TY - JOUR
T1 - A polymer-coated, paclitaxel-eluting stent (Eluvia) versus a polymer-free, paclitaxel-coated stent (Zilver PTX) for endovascular femoropopliteal intervention (IMPERIAL)
T2 - a randomised, non-inferiority trial
AU - IMPERIAL investigators
AU - Gray, William A.
AU - Keirse, Koen
AU - Soga, Yoshimitsu
AU - Benko, Andrew
AU - Babaev, Anvar
AU - Yokoi, Yoshiaki
AU - Schroeder, Henrik
AU - Prem, Jeffery T.
AU - Holden, Andrew
AU - Popma, Jeffrey
AU - Jaff, Michael R.
AU - Diaz-Cartelle, Juan
AU - Müller-Hülsbeck, Stefan
AU - Albrecht, Thomas
AU - Ando, Kenji
AU - Babaev, Anvar
AU - Bacharach, Michael J.
AU - Bachinsky, William
AU - Bajakian, Danielle
AU - Beasley, Robert
AU - Benenati, James
AU - Benko, Andrew
AU - Burket, Mark
AU - Cardenas, Joseph
AU - Das, Tony
AU - De Martino, Randall
AU - Deutschmann, Hannes
AU - Dulas, Daniel
AU - Feldman, Robert
AU - Fugate, Mark
AU - Garcia, Lawrence
AU - Golzar, Jaafer
AU - Gutta, Rao
AU - Hall, Patrick
AU - Hawkins, Stewart
AU - Henao, Steve
AU - Herdrich, Benjamin
AU - Hirano, Keisuke
AU - Holden, Andrew
AU - Jaalouk, Safwan
AU - Janzer, Sean
AU - Kawasaki, Daizo
AU - Keirse, Koen
AU - Khatib, Yazan
AU - Kichikawa, Kimihiko
AU - Korngold, Ethan
AU - Loewe, Christian
AU - Lopez, Louis
AU - Lui, Henry
AU - Mano, Toshiaki
N1 - Funding Information:
IMPERIAL was funded by Boston Scientific. We thank H Terry Liao (Boston Scientific) for designing the statistical analysis plan and Elizabeth J Davis (Boston Scientific) for providing medical writing assistance.
Funding Information:
WAG, YS, YY, JTP, and AH serve as advisors to Boston Scientific. ABe reports receiving research funding from Medtronic and Soundbite Medical, is a shareholder in Soundbite Medical, and has received speaking fees from Medtronic, Cordis, and Boston Scientific. ABa reports receiving honoraria for physician training from Boston Scientific, Abbott Vascular, Medtronic, and Cook. JP reports grants from Boston Scientific, Medtronic, Abbott Vascular, Cook, and Terumo; personal fees from Boston Scientific (medical advisory board, educational course); and grants and personal fees from Edwards Lifesciences. MRJ serves as a non-compensated advisor to Boston Scientific, Abbott Vascular, Cordis, a Cardinal Health Company, and Medtronic, and reports personal fees from Philips Volcano, consultant equity from Micell and Vactronix, and investments in Vascular Therapies, Vactronix Scientific, and Gemini. JD-C is an employee of, and owns stock in, Boston Scientific. SM-H serves as a consultant for, and has received honoraria and travel grants from, Boston Scientific, and has received personal fees from Terumo. KK and HS declare no competing interests.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2018/10/27
Y1 - 2018/10/27
N2 - Background: The clinical effect of a drug-eluting stent in the femoropopliteal segment has not been investigated in a randomised trial with a contemporary comparator. The IMPERIAL study sought to compare the safety and efficacy of the polymer-coated, paclitaxel-eluting Eluvia stent with the polymer-free, paclitaxel-coated Zilver PTX stent for treatment of femoropopliteal artery segment lesions. Methods: In this randomised, single-blind, non-inferiority study, patients with symptomatic lower-limb ischaemia manifesting as claudication (Rutherford category 2, 3, or 4) with atherosclerotic lesions in the native superficial femoral artery or proximal popliteal artery were enrolled at 65 centres in Austria, Belgium, Canada, Germany, Japan, New Zealand, and the USA. Patients were randomly assigned (2:1) with a site-specific, web-based randomisation schedule to receive treatment with Eluvia or Zilver PTX. All patients, site personnel, and investigators were masked to treatment assignment until all patients had completed 12 months of follow-up. The primary efficacy endpoint was primary patency (defined as a peak systolic velocity ratio ≤2·4, without clinically driven target lesion revascularisation or bypass of the target lesion) and the primary safety endpoint was major adverse events (ie, all causes of death through 1 month, major amputation of target limb through 12 months, and target lesion revascularisation through 12 months). We set a non-inferiority margin of −10% at 12 months. Primary non-inferiority analyses were done when the minimum sample size required for adequate statistical power had completed 12 months of follow-up. The primary safety non-inferiority analysis included all patients who had completed 12 months of follow-up or had a major adverse event through 12 months. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02574481. Findings: Between Dec 2, 2015, and Feb 15, 2017, 465 patients were randomly assigned to Eluvia (n=309) or to Zilver PTX (n=156). Non-inferiority was shown for both efficacy and safety endpoints at 12 months: primary patency was 86·8% (231/266) in the Eluvia group and 81·5% (106/130) in the Zilver PTX group (difference 5·3% [one-sided lower bound of 95% CI −0·66]; p<0·0001). 259 (94·9%) of 273 patients in the Eluvia group and 121 (91·0%) of 133 patients in the Zilver PTX group had not had a major adverse event at 12 months (difference 3·9% [one-sided lower bound of 95% CI −0·46]; p<0.0001). No deaths were reported in either group. One patient in the Eluvia group had a major amputation and 13 patients in each group required target lesion revascularisation. Interpretation: The Eluvia stent was non-inferior to the Zilver PTX stent in terms of primary patency and major adverse events at 12 months after treatment of patients for femoropopliteal peripheral artery disease. Funding: Boston Scientific.
AB - Background: The clinical effect of a drug-eluting stent in the femoropopliteal segment has not been investigated in a randomised trial with a contemporary comparator. The IMPERIAL study sought to compare the safety and efficacy of the polymer-coated, paclitaxel-eluting Eluvia stent with the polymer-free, paclitaxel-coated Zilver PTX stent for treatment of femoropopliteal artery segment lesions. Methods: In this randomised, single-blind, non-inferiority study, patients with symptomatic lower-limb ischaemia manifesting as claudication (Rutherford category 2, 3, or 4) with atherosclerotic lesions in the native superficial femoral artery or proximal popliteal artery were enrolled at 65 centres in Austria, Belgium, Canada, Germany, Japan, New Zealand, and the USA. Patients were randomly assigned (2:1) with a site-specific, web-based randomisation schedule to receive treatment with Eluvia or Zilver PTX. All patients, site personnel, and investigators were masked to treatment assignment until all patients had completed 12 months of follow-up. The primary efficacy endpoint was primary patency (defined as a peak systolic velocity ratio ≤2·4, without clinically driven target lesion revascularisation or bypass of the target lesion) and the primary safety endpoint was major adverse events (ie, all causes of death through 1 month, major amputation of target limb through 12 months, and target lesion revascularisation through 12 months). We set a non-inferiority margin of −10% at 12 months. Primary non-inferiority analyses were done when the minimum sample size required for adequate statistical power had completed 12 months of follow-up. The primary safety non-inferiority analysis included all patients who had completed 12 months of follow-up or had a major adverse event through 12 months. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02574481. Findings: Between Dec 2, 2015, and Feb 15, 2017, 465 patients were randomly assigned to Eluvia (n=309) or to Zilver PTX (n=156). Non-inferiority was shown for both efficacy and safety endpoints at 12 months: primary patency was 86·8% (231/266) in the Eluvia group and 81·5% (106/130) in the Zilver PTX group (difference 5·3% [one-sided lower bound of 95% CI −0·66]; p<0·0001). 259 (94·9%) of 273 patients in the Eluvia group and 121 (91·0%) of 133 patients in the Zilver PTX group had not had a major adverse event at 12 months (difference 3·9% [one-sided lower bound of 95% CI −0·46]; p<0.0001). No deaths were reported in either group. One patient in the Eluvia group had a major amputation and 13 patients in each group required target lesion revascularisation. Interpretation: The Eluvia stent was non-inferior to the Zilver PTX stent in terms of primary patency and major adverse events at 12 months after treatment of patients for femoropopliteal peripheral artery disease. Funding: Boston Scientific.
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U2 - 10.1016/S0140-6736(18)32262-1
DO - 10.1016/S0140-6736(18)32262-1
M3 - Article
C2 - 30262332
AN - SCOPUS:85056359256
SN - 0140-6736
VL - 392
SP - 1541
EP - 1551
JO - The Lancet
JF - The Lancet
IS - 10157
ER -