TY - JOUR
T1 - One-year results with a low-profile endograft in subjects with thoracic aortic aneurysm and ulcer pathologies
AU - RelayPro-A Investigators
AU - Szeto, Wilson Y.
AU - Vallabhajosyula, Prashanth
AU - Matsuda, Hitoshi
AU - Moainie, Sina L.
AU - Sharafuddin, Mel J.
AU - Corvera, Joel
AU - Smolock, Christopher J.
AU - Miyamoto, Shinji
AU - Naslund, Thomas
AU - Ramaiah, Venkatesh
AU - Szeto, Wilson
AU - Brinkman, William
AU - Smith, Robert
AU - Hadro, Neal
AU - Schermerhorn, Marc
AU - Wheatley, Grayson
AU - Smolock, Christopher
AU - Yamaguchi, Dean
AU - Leshnower, Bradley
AU - Jain, Akhilesh
AU - Meisner, Robert
AU - Khoynezhad, Ali
AU - Brener, Bruce
AU - Moainie, Sina
AU - Salehi, Payam
AU - Sharafuddin, Melhem
AU - Patel, Himanshu
AU - Kumins, Norman
AU - Pearce, Benjamin
AU - Donayre, Carlos
AU - Back, Martin
AU - Timaran, Carlos
AU - Sueda, Taijiro
AU - Takahashi, Shinya
AU - Yamaguchi, Atsushi
AU - Ohki, Takao
AU - Shimizu, Hideyuki
AU - Kato, Masaaki
AU - Komori, Kimihiro
AU - Kichikawa, Kimihiko
AU - Ichihashi, Shigeo
AU - Okamoto, Takeshi
AU - Kurimoto, Yoshihiko
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was sponsored by Bolton Medical Inc (Terumo Aortic).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022
PY - 2022/5
Y1 - 2022/5
N2 - Objective: The study objective was to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the second-generation, low-profile RelayPro (Terumo Aortic) thoracic endograft for the treatment of descending thoracic aortic aneurysm or penetrating atherosclerotic ulcer. Method: A prospective, international, nonblinded, nonrandomized, pivotal trial analyzed a primary safety end point of major adverse events at 30 days (death, myocardial infarction, stroke, renal/respiratory failure, paralysis, bowel ischemia, procedural blood loss) and a primary effectiveness end point of treatment success at 1 year (technical success, patency, absence of aneurysm rupture, type I/III endoleaks, stent fractures, reinterventions, aneurysm expansion, and migration) compared with performance goals from the previous generation Relay pivotal study. The study was conducted in 36 centers in the United States and Japan and enrolled participants between 2017 and 2019. Results: The study population of 110 patients had a median (interquartile range) age of 76 (70-81) years, 69 (62.7%) were male, and 43 (39.1%) were Asian. Patients were treated for 76 fusiform aneurysms (69%), 24 saccular aneurysms (22%), and 10 penetrating atherosclerotic ulcers (9%). Most patients (82.7%) were treated with a non-bare stent configuration. Technical success was 100%. The median (interquartile range) procedure time was 91 (64-131) minutes, and the deployment time was 16 (10-25) minutes. A total of 50 patients (73.5%) in the US cohort had percutaneous access, whereas centers in Japan used only surgical cutdown. The 30-day composite major adverse events rate was 6.4% (95% upper confidence interval, 11.6%; P = .0002): 2 strokes, 2 procedural blood losses greater than 1000 mL requiring transfusion, 2 paralysis events, and 1 renal failure. Primary effectiveness was 89.2% (lower 95% confidence interval, 81.8%; P = .0185). Nine subjects experienced 11 events (1 aneurysm expansion, 6 secondary interventions, and 4 type I endoleaks). There was no loss of stent-graft patency, no rupture, no fractures, and no migration. Conclusions: The low-profile RelayPro thoracic endograft met the study primary end points and demonstrated satisfactory 30-day safety and 1-year effectiveness for the treatment of patients with aneurysms of the descending thoracic aorta or penetrating atherosclerotic ulcers. Follow-up is ongoing to evaluate longer-term outcomes and durability.
AB - Objective: The study objective was to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the second-generation, low-profile RelayPro (Terumo Aortic) thoracic endograft for the treatment of descending thoracic aortic aneurysm or penetrating atherosclerotic ulcer. Method: A prospective, international, nonblinded, nonrandomized, pivotal trial analyzed a primary safety end point of major adverse events at 30 days (death, myocardial infarction, stroke, renal/respiratory failure, paralysis, bowel ischemia, procedural blood loss) and a primary effectiveness end point of treatment success at 1 year (technical success, patency, absence of aneurysm rupture, type I/III endoleaks, stent fractures, reinterventions, aneurysm expansion, and migration) compared with performance goals from the previous generation Relay pivotal study. The study was conducted in 36 centers in the United States and Japan and enrolled participants between 2017 and 2019. Results: The study population of 110 patients had a median (interquartile range) age of 76 (70-81) years, 69 (62.7%) were male, and 43 (39.1%) were Asian. Patients were treated for 76 fusiform aneurysms (69%), 24 saccular aneurysms (22%), and 10 penetrating atherosclerotic ulcers (9%). Most patients (82.7%) were treated with a non-bare stent configuration. Technical success was 100%. The median (interquartile range) procedure time was 91 (64-131) minutes, and the deployment time was 16 (10-25) minutes. A total of 50 patients (73.5%) in the US cohort had percutaneous access, whereas centers in Japan used only surgical cutdown. The 30-day composite major adverse events rate was 6.4% (95% upper confidence interval, 11.6%; P = .0002): 2 strokes, 2 procedural blood losses greater than 1000 mL requiring transfusion, 2 paralysis events, and 1 renal failure. Primary effectiveness was 89.2% (lower 95% confidence interval, 81.8%; P = .0185). Nine subjects experienced 11 events (1 aneurysm expansion, 6 secondary interventions, and 4 type I endoleaks). There was no loss of stent-graft patency, no rupture, no fractures, and no migration. Conclusions: The low-profile RelayPro thoracic endograft met the study primary end points and demonstrated satisfactory 30-day safety and 1-year effectiveness for the treatment of patients with aneurysms of the descending thoracic aorta or penetrating atherosclerotic ulcers. Follow-up is ongoing to evaluate longer-term outcomes and durability.
KW - TEVAR
KW - aneurysm
KW - endovascular
KW - penetrating atherosclerotic ulcer
KW - thoracic
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jtcvs.2021.10.071
DO - 10.1016/j.jtcvs.2021.10.071
M3 - Article
C2 - 35241276
AN - SCOPUS:85125522709
SN - 0022-5223
VL - 163
SP - 1739-1750.e4
JO - Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
JF - Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
IS - 5
ER -