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The Role of Percutaneous Angioplasty in Ischemic Leg Ulcer Healing

Peripheral Angioplasty as the First Choice Revascularization Procedure to Promote Ischemic Leg Ulcer Healing

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03057080
Enrollment
161
Registered
2017-02-17
Start date
2009-06-01
Completion date
2016-12-01
Last updated
2017-02-17

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

Conditions

Ischemic Foot Ulcers

Brief summary

The aim of our study was to evaluate the technical and clinical effectiveness of PTA in the management of ischemic foot ulcers. All consecutive patients presenting with a foot ulcer at the outpatient Vascular surgery clinic of our hospital were evaluated. If non-invasive parameters suggested peripheral arterial disease (PAD) anatomic imaging (CTA and/or DSA) was performed and a PTA was carried out when feasible during the same session. All patients were followed until healing, amputation, death, or for at least two years. Short-term and long-term clinical success of PTA was evaluated based on ulcer size and appearance. Patients with worsening ulcers after PTA underwent bypass grafting or amputation.

Detailed description

The aim of our study was to evaluate the technical and clinical effectiveness of PTA in the management of ischemic foot ulcers. Methods: All consecutive patients presenting with a foot ulcer at the outpatient Vascular surgery clinic of our hospital were evaluated. Preoperative evaluation included foot pulse assessment, ankle-brachial-index (ABI) and duplex scanning. If non-invasive parameters suggested peripheral arterial disease (PAD) anatomic imaging (CTA and/or DSA) was performed and a PTA was carried out when feasible during the same session. All patients were followed until healing, amputation, death, or for at least two years. Short-term and long-term clinical success of PTA was evaluated based on ulcer size and appearance. Patients with worsening ulcers after PTA underwent bypass grafting or amputation.

Interventions

The main goal of the angioplasty (which was also the definition of technical success) was to achieve straight-line flow (SLF) from the aorta down to either a patent dorsalis pedis or plantar arch.

Sponsors

University of Crete
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 90 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* newly diagnosed patients with ischemic foot ulcer and * patients aged 18 years or older.

Exclusion criteria

* refusal to participate * refusal of PTA therapy * lesions not amenable to endovascular revascularization by vascular team's consensus based on preinterventional imaging * absolute contraindication to contrast media injection, as determined by the investigator * uncontrollable coagulopathy * unwilling or unable to provide informed consent or return for required follow-up evaluations and * previous or concurrent participation in another clinical research study

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Number of patients with ulcer healing2 yearsNumber of patients with complete Ischemic leg ulcer healing defined as the complete epithelization of the lesion

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Amputation free survival2 yearsNumber of months without amputation
Number of patients with all-cause mortality2 yearsNumber of patients with all-cause mortality after PTA
Number of participants with Major adverse events2 yearsNumber of participants with Major adverse events from PTA
Number of patients with 30-day morbidity and mortality30 days30-day morbidity and mortality from PTA
Number of patients requiring re-intervention2 yearsumber of patients requiring PTA re-intervention

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026