Nakama Tatsuya, Takahara Mitsuyoshi, Iwata Yo, Suzuki Kenji, Tobita Kazuki, Hayakawa Naoki, Horie Kazunori, Mori Shunsuke, Obunai Kotaro, Ohki Takao
Department of Cardiology, Tokyo Bay Medical Center, Urayasu, Japan; Division of Vascular Surgery, Department of Surgery, the Jikei University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
Department of Metabolic Medicine, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Osaka, Japan.
JACC Cardiovasc Interv. 2025 Sep 8;18(17):2155-2166. doi: 10.1016/j.jcin.2025.07.034.
Long-term comparative data on drug-eluting stents (DES) and drug-coated balloons (DCB) for femoropopliteal artery (FPA) disease remain limited.
The authors sought to compare 3-year outcomes of DES vs DCB without bailout stenting in FPA disease.
We retrospectively analyzed 1,406 patients from a multicenter registry who underwent endovascular therapy for FPA using DES (n = 342) or DCB (n = 1,064) after the successful lesion preparation. Successful lesion preparation was defined as <50% residual stenosis and absence of Grade D or higher dissection. The primary outcomes were 3-year primary patency and freedom from clinically driven target lesion revascularization (CD-TLR), analyzed using propensity score matching.
During a median follow-up period (Q1-Q3) of 22.5 months (8.8-37.1 months), 484 cases of patency loss were observed. Propensity score matching resulted in 314 matched pairs: 314 in the DES (Eluvia: 73.9% [232/314], Zilver PTX: 26.1% [82/314]), and 981 in the DCB (IN.PACT: 64.3% [201.8/314], Lutonix: 35.7% [112.2/314]). After matching, the 3-year primary patency was significantly higher in the DES than in the DCB group (65.3% [95% CI: 58.9%-72.4%] vs 59.5% [54.8%-64.5%]; P = 0.042). However, freedom from CD-TLR was similar (73.2% [67.5%-79.4%] vs 72.2% [68.0-%76.7%]; P = 0.27). Lesion length >150 mm and dissection Grade C showed significant interaction effects (P = 0.007 and 0.013, respectively), indicating greater benefit from DES in reducing the restenosis risk.
Despite successful lesion preparation, DES demonstrated significantly higher primary patency over 3 years. However, this did not translate into a clinical benefit, as freedom from CD-TLR rates remained comparable between groups.