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GENEVA is the world's first multicenter, randomized, prospective, controlled trial of the clinical effectiveness of best endovascular treatment versus best endovascular treatment combined with gene therapy for severe lower limb ischemia (Rutherford categories 4 and 5). The researchers hypothesized that the combination treatment would significantly reduce the number of re-interventions on the operated segment and high amputations, and also significantly increase the time interval between re-interventions.
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Objective - To prove the effectiveness and safety of combined endovascular treatment and gene therapy for Fontaine grades III and IV CI (Rutherford grades 4 and 5) in comparison with isolated endovascular treatment by comparing the immediate and long-term results of the two techniques, assessed using clinical and instrumental methods.
Null hypothesis (Н0) - After endovascular treatment in combination with gene therapy with supercoiled plasmid deoxyribonucleic acid pCMV-VEGF165 in patients with critical ischemia of the lower limb III and IV degrees according to Fontaine (categories 4 and 5 according to Rutherford), the number of re-interventions on the operated segment and the number high amputations will be the same as after isolated endovascular treatment.
The frequency of re-interventions on the operated segment during endovascular interventions in the long-term period according to the main randomized clinical trials (BASIL 1, BASIL 2, BEST-CLI) is 25.9%, 19.0%, 23.5%, and the number of high amputations (BASIL 1, BASIL 2) - 19.1% and 18.0% respectively. High amputations lead to disability and loss of performance, incl. and working population. Within 5 years after major amputation, more than half of patients die from concomitant diseases. Each repeat revascularization is significantly more difficult and longer than the previous intervention, reducing the potential for future interventions.
In this regard, the search for new modern minimally invasive methods for the treatment of critical ischemia of the lower extremities, which will help to significantly reduce the number of high amputations and repeated interventions, as well as increase the intervals between repeated interventions, is an extremely important medical and economic problem.
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386 participants in 2 patient groups
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Alrxander Korotkikh, PhD; Sergey Radaev
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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