SPIRIT IV Trial Comparing Xience V To Taxus Leads TCT Stent News
This article was originally published in The Gray Sheet
Executive Summary
Abbott's Xience V everolimus-eluting stent outperformed Boston Scientific's Taxus Express2 paclitaxel eluting stent in the 3,690-patient SPIRIT IV trial randomized trial, according to 12-month results released at the 2009 Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics conferenc
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TCT In Brief
DES in the leg: Cook Medical's Zilver PTX is the first drug-eluting stent to show clear improvements in treating peripheral artery disease over standard angioplasty and provisional bare-metal stenting in a randomized trial. The paclitaxel-eluting, polymer-free stent met its safety and effectiveness endpoints in Cook's 479-patient pivotal study presented Sept. 24 at the Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics meeting in Washington, D.C. Patients with femoropopliteal artery disease randomized to Zilver PTX had an event-free-survival rate (safety) of 90.4% compared to 82.6% in patients randomized to standard angioplasty. On effectiveness, Zilver achieved an 83.1% patency rate. About half of the angioplasties in the control group were judged to be "suboptimal," requiring either a bare-metal stent or Zilver to be placed. Lesions that received "standard care," i.e. either had an "optimal" angioplasty or received a subsequent bare-metal stent, achieved a 67% patency rate. Lesions in the suboptimal group that ultimately received Zilver achieved an 89.9% patency rate compared to 73% in the suboptimal bare metal stent patients. Cook sent the results to FDA this past summer as part of Zilver PTX's pending PMA submission
TCT In Brief
DES in the leg: Cook Medical's Zilver PTX is the first drug-eluting stent to show clear improvements in treating peripheral artery disease over standard angioplasty and provisional bare-metal stenting in a randomized trial. The paclitaxel-eluting, polymer-free stent met its safety and effectiveness endpoints in Cook's 479-patient pivotal study presented Sept. 24 at the Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics meeting in Washington, D.C. Patients with femoropopliteal artery disease randomized to Zilver PTX had an event-free-survival rate (safety) of 90.4% compared to 82.6% in patients randomized to standard angioplasty. On effectiveness, Zilver achieved an 83.1% patency rate. About half of the angioplasties in the control group were judged to be "suboptimal," requiring either a bare-metal stent or Zilver to be placed. Lesions that received "standard care," i.e. either had an "optimal" angioplasty or received a subsequent bare-metal stent, achieved a 67% patency rate. Lesions in the suboptimal group that ultimately received Zilver achieved an 89.9% patency rate compared to 73% in the suboptimal bare metal stent patients. Cook sent the results to FDA this past summer as part of Zilver PTX's pending PMA submission
TCT Takes The Stage; Sapien Set To Play The Lead
U.S. approval of the first transcatheter aortic valve replacement may be at least a year away, but the buzz surrounding the technology could go into overdrive at this week's Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics conference in Washington, D.C