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A Clinical Investigation of SM-01 Stenting Versus PTA for the Treatment of Superficial Femoral Artery Disease

A Clinical Investigation of SM-01 Stenting Versus PTA for the Treatment of Superficial Femoral Artery Disease

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01183117
Enrollment
105
Registered
2010-08-17
Start date
2010-07-31
Completion date
2014-08-31
Last updated
2015-04-02

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Peripheral Vascular Diseases

Brief summary

The main objective is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of SM-01 stenting (Cordis S.M.A.R.T.™ Nitinol Stent System) for the treatment of SFA lesions as compared to PTA (balloon angioplasty). If SM-01 is used in a PTA-bailout patient, the case will be assessed separately.

Interventions

DEVICESM-01

SM-01 is a self-expandable, crush recoverable stent with a diameter larger than that of the arterial lumen. The stent is indicated for use in a vessel with a diameter 1 to 2 mm smaller than the nominal stent diameter. This stent will open to the diameter of the artery and will continue to apply expanding force on the artery.

DEVICEPTA

balloon angioplasty

Sponsors

Johnson & Johnson K.K. Medical Company
Lead SponsorINDUSTRY

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
20 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

1. Age \>= 20 years. 2. Symptomatic leg ischemia by Rutherford Classification (category1, 2, or 3). 3. Lesion length \>= 40 mm to \<= 150 mm. (must be treatable with no more than two SM-01 stents. Overlap should be about 1cm if two stents are used) 4. Reference vessel diameter (RVD) \>= 4.0 mm and \<= 7.0 mm. 5. All lesions are to be located \>= 3.0 cm proximal to the superior edge of the patella, and \>= 1.0 cm distal to the SFA / PFA bifurcation. 6. \>= 50% stenosis or total occlusion. 7. Patent infrapopliteal and popliteal arteries, i.e., single-vessel runoff or better with at least one of three vessels patent (\< 50% stenosis) to the ankle or foot. 8. Patient or legally authorized representative must provide written informed consent prior to initiation of study procedures. 9. A patient with bilateral obstructive SFA disease is eligible for enrollment into the study. If a patient with bilateral disease is enrolled, the target limb will be the more severe limb. The more severe limb will be selected according to clinical symptomatology. If clinical symptomatology is similar, the more clinically severe lesion will be selected. The contralateral procedure should not be done until at least 30 days after the index procedure of the more severe limb was attempted.

Exclusion criteria

1. Recent hemorrhagic disease within the past 3 months. 2. Aneurysm in the SFA or popliteal artery. 3. Acute limb occlusion. 4. Procedures which are pre-determined to require stent-in-stent placement to obtain patency, such as severe calcification which is resistant to stenting, or for in-stent restenosis. 5. Poor iliac or common femoral inflow.(However, intervention to restore adequate blood flow prior to the treatment of the study lesion is allowed.) 6. Known allergies to aspirin, heparin, or ticlopidine, or bleeding diathesis. 7. Patients unable or unwilling to tolerate anticoagulant or antiplatelet therapy. 8. Patients unable or unwilling to tolerate contrast agents used in intravascular procedures. 9. Allergic to nitinol or tantalum. 10. Women who are pregnant or lactating, or of child bearing potential, or with a desire to be a parent during the study period. 11. Significant vessel tortuosity or other parameters prohibiting access to the lesion or which would prevent delivery of the stent device. 12. Revascularization involving the same limb 30 days prior to the index procedure or a planned re-vascularization within 30 days after the index procedure. 13. Previously implanted stent(s) at the same site in the artery to be treated. 14. Requiring stent placement in the distal SFA or popliteal artery. 15. Presence of a femoral artificial graft. 16. History of participating in any other clinical study within 1 year. 17. Life expectancy less than 3 years, or any other factors preventing clinical follow-up. 18. Receiving dialysis or immunosuppressant therapy 19. Serum creatinine level \>= 2.0 mg/dL before procedure. 20. A principal investigator or a co-principal investigator determines that patient is unsuitable for this study.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Non-TVF(Target-vessel failure) rate12 MonthsThe primary endpoint will be freedom from TVF defined as any events of clinical driven (confirmed by duplex ultrasound or angiography) TLR/TVR, procedure failure, amputation of the target lesion's leg, procedure or device related death, occlusion of target lesion, or \> 70% restenosis of target lesion.

Secondary

MeasureTime frame
Procedure Success rate for Bailout12 Months
Difference between pre and post proceduer of ABI12 Months
Difference between pre and post procedure of Rutherford Categories12 Months
Non-TLR/TVR rate12 Months
Procedure Success rate12 Months
Stent Fracture rate12 Months
Difference between pre and post procedure of QOL (SF-36)12 Months
Major Clinical Event rate12 Months
Primary Patency rate12 Months

Countries

Japan

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 22, 2026