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The INTERCEDE randomized trial will establish whether six-months of intermittent pneumatic compression combined with walking exercise improves walking endurance at six-month follow-up, compared to walking exercise + sham compression therapy, in people with lower extremity peripheral artery disease (PAD). The INTERCEDE trial will also determine whether intermittent pneumatic compression therapy improves walking endurance at 6-month follow-up, compared to a sham compression therapy. The trial will also determine whether benefits of intermittent pneumatic compression persist after intermittent pneumatic compression treatment is completed.
Full description
Walking exercise is first-line therapy for PAD. However, many PAD patients are unable or unwilling to exercise. Therefore, in people with PAD, the investigators will determine whether intermittent pneumatic compression augments the benefits of exercise and whether intermittent pneumatic compression alone improves walking performance compared to sham control. The investigators will conduct a randomized trial (2 x 2 factorial design) of 230 PAD participants randomized to one of four groups: Group A: intermittent pneumatic compression + exercise; Group B: intermittent pneumatic compression+ "no exercise" control; Group C: sham control + exercise; and Group D: sham control + "no exercise" control. The intermittent pneumatic compression and sham interventions will be delivered for six months. The primary outcome is change in six-minute walk distance at 6-month follow-up. In secondary aims, the investigators will determine whether the benefits of intermittent pneumatic compression persist even after intermittent pneumatic compression is discontinued and delineate mechanisms by which intermittent pneumatic compression affects walking performance, by measuring changes in MRI-measured calf muscle perfusion and physical activity. The investigators will determine whether intermittent pneumatic compression improves systemic endothelial function, by measuring changes in brachial artery flow-mediated dilation (FMD).
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Inclusion criteria
All participants will have PAD. PAD will be defined as follows: first, an ankle-brachial index (ABI) < or = 0.90 at the baseline study visit is an inclusion criterion for PAD. Second, potential participants with an ABI >0.90 who have vascular laboratory evidence of PAD. Vascular laboratory evidence consists of objective evidence of PAD, including toe brachial index (TBI) < or = 0.70, Duplex measure showing 70% stenosis or greater, or ABI values < 0.90. Abnormal waveforms or pulse volume recordings alone from a non-invasive vascular laboratory test will not be sufficient for enrollment. Third, potential participants with an ABI >0.90 who have angiographic evidence of PAD consisting of a stenosis of 70% or greater in a lower extremity artery.
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230 participants in 4 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Kathryn Domanchuk, BS
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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