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The purpose of this study is to see if physician modified endovascular grafts (PMEG) can be used safely for the treatment of aortic disorders. The surgeon will modify a commercially available graft tailored to the participant's anatomy for surgery. The researchers will follow participants for 5 years, which will require regular visits to the clinic for follow-up imaging and follow-up blood tests.
Full description
The primary objective of the clinical investigation Duke CARES Trial is to assess the use of physician-modification of commercially available, off-the-shelf, endovascular stent-grafts to treat juxtarenal, pararenal and paravisceral complex abdominal aneurysms or thoracoabdominal aneurysms in high-risk for open surgery subjects having appropriate anatomy. The primary intent of the study is to assess safety and efficacy of the device acutely (i.e., treatment success and technical success), at 30 days (i.e., the rate of major adverse events (MAE)) and at 6 months, 12 months and annually to 5 years (i.e., the proportion of treatment group subjects that achieve and maintain treatment success).
Additionally, the study will assess domains for improvement of patient selection criteria, device design, operative techniques, and follow-up regimens to benefit patients undergoing complex endovascular aneurysm repair
Main Study - Statistical Cohort Physician Modified Endovascular Grafts are indicated for endovascular repair of juxtarenal, pararenal, paravisceral and thoracoabdominal aneurysms, in high-risk for open surgery subjects having appropriate anatomy as defined in the eligibility section.
Non-statistical cohort Patients with life-threatening aortic disease who have no acceptable surgical or endovascular alternatives will be allowed to receive treatment under this IDE. Enrollment of these patients under the IDE permits systematic data collection and FDA oversight, while their separation from the primary study cohort preserves the integrity of the safety and effectiveness analyses. This approach provides a treatment option for critically ill patients by offering access to a potential therapeutic option within a regulated and monitored environment without compromising the scientific validity of the trial. The patients in this cohort will follow standard of care, which includes follow-up at 1 month, 6 months and then annually. Data collection and presentation in this cohort will be consistent with the primary study cohort; however, data from this cohort will not be included in the statistical analysis.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
MAIN COHORT
INCLUSION CRITERIA:
AND
Extent of aorta to be treated: juxtarenal, pararenal that include 1 or 2 renal and/or accessory renal arteries, paravisceral that includes celiac artery and/or superior mesenteric artery, and/or thoracoabdominal
High risk of morbidity and mortality with open surgical repair as defined by:
a. Anatomic Criteria (Previous abdominal surgery; Previous thoracotomy; Previous aortic surgery) b. Physiologic Criteria (ASA Category III or higher; Age >70 years; Previous myocardial infarction, coronary artery disease, or coronary artery stent; Coronary stress test with a reversible perfusion defect; Congestive heart failure (CHF); Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD))
Iliac or femoral access vessel morphology that is compatible with vascular access techniques, devices or accessories, with or without use of a surgical conduit
Nonaneurysmal aortic segment proximal to the aneurysm (neck) with a minimum neck length of 25 mm (Diameter in the range of 18 mm - 42 mm; Angle less than 60o relative to the axis of the aneurysm; Angle less than 60o relative to the axis of the suprarenal aorta);
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
GENERAL EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
MEDICAL EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Known sensitivities or allergies to the materials of construction of the devices, including nitinol (nickel, titanium), polyester, polypropylene, gold, stainless steel, and/or solder (tin, silver).
Known hypersensitivity or contraindication to anticoagulation or contrast media that cannot be adequately medically managed
Uncorrectable coagulopathy
Body habitus that would inhibit x-ray visualization of the aorta or exceeds the safe capacity of the equipment
• Morbid obesity (BMI ≥ 40 or BMI 30-39.9 with comorbidities)
Major surgical or interventional procedure unrelated to the treatment of the aneurysm planned < 30 days of the endovascular repair
Unstable angina (defined as angina with a progressive increase in symptoms, new onset at rest or nocturnal angina)
Baseline creatinine greater than 2.0 mg/dL
History of connective tissue disorders (e.g., Marfan Syndrome, Ehler's Danlos Syndrome)
Deemed a high risk due to significant comorbidities, adjudicated by severity according to the Society for Vascular Surgery reporting standards for endovascular aortic repair involving the renal-mesenteric arteries
ANATOMICAL EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Thrombus or excessive calcification within the neck of the aneurysm
Presence of significant thrombus and/or excessive calcification within the intended proximal or distal seal zone of the aneurysm.
Branch stenosis > 75% (if left untreated)
Anatomy that would not allow maintenance of at least one patent hypogastric artery
Note: Patients with life-threatening aortic disease who have no acceptable surgical or endovascular alternatives will be allowed to receive treatment under this IDE in the non-statistical cohort
Non-statistical Cohort
This cohort will include patients who meet the inclusion criteria and meet any of the above exclusion criteria* with the exception of the following:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
30 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Ellen R Burkett, MSHS
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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