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September 2010
BTK Stenting in Critical Limb Ischemia
A review of the data and practical techniques for below-the-knee stenting.
Critical limb ischemia (CLI) is a serious condition affecting a growing number of patients worldwide, particularly as diabetes becomes a larger epidemic. A quarter million amputations are performed annually in the United States and Europe, and this number is even greater worldwide, resulting in a huge social and economic burden with a serious compromise in quality of life.1-5
CLI patients have extensive multivessel disease and challenging lesions, particularly in diabetic and renal failure patients.6 The BASIL study showed that in CLI patients, lower limb bypass and balloon angioplasty were associated with similar outcomes in terms of amputation-free survival. 7,8 If untreated, CLI patients have a 1-year amputation rate of 50% or greater, with associated high morbidity and mortality rates. Limb salvage by surgery or endovascular techniques has improved the quality of life for patients, as well as 5-year survival rates. In CLI patients, endovascular techniques have been associated with lower morbidity and mortality rates than bypass surgery. Numerous endovascular techniques have shown limb salvage rates of > 90% in CLI patients.9-13
BELOW-THE-KNEE STENTING
Below-the-knee (BTK) stenting is frequently used as a
bailout technique for flow-limiting dissections after
intervention, restenosis and elastic recoil, and suboptimal
endovascular results. However, there are significant
data showing that BTK stenting is an effective and
durable primary endovascular strategy for CLI patients,
which consists of balloon-expandable and self-expanding
stents.14-17
BALLOON-EXPANDABLE STENTS
The Paradise study investigated the efficiency and safety
of balloon-expandable drug-eluting stents to prevent
amputation in patients with BTK CLI. The 3-year cumulative
rate of amputation was 6% ± 2%, and binary restenosis
occurred in 12% of the 35% of patients who underwent
repeat angiography.14 The Siablis study was a prospective
registry investigating the performance of sirolimus-eluting
stents versus bare-metal stents (BMS) in CLI patients.15 The
3-year angiographic and clinical results showed improved
patency with sirolimus-eluting stents over BMS.
A meta-analysis of 18 studies on 640 patients undergoing BTK stenting in CLI showed that (1) patients treated with balloon-expandable BMS have similar outcomes to those treated with self-expanding BMS, (2) sirolimus-eluting stents provided superior outcomes to BMS, and (3) primary patency was superior with sirolimus-eluting stents compared to paclitaxel-eluting stents in some studies.16
SELF-EXPANDING STENTS
The XCELL study is the largest United States prospective
multicenter registry of patients with CLI to evaluate the
Xpert self-expanding stent (Abbott Vascular, Santa Clara,
CA). Of the 120 enrolled patients, 21 patients (17.5%) were
Rutherford class 4, 82 patients (68.3%) were Rutherford class
5, and 17 patients (14%) were Rutherford class 6. There were
76 patients (63.3%) with one-vessel runoff, 67% were diabetic,
and the mean stented vessel length was 7.6 cm. The primary
endpoint was 12-month amputation-free survival, and
secondary endpoints were angiographic in-stent restenosis
rates, stent fracture assessment, and the extent of wound
healing.
At 6-month follow-up in 115 patients, interim data showed that there was a total of 36 target lesion revascularizations (31.3%), of which, 21 (18.3%) were symptomatic. There were seven major amputations (6.1%), six deaths (5.2%), four target vessel revascularizations (3.5%), and one access-site complication requiring transfusion (0.9%). Wound healing data showed that 68 wounds (53.5%) were 100% healed, 43 (33.9%) had significantly decreased wound areas, and 16 (12.6%) had increased wound areas at 6-month follow-up (Figures 1 through 3).17
PRACTICAL TECHNIQUES FOR BTK STENTING
Patient Selection
There should be adequate distal runoff below the
ankle and in the foot, and the vessel caliber should ideally
be more than 2 mm in diameter. The stented vessel
should be the dominant vessel feeding the foot, constituting
the pedal arch, and feeding the nonhealing ulcer.
Vessel Preparation
Before stenting, the vessel should be adequately pretreated
with balloon angioplasty—scoring balloons if the lesion is
rigid and calcified—and debulked with atherectomy devices
if the lesion is complex, heavily calcified, or if a long chronic
total occlusion is present. This will allow for proper stent
expansion and sizing and will help prevent stent elongation,
which could increase restenosis and stent fracture rates.
It is important to adequately treat significant inflow and outflow disease before stenting. When stenting proximally in the tibial and peroneal arteries, make sure that there is good distal flow to prevent stent thrombosis. Selective administration of nitroglycerin (300–500 µg) should be administered into the culprit vessel to assess proper stent sizing.
When stenting distally, be sure that the distal stent edge is at least 3 cm above the ankle joint to avoid stent injury and preserve a distal bypass option. It is advisable not to stent across major branches, when the vessel caliber is 2 mm or less, and when the distal runoff below the ankle is poor.
Tips and Tricks for BTK Stenting
It is important to make sure that the entire lesion is
covered from healthy vessel to healthy vessel. When
using balloon-expandable stents in bifurcated lesions,
kissing stenting and coronary bifurcation stenting techniques
can be used. It is always better to use one long
stent than overlapping stents to decrease restenosis and
stent fractures. When multiple stents are used, it is recommended
to overlap them by 1 cm. Balloon-expanding
stents should be expanded to a 1.1:1 ratio; for selfexpanding
stents, the stent size should be at least one
size larger than the vessel diameter. For longer lesions, it is
better to use self-expanding stents because of their
longer length. Postdilatation for self-expanding stents is
recommended with a balloon that is a half-size larger
than the stent size.
When deploying self-expanding stents, always advance the stent delivery system beyond the lesion and then pull it back to just beyond the lesion to offset the stored up torque in the delivery system. Deploy the stent slowly with a pin-and-pull technique to avoid elongation of the stent. Lastly, use road mapping while deploying the stents.
DISCUSSION AND SUMMARY
Please note that BTK stenting with balloon-expandable
and self-expanding stents, as described in this article,
is an off-label use. This technique is primarily performed
for flow-limiting dissections, restenosis, and
inadequate results after other endovascular techniques.
However, primary stenting for CLI patients should be
considered as a first-line endovascular treatment based
on the available data. Current limitations are the lack of
available long stents and the expense of drug-eluting
stents. In CLI patients, for lesions longer than 10 cm,
atherectomy followed by low-pressure angioplasty
should be considered with the limitation of currently
available stent lengths.
Drug-eluting balloons will prove to be a great option for CLI patients. Further studies need to be done comparing comparing drug-eluting balloons with and without atherectomy to longer BTK self-expanding stents with both bare-metal and drug-eluting stents. Sirolimus-eluting stents have shown improved durability and clinical outcomes compared to BMS. Interim data for self-expanding stents from the XCELL study have been very promising. Larger randomized studies are also needed to compare BTK stenting with other endovascular techniques in treating CLI patients with complex BTK multivessel disease.
Prakash Makam, MD, FACC, FSCAI, is the Medical Director of Cardiovascular Research, Community Health Care System and Medical Director of Cardiovascular Research at Cardiology Associates of Northwest Indiana in Munster, Indiana. He has disclosed that he holds no financial interest in any product or manufacturer mentioned herein. Dr. Makam may be reached at (219) 934-4200; pmakam@canwi.com.
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