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About
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and performance of a new version of a coronary artery stent for treating blockages in the arteries supplying blood to the heart muscle. The Amaranth Medical APTITUDE scaffold releases a drug (sirolimus) to reduce the likelihood of the treated blood vessel developing a new blockage. In addition, the scaffold dissolves away over time, leaving no permanent implant after the blood vessel has healed.
Full description
The objective of this study is to evaluate the safety and performance of the AmM APTITUDE Bioresorbable Drug-Eluting Coronary Scaffold for use in the treatment of single, de novo, stenotic native coronary artery lesions in patients undergoing elective percutaneous coronary intervention. The scaffold is a single-use device comprised of a balloon-expandable, intracoronary drug coated scaffold pre-mounted on a rapid-exchange delivery catheter. The scaffold is made of Poly-L-Lactide (PLLA) and is coated with a polymer-antiproliferative drug (sirolimus) matrix. The scaffold provides mechanical support similar to a metallic stent to the vessel while it is healing, and then gradually breaks down over time leaving no permanent implant in the treated vessel. Compared to prior versions of the scaffold, the new device has a thinner strut design (a wall thickness of 120 µm rather than 150 µm), but is otherwise identical.
The study design is a prospective, non-randomized, multi-center, non-inferiority trial. It will enroll a maximum of 60 patients from up to 12 investigational centers in Colombia and the European Union. Eligible patients who are at least 18 years of age diagnosed with symptomatic ischemic disease due to a discrete, single, de novo, stenotic lesion in native coronary artery will be asked to participate in this study. After treatment with the investigational device, subjects will be followed for five years. Safety of the device will be evaluated using the incidence of target vessel failure during the follow-up period. Performance (efficacy) will be assessed using the in-scaffold late lumen loss measured by quantitative coronary angiography at nine months.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
General
Subject is ≥ 18 years of age and < 85 years of age.
Subject agrees not to participate in any other investigational device or drug study for a period of two years following the index procedure. Questionnaire-based studies, or other studies that are non-invasive and do not require investigational devices or medications are allowed.
Subject (or their legally authorized representative) provides written informed consent prior to any study-related procedure, using the form approved by the local Ethics Committee.
Subject has:
Subject is an acceptable candidate for coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery.
Patient agrees to complete all protocol required follow-up visits, including angiograms.
Elective percutaneous interventions for non-target lesions are allowed if performed ≥ 30 days prior to or following the index procedure.
Angiographic
Exclusion criteria
General
Angiographic Exclusion
Target lesion meets any of the following criteria:
Target lesion involving a myocardial bridge.
Target vessel contains visible thrombus as indicated in the angiographic images.
Another clinically significant lesion is located in the same major epicardial vessel as the target lesion (including side branches).
Inadequate pre-dilation of the target lesion (residual stenosis > 40% by visual assessment).
Patient has a high probability that the use of other ancillary devices such as atherectomy or cutting balloon will be required at the time of index procedure for treatment of the target vessel.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
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60 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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