Zehnder Thomas, von Briel Christian, Baumgartner Iris, Triller Jürgen, Greiner Richard, Mahler Felix, Do Dai-Do
Cardiovascular Department, Division of Angiology, University Hospital (Inselspital), Bern, Switzerland.
J Endovasc Ther. 2003 Apr;10(2):304-11. doi: 10.1177/152660280301000221.
To test the preventive effect of endovascular brachytherapy (EVBT) on restenosis following secondary angioplasty in patients with presumed neointimal restenosis in the femoropopliteal segment.
From March 1997 through May 2000, 100 patients (58 men; mean age 70 years, range 45-87) with postangioplasty femoropopliteal segment restenoses were enrolled and randomized to treatment with repeat angioplasty and EVBT (n=51) or to angioplasty alone (n=49) as control. The groups were similar with regard to demographics and lesion characteristics. High-dose-rate EVBT was performed with (192)Ir irradiation without a centering device (12 Gy for a reference vessel radius of 3 mm and a 2-mm reference depth). Primary endpoint in the 1-year follow-up was recurrent obstruction >50% documented by duplex ultrasound; the secondary endpoint was clinical improvement.
Only 44 (86%) of 51 patients received adequate EVBT due to technical failure, so the 7 failures were included with the controls in the per-protocol adherence analysis. At 1 year, the patients receiving EVBT had a restenosis rate of 23% (10/44), which differed significantly (p<0.028) from the 42% (23/56) rate in controls. Clinical results tended to be better with EVBT, but differences did not achieve statistical significance.
EVBT without a centering device reduced restenosis significantly in patients with recurrent stenosis after angioplasty, which confirms previous results in primary long-segment femoropopliteal obstructions.