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. 2018 Jun 2;20(8):40. doi: 10.1007/s11883-018-0742-x

Table 1.

Brief overview of PAD trials and percentage of women enrolled

Study design Follow-up Salient features No. of patients Men (%) Women (%) Outcomes
Pharmacotherapy
 CASPAR RCT placebo 2 years Patients undergoing vascular grafting as a treatment for PAD and 2 to 4 days after bypass surgery 851 66 34 Combination of clopidogrel plus ASA did not improve limb or systemic outcomes in the overall population of PAD patients requiring below-knee bypass grafting. Subgroup analysis: clopidogrel plus ASA conferred benefit in patients receiving prosthetic grafts
 AAA Intention-to-treat double-blind RCT 8.2 years Patients free of clinical cardiovascular disease, recruited from a community health registry, with a positive ABI screening test 3350 28 72 Aspirin did not result in a significant reduction of vascular events among patients without clinical cardiovascular disease and a low ABI
 POPADAD RCT, double-blind, 2 × 2 factorial, placebo-controlled 6.7 years Adults aged > 40 with type 1 or type 2 diabetes and an ABI of 0.99 or less but no symptomatic cardiovascular disease 1276 44 56 No benefit from either aspirin or antioxidant treatment on the composite hierarchical primary end points of cardiovascular events and cardiovascular mortality
 CAPRIE Double-blind RCT 1.91 years Patients with atherosclerotic vascular disease 6452 73 27 Long-term administration of clopidogrel to patients with atherosclerotic vascular disease is more effective than aspirin in reducing the combined risk of ischemic stroke, myocardial infarction, or vascular death
 CHARISMA (PAD subgroup) RCT, double-blind, 2 × 2 factorial, placebo-controlled, multicenter 28 months Patients with PAD identified in CHARISMA study. Current intermittent claudication + an ABI ≤ 0.85, or a history of intermittent claudication + previous related intervention (amputation, surgical or catheter-based peripheral revascularization) 3096 70 30 Among patients with PAD, the primary end point occurred in 7.6% in the clopidogrel plus aspirin group and 8.9% in the placebo plus aspirin group (p = 0.18). The rate of MI and hospitalization for ischemic events were lower in the DAPT arm than aspirin alone
 EUCLID Double-blind, event-driven RCT 30 months 50 years of age with symptomatic peripheral artery disease. One of two inclusion criteria: previous revascularization of the lower limbs for symptomatic disease more than 30 days before randomization or hemodynamic evidence of peripheral artery disease 13,885 72 28 The primary efficacy end point occurred in 10.8% receiving ticagrelor and in 10.6% receiving clopidogrel failing to show ticagrelor to be superior to clopidogrel for the reduction of cardiovascular events (p = 0.65)
 COMPASS Double-blind double-dummy RCT using a 3-by-2 partial factorial design 23 months Adults who meet criteria for CAD, PAD or both 27,395 78 22 Combination therapy with rivaroxaban (2.5 mg twice daily) plus aspiring among patients with stable atherosclerotic vascular disease had statistically significant better cardiovascular outcomes and more major bleeding events than those assigned to aspirin alone
 4S Double-blind RCT 5.4 years Adults 35–70 years with history of angina pectoris or MI 4444 81.3 18.7 Simvastatin produced significant reduction of cardiovascular mortality in patients with CAD. Probability of a woman > 60 years escaping a major coronary event was 77.7% in placebo and 85.1% in simvastatin arm (p = 0.01). RR of death or coronary event in women < 60 were 0.63 and 0.61, respectively
 WOSCOPS Double-blind RCT 4.9 years Fasting LDL > 155; no history of MI, arrhythmia or other serious illness, men with stable angina who had not been hospitalized within the previous 12 months 6595 100 0 Pravastatin lowered plasma cholesterol levels by 20% and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels by 26%. A 22% reduction in the risk of death from any cause in the pravastatin group was observed
 HOPE Double-blind, 2 × 2 factorial, RCT 3.5 years Adults > 55 years old with history of CAD, PAD, CVA, or DM + another CV risk factor 9297 73 27 Treatment with ramipril-reduced rates of death from cardiovascular causes, MI, stroke, death from any cause, revascularization procedures, heart failure and complications related to DM
 CAMELOT Multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT 24 months Adults 30–79 years old requiring coronary angiography for evaluation for chest pain or percutaneous coronary intervention + DBP < 100 with or without treatment 1991 73.7 26.3 Administration of amlodipine to patients with CAD and normal blood pressure resulted in reduced adverse cardiovascular events particularly in women (RRR 42.8%) + IVUS showed evidence of slowing of atherosclerosis progression
 FOURIER (PAD subgroup) Double-blind RCT 2.2 years Clinically evident atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease including prior MI, prior ischemic stroke, or symptomatic PAD (intermittent lower extremity claudication and an ankle-brachial index < 0.85, a history of a peripheral artery revascularization procedure, or a history of amputation attributable to atherosclerotic disease) 3642 71.8 28.2 ARR for CV death, MI, or stroke 3.5% in patients with PAD, and 1.4% in patients without PAD
 STOP-IC Prospective RCT, open-label, multicenter 12 months Patients with symptomatic PAD attributable to de novo femoropopliteal lesions 191 68.5 31.5 The angiographic restenosis rate at 12 months was 20% in the cilostazol group in comparison with 49% in the noncilostazol group (p = 0.001; odds ratio, 0.26; 95% confidence interval, 0.13–0.53)
Exercise therapy
 CLEVER Multicenter RCT across 29 centers in US and Canada 18 months Adults > 40 years of age with moderate to severe claudication due to aortoiliac PAD. Moderate to severe claudication was defined as the ability to walk at least 2 min on a treadmill at 2 miles per hour at no grade, but <11 min on a graded treadmill test using the Gardner-Skinner protocol 111 62 38 Supervised exercise provides a superior improvement in treadmill walking performance compared to both primary aortoiliac revascularization and optimal medical care (home walking and cilostazol) over 6 months (p < 0.001 for the comparison of SE versus OMC, p = 0.02 for ST versus OMC, and p = 0.04 for SE versus ST). This benefit was also associated with an improvement in self-reported walking distance, an increase in high-density lipoprotein, and a decrease of fibrinogen. Secondary measures of treatment efficacy favored primary stenting, with greater improvements in self-reported physical function
 ERASE Parallel-design RCT conducted in the Netherlands at 10 sites 12 months PAD and stable claudication (≥ 3 months) with a resting ABI of < 0.90 or if their ABI decreased by more than 0.15 after treadmill testing regardless of their ABI at rest. All participants also had 1 or more vascular stenoses at the aortoiliac level, the femoropopliteal level, or both. Maximum walking distance had to be between 100 m and 500 m 666 62 38 Combination therapy of endovascular revascularization followed by supervised exercise resulted in significantly greater improvement in walking distances and health-related quality of life scores compared with supervised exercise only
Interventional
 IN.PACT SFA prospective, multicenter, single-blinded, RCT 12 months Patients with intermittent claudication or ischemic rest pain due to superficial femoral and/or popliteal PAD 331 66 34 Drug-coated balloon was superior to PTA and had a favorable safety profile for the treatment of patients with symptomatic femoropopliteal peripheral artery disease
 LEVANT-2 Single-blind, RCT 12 months Rutherford stage 2–4 with ≥ 70% angiographically significant atherosclerotic lesion in the superficial femoral or popliteal artery, or both. The total treated lesion length had to be 15 cm or less, and the reference diameter of the target vessel had to be 4–6 mm 476 63 37 PTA with a paclitaxel-coated balloon resulted in a rate of primary patency at 12 months that was higher than the rate with angioplasty with a standard balloon
 THUNDER RCT, multicenter 5 years Symptomatic peripheral artery disease with one or more obstructive lesions, either new lesions or restenoses, at least 70% of vessel diameter and at least 2 cm in length, in the superficial femoral artery, the popliteal artery, or both 154 65.5 34.5 Use of paclitaxel-coated angioplasty balloons (PCB) during percutaneous treatment of femoropopliteal disease is associated with significant reductions in late lumen loss and target lesion revascularization. Reduced rate of revascularization following PCB treatment was maintained over a 5 year period, although noted to be higher in women
 ABSOLUTE Single-institution RCT 12 months Symptomatic PAD with Rutherford stage 3–5; > 50% or occlusion of the ipsilateral superficial femoral artery, a target lesion length of more than 30 mm, and at least one patent (< 50% stenosis) tibioperoneal runoff vessel 104 53 47 At 6–12 months, treatment of superficial femoral artery disease by primary implantation of a self-expanding nitinol stent yielded results that were superior to those with the currently recommended approach of balloon angioplasty with optional secondary stenting
 ASTRON Multicenter RCT 12 months Symptomatic PAD Rutherford class 3–5; > 50% stenosis or occlusion of the SFA with a target lesion length between 30 mm and 200 mm, and at least one patent (< 50% stenosis) tibioperoneal runoff vessel 73 68 32 Primary stenting with a self-expanding nitinol stent for treatment of intermediate length SFA disease resulted morphologically and clinically superior midterm results compared with balloon angioplasty with optional secondary stenting
 FAST Multicenter RCT in 11 European centers 12 months De novo SFA lesion located at least 1 cm from the SFA origin with a length between 1 and 10 cm. Target lesion diameter stenosis had to be at least 70% by visual estimate. The popliteal artery as well as 1 of the infrapopliteal (below-the-knee) vessels had to be continuously patent for sustained distal runoff. Clinically, patients to have at least Rutherford category 2 244 69 31 No statistically significant difference between treatment groups was observed at 12 months in the improvement by at least 1 Rutherford category of peripheral arterial disease
 PACIFIER Investigator-initiated multicenter RCT conducted in three German institutions 12 months Claudication or critical limb ischemia (Rutherford 2–5); disease of SFA or popliteal artery; lesion length 3–30 cm; an occlusion or a grade of stenosis ≥ 70%, and absence of contraindications to dual antiplatelet therapy 85 59 41 DEB was associated with significant reductions in late lumen loss and restenosis at 6 months, and re-interventions after femoropopliteal percutaneous transluminal angioplasty up to 1 year of follow-up
 VIASTAR Prospective, single-blind, multicenter, RCT 24 months Symptomatic PAD in the Rutherford stage 2–5, de novo arteriosclerotic stenosis or occlusion of the SFA and proximal popliteal artery 10–35 cm in length (TASC II classes B-D), patent or successfully treated iliac artery inflow, and outflow of at least 1 tibial artery 141 71 29 In lesions ≥ 20 cm, (TASC class D), the 12-month patency rate was significantly longer in VIA patients. Freedom from target lesion revascularization was 84.6% for Viabahn versus 77.0% for BMS. The ankle-brachial index in the Viabahn group significantly increased compared with the BMS at 12 months
 DEBATE-BTK Single-center, parallel-group, open blinded end point RCT 12 months presence of diabetes mellitus, CLI (Rutherford class 4 or greater), stenosis or occlusion ≥ 40 mm of at least 1 tibial vessel with distal runoff to the foot, and agreement to 12-month angiographic evaluation 132 80 20 Drug-eluting balloons compared with PTA strikingly reduce 1-year restenosis, target lesion revascularization, and target vessel occlusion in the treatment of below-the-knee lesions in diabetic patients with critical limb ischemia
 ZILVER Prospective, multinational RCT with a complementary single-arm study 24 months Rutherford category ≥ 2, ≥ 50% diameter stenosis, reference vessel diameter 4–9 mm, lesion length up to 14 cm, and at least 1 patent runoff vessel with < 50% stenosis throughout its course 474 65 35 Primary DES group demonstrated significantly superior 2-year event-free survival and primary patency
 FEMPAC Multicenter RCT 6 months Occlusion/stenosis ≥ 70% diameter of the SFA and/or popliteal artery with clinical Rutherford stages 1–5; successful guidewire passage of the lesion during angiography 87 60 40 The number of target lesion revascularizations was lower in the paclitaxel-coated balloon group than in control subjects (p = 0.002). Improvement in Rutherford class was greater in the coated balloon group (p = 0.045), whereas the improvement in ankle-brachial index did not achieve statistical significance
 BASIL Multicenter RCT, prospective, across 27 UK hospitals 5.5 years Severe limb ischemia, for > 2 weeks, and who on diagnostic imaging had a pattern of disease which, in joint investigator opinions, could equally well be treated by either infra-inguinal bypass surgery or balloon angioplasty 452 59.5 40.5 In patients presenting with severe limb ischemia due to infra-inguinal disease and who are suitable for surgery and angioplasty, a bypass surgery-first and a balloon angioplasty-first strategy are associated with broadly similar outcomes in terms of amputation-free survival, and in the short-term, surgery is more expensive than angioplasty
 ACHILLES Prospective multicenter RCT in nine European countries 1 year Adults with infrapopliteal PAD. Reasons for exclusion were significant stenoses (> 50%) distal to the target lesion that might require revascularization or impede runoff; angiographically evident thrombus or history of thrombolysis within 72 h; untreated lesions (> 75% stenosis), Cr > 2.5 mg/dl 200 71.5 28.5 lower angiographic restenosis rates (22.4 vs 41.9%, p = 0.019), greater vessel patency (75.0% vs 57.1%, p = 0.025), and similar death, repeat revascularization, index-limb amputation rates, and proportions of patients with improved Rutherford class for sirolimus-eluting stents vs PTA
 DESTINY RCT, multicenter European 12 months Symptomatic PAD due to a maximum of two focal de novo atherosclerotic target lesions in one or more infrapopliteal vessels 140 63.5 36.5 Treatment of the infrapopliteal occlusive lesions of CLI with everolimus stents demonstrated an 85% patency vs 54% with BMS at 12 months, decrease in restenosis, as well as statistically significant independence from revascularization
 YUKON-BTX Double-blind RCT 12 months Rutherford class 3–5, presence of a single primary target lesion in a native infrapopliteal artery that was 2.5–3.5 mm in diameter and that did not exceed 45 mm in length 161 66.5 33.5 BMS placement was associated with a hazard ratio for restenosis of 3.2 (95% CI 1.5 to 6.7; p = 0.003) compared with sirolimus-eluting stents (SES) after 1 year. No significant differences between the study groups concerning mortality and amputation rates were observed, but mean ABI and Rutherford scores showed significant improvements in sirolimus group
 IN.PACT DEEP CLI Prospective multicenter RCT 12 months Rutherford class 4–6 symptomatic CLI patients; reference vessel diameters between 2 and 4 mm; single or multiple lesions with ≥ 70% stenosis of different lengths in one or more main afferent crural vessels including tibioperoneal trunk 358 74.3 25.7 IN.PACT Amphirion drug-eluting balloons demonstrated comparable and non-inferior efficacy to PTA in CLI patients. The overall complication rate, a composite of core laboratory-adjudicated incidence of vasospasm, abrupt closure, vessel recoil, thrombus, and perforation, was higher in the IA-DEB arm versus the PTA arm (9.7 vs 3.4%; p = 0.035). Major amputation-free survival had a trend favoring DEB
 IDEAS Prospective RCT 6 months Rutherford classes 3–6 and angiographically documented infrapopliteal disease with a minimum lesion length of 70 mm 50 76 34 DES are related with significantly lower residual immediate post-procedure stenosis and have shown significantly reduced vessel restenosis at 6 months