Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Prospective, Multi-center, Single-arm Study of the Shockwave Medical SkyRunner Carotid Intravascular Lithotripsy (IVL) System for the Treatment of Calcified Carotid Arteries prior to Trans-Carotid Stenting (SKYWARD Trans-Carotid IDE Study)
Full description
To assess the safety and effectiveness of the Shockwave Medical SkyRunner Carotid IVL System for the treatment of calcified carotid arteries prior to stenting with commercially available trans-carotid stent systems in patients at high risk for complications from carotid endarterectomy (CEA).
Up to 160 subjects will be enrolled at up to 25 sites in the United States (US). The estimated study duration is approximately 40 months. Study subjects will be followed through discharge, 30 days, 6, 12, and 24 months.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
General Inclusion Criteria:
Age ≥ 18 years.
Patient is able and willing to comply with all assessments in the study.
Patient has been informed of the nature of the study, agrees to participate and has signed the approved informed consent form.
Patient approved for inclusion by a Patient Screening Committee.
Patient must have a life expectancy > 1 year at the time of the index procedure with no planned major cardiac intervention or surgery within 30 days following the index procedure.
Angiographic Inclusion Criteria:
Patient has a discrete lesion located in the internal carotid artery (ICA) with or without involvement of the carotid bifurcation.
Target lesion must meet all requirements for commercially available trans-carotid stent systems (refer to IFU for requirements) and investigator intends to treat the target lesion with a single stent.
Patient must meet one of the following criteria regarding neurological symptom status and degree of stenosis by duplex ultrasound in combination with CT or MR angiography:
Symptomatic: ≥ 50% stenosis of the internal carotid artery and the patient has a history of stroke, TIA and/or amaurosis fugax within 180 days of the procedure ipsilateral to the carotid artery to be treated.
OR
Asymptomatic: ≥ 70% stenosis of the internal carotid artery without any neurological symptoms.
Patient has evidence of circumferential calcification of the stenotic lesion defined as ≥ 3 mm thickness of calcification as determined by Computed Tomography Angiography (CTA).
Patient is high risk for CEA defined as meeting at least one anatomic or clinical high-risk condition listed below:
Anatomic High Risk Inclusion Criteria:
Contralateral Carotid artery occlusion.
Tandem Stenoses > 70%.
High cervical carotid artery stenosis.
Restenosis after carotid endarterectomy.
Bilateral carotid artery stenosis requiring treatment within 30 days after index treatment.
Hostile neck anatomy but which the Investigator deems safe for trans- carotid access including but not limited to:
Clinical High Risk Inclusion Criteria:
General Exclusion Criteria:
Patient has alternative source of cerebral embolus, including but not limited to:
Patient has a history of spontaneous intracranial hemorrhage within the past 12 months, a hemorrhagic transformation of an ischemic stroke within the past 60 days or has had a recent stroke (< 7 days) of sufficient size (on CT or MRI) to place the patient at risk of hemorrhagic conversion during the procedure.
Patient with a history of major stroke with substantial neurological deficit (NIHSS ≥ 5 or mRS ≥ 3) within 1 month of index procedure.
Patient has had a TIA, or amaurosis fugax within 48 hours prior to the procedure.
Patient has neurologic illnesses within the past 2 years characterized by fleeting or fixed neurologic or cognitive deficit which cannot be distinguished from TIA or stroke.
Patient has an intracranial tumor.
Patient has an isolated hemisphere.
Patient has an open stoma in the neck.
Patient has an unresolved/uncorrected bleeding disorder.
Patient had a myocardial infarction (MI) within last 72 hours prior to index procedure.
Patient has contralateral laryngeal, lateral recurrent, or vagus nerve injury.
Patient has history of intolerance or allergic reaction to contrast material that cannot be adequately premedicated or to any of the required study medications (i.e., antiplatelet agents, statins) or device materials (refer to IFUs).
Female patients who are pregnant, nursing, or may become pregnant.
Patient is participating in another research study involving an investigational agent (pharmaceutical, biologic, or medical device) that has not reached its primary endpoint.
Patient has other medical, social, or psychological problems that, in the opinion of the investigator, would present difficulty in complying with protocol requirements.
Patient is on renal replacement therapy (i.e., dialysis).
Angiographic Exclusion Criteria:
Presence of a previously placed intravascular stent in the target vessel or ipsilateral CCA.
A significant CCA inflow or distal/intracranial lesion.
Occlusion (TICI 0) or "string sign" > 1 cm of the ipsilateral common or internal carotid artery.
An intraluminal filling defect consistent with thrombus.
CCA disease that would preclude the use of TCAR per IFU.
Presence of extensive or diffuse atherosclerotic disease involving the aortic arch or proximal common carotid artery that would preclude the safe introduction of the study device.
Patient has < 5 cm of distance between the clavicle and bifurcation, as assessed by duplex ultrasound.
Cerebral aneurysm, symptomatic or > 5 mm or AVM (arteriovenous malformation) of the cerebral vasculature.
Massive exophytic (mushroom-like) or irregular endoluminal calcification seen on CTA or fluoroscopy.
Failure to successfully cross the guidewire across the target lesion; successful crossing defined as tip of the guidewire distal to the target lesion in the absence of flow-limiting dissections or perforations.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
160 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Birgit Greschner; Danilo Romero
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal