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Active Not RecruitingNCT05057637

The Impact of Optical Coherence Tomography on the Endovascular Treatment Planning of Femoropopliteal Disease

The Impact of Optical Coherence Tomography on the Decision-making Process of Endovascular Treatment of Femoropopliteal Disease

Status
Active Not Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
25 (estimated)
Sponsor
Rijnstate Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Rationale: Peripheral arterial disease is a severe clinical problem with an increasing prevalence, due to an ageing population. Endovascular treatment, usually using stents, is recommended for most lesions in the femoropopliteal tract. The patency of these stents is influenced by several factors, including stent sizing and stent positioning. Current procedural planning of femoropopliteal disease is primarily based on single-plane digital subtraction angiographies (DSA). This modality provides a 2-dimensional image of the vessel lumen, which may be suboptimal for stent sizing. It can therefore be difficult to choose the optimal stent position as minor lesions may be missed. Suboptimal treatment could result in unfavourable levels of wall shear stress causing the vessel wall to be more susceptible to neo-intimal hyperplasia ultimately causing restenosis and stent failure. Intravascular optical coherence tomography (OCT) is able to visualize the arterial wall with a micrometer resolution, which could result in better stent sizing. Furthermore, OCT is able to visualize different layers in the vessel wall and identify unhealthy areas, which may lead to a more optimal stent placement as unhealthy areas can be covered completely. Moreover, OCT provides detailed patient-specific geometries necessary to develop reliable computational fluid dynamics (CFD) models that simulate blood flow in stented arteries and calculate wall shear stresses, which could predict stent patency. Objective: To investigate in a clinical study how often the use of intravascular optical coherence tomography for femoropopliteal stenotic lesions leads to alterations in treatment planning before and after stent placement, in comparison to traditional digital subtraction angiography-based treatment planning. Study design: Exploratory observational study. Study population: 25 patients with femoropopliteal stenotic lesions who are treated with a Supera interwoven nitinol stent or Absolute nitinol stent. Main study parameters/endpoints: The percentage of procedures in which OCT changed the DSA-based treatment planning before and after stent placement to investigate the impact of OCT imaging on treatment planning.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEOptical coherence tomography measurementsOptical coherence tomography measurements in femoropopliteal tract

Timeline

Start date
2022-03-09
Primary completion
2025-12-12
Completion
2027-04-01
First posted
2021-09-27
Last updated
2026-01-07

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Netherlands

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05057637. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.