (actual)
Sponsor
Ablative Solutions, Inc. · Industry
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The Ablative Solutions, Inc. Peregrine System Infusion Catheter is a catheter-based device which is intended to be used to ablate the afferent and efferent sympathetic nerves serving the kidneys. The catheter is inserted via the femoral artery, steered into the renal artery, and then delivers, by infusion from its distal end, a neurolytic agent. This targets the nerve bundles, which are in the adventitia - a sheath surrounding the artery. The aim is to reduce blood pressure in cases of hypertension, including seriously elevated blood pressure which does not respond to drug treatment. This study will evaluate the safety and performance of the device.

Detailed description

There is strong evidence in the published literature that the renal nerves are important contributors to hypertension, and that their ablation does not have adverse side-effects. The literature provides technical, clinical and scientific evidence supporting the use of perivascular renal denervation for a carefully defined patient group. An existing device (the Medtronic Symplicity catheter) was initially shown to be safe and effective for achieving perivascular renal denervation by delivery of radio-frequency energy. The results of early nonrandomized clinical studies (HTN-1, HTN-2) found that perivascular renal denervation by radio-frequency energy delivery was an effective therapy, associated with very low risks. In other contexts, denervation can also be safely and effectively achieved by neurolytic agents. The ASI Peregrine System™ Infusion Catheter and the denervation procedure in general is similar enough to the Medtronic Symplicity catheter to enable the use of published data to establish the validity of the design concept of the Peregrine System and estimate the likely levels of risk of side effects. It can be concluded from the literature that the ASI Peregrine System™ will achieve percutaneous renal denervation with a low risk of procedural complications (comparable to accepted percutaneous interventional therapies) and without long-term impairment of renal artery or kidney function or other serious adverse events. Previous premarket clinical trials have provided support for the safe and effective use of the Peregrine Catheter for the treatment of patients with hypertension. The Peregrine System Infusion Catheter is currently CE marked and the indication for use is "The Peregrine System™ Infusion Catheter is intended for the infusion of a neurolytic agent to achieve a reduction in systemic blood pressure in hypertensive patients." Based upon the literature and previous clinical data, chemical denervation is an appropriate treatment for the specified study population of adults who have hypertension despite taking at least 3 anti-hypertensive drugs of different classes including at least one diuretic. The objectives of this post-market study are to collect additional safety and performance data pertaining to renal denervation by using dehydrated alcohol as a chemical neurolytic agent delivered into the adventitial/peri-adventitial area of the renal arteries for the purpose of renal denervation, using the Peregrine System™ Infusion Catheter, in patients with hypertension. In order for the study to be valid, only one chemical neurolytic agent can be used. The Coordinating Investigator has chosen to use dehydrated alcohol (not less than 95% by volume) for therapeutic neurolysis, therefore all participating sites will use this agent.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEPeregrine System Infusion CatheterThe Peregrine Catheter is inserted bilaterally into the renal arteries and a specified amount of a neurolytic agent is inserted into the vessel walls.

Timeline

Start date
2015-11-01
Primary completion
2019-02-01
Completion
2019-07-01
First posted
2015-10-07
Last updated
2023-09-28
Results posted
2023-09-28

Locations

10 sites across 4 countries: Belgium, Czechia, Germany, Poland

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02570113. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.