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The purpose of this study is to assess the role endovascular therapy to treat aortic disease involving the ascending aorta, the aortic arch, and the visceral segment of the aorta (or thoracoabdominal aorta)
Full description
This study is a prospective, non-randomized, single-site evaluation of the use of novel endovascular technology to treat complex aortic disease.
In an effort to allow for the evaluation of patients with both complex anatomic condition and challenging physiologic situations there are three study subsections as follows:
In addition, the purpose of the study is also characterized based on the protocol arm that patients are enrolled:
Ascending Arm Protocol: The purpose of this study is to assess the safety, efficacy, and intermediate (or long-term) rupture free survival rate of high risk surgical patients undergoing endovascular repair of ASCENDING AORTIC pathology including aortic dissection, aortic aneurysm, and/or aortic pseudoaneurysm. The objectives of this arm are as follows:
Arch Arm Protocol: The purpose of this study is to assess the safety, efficacy, and intermediate (or long-term) rupture free survival rate of high risk surgical patients undergoing endovascular repair of AORTIC ARCH pathology including aortic aneurysm, pseudoaneurysm and/or dissection. The objectives of this arm are as follows:
Thoracoabdominal Arm Protocol: The purpose of this study is to assess the long-term safety, durability and rupture free survival of surgical patients undergoing endovascular repair of the THORACOABDOMINAL AORTA involving pathologies that include thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms, renal artery aneurysms and superior mesenteric artery aneurysms.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Ascending Arm Protocol:
General Inclusion Criteria (Must meet ALL of the following):
Anatomic Inclusion Criteria
Have ONE of the following
Must meet ALL of the following:
Proximal Fixation:
>15 mm aortic length distal to a patent coronary artery or coronary artery bypass that are considered patent and necessary for proper cardiac perfusion.
Aortic diameter at the sinotubular junction >20 mm and ≤ 38mm
Distal Fixation: a length of distal ascending aorta >5mm proximal to the innominate artery whereby seal and fixation can be achieved (the dissection flap may transcend the arch, but the seal must be achievable within the true lumen of the dissection)
Iliac artery access
Arch Arm Protocol
General Inclusion Criteria (Must meet ALL of the following):
Anatomic Inclusion Criteria
Must meet ALL of the following:
Aneurysm of the ascending aorta or aortic arch/proximal descending thoracic aorta that is >5.5cm or is considered to be at high risk for rupture or dissection given the morphologic characteristics of the aneurysm (or diverticulum).
Proximal aortic fixation zone:
Distal aortic fixation zone:
Supra-aortic trunk (brachiocephalic) vessels
Although the prosthesis will typically have two branches, modifications to the design will allow for a single branch or three branches. Thus, it is generally planned that at least one extra-anatomic bypass graft will be done in conjunction (or in a staged fashion) with the procedure. The two vessels incorporated into the endograft repair would most commonly be the innominate artery and left carotid artery. However, the innominate artery may be coupled with the left subclavian artery in the setting of a bovine arch whereby the flow to the left carotid would come from a left subclavian to carotid bypass. Similarly, the left carotid and subclavian artery may be branched, or simply one vessel branched should specific anatomic limitations exist. In such a situation, multiple extra-anatomic bypasses may be necessary. Thus the inclusion criteria are defined for each artery, yet any combination of arteries may be used for a repair.
Diameter of vessel(s) to be incorporated into endograft
In the setting of an aortic dissection the following criteria must exist:
In the setting of a more distal disease, the repair may be coupled with a thoracoabdominal branched device, infrarenal device, and/or internal iliac branch device - typically performed in a staged fashion
Iliac anatomy must allow for the delivery of the arch branch device which is loaded within an 18F-24F sheath. Conduits to the iliac vessels or aorta may be used if deemed necessary.
Thoracoabdominal Arm Protocol
General Inclusion Criteria (Must meet ALL of the following):
Anatomic Inclusion Criteria
Presence of at least one of the following aneurysms is necessary to drive the need for a repair with a fenestrated/branched device:
Outside of the "Indications for Use" for commercially available fenestrated or branched endografts approved for use for the treatment of these aneurysms.
Proximal neck
Iliac Artery
For a straight aorto-aortic prosthesis, distal neck (normal aorta between the aneurysm and iliac bifurcation) ≥ 10 mm in length and ≤ 40 mm in diameter
If a hypogastric branch will be used to treat the common iliac aneurysm
Renal arteries or other visceral vessels arising from the aorta in an orientation that is evident and measurable from cross-sectional imaging (CT or MR)
Visceral branch diameters (for incorporated vessels) between 4 mm - 11 mm at the intended distal sealing site (thus distal to a visceral artery aneurysm in such circumstances).
Greater than 5 mm of proximal visceral branch length to allow for a seal with the mated device, or the ability to exclude an early branch.
In the setting of an aortic dissection the following criteria must exist:
In the setting of a more proximal disease, the repair may be coupled with an arch-branched device, thoracic aortic endograft, or surgical aortic repair - typically performed in a staged fashion
General Exclusion Criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
170 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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