Title: Laser Atherectomy
1WELCOME
Hilton Harrisburg, September 2007
2Laser Atherectomy
3devices
- Balloons
- Stents
- Cutting Balloons
- Laser Atherectomy
- Directional Atherectomy
- Cryoplasty
- Angiojet thrombectomy
- Filter Wires
- Occlusive Protection
- Re-entry catheters
- Lumend device
4Peripheral Intervenional Procedure
- Patient
- Lesion
- Equipment
- Physician
- STAFF
5(No Transcript)
6Recent Laser modification
- Increasing the energy.
- Continuous ON
- Hydrophilic coating
72.5 Extreme Vs. 2.5 Turbo
- Continuous on
- Fiber density 128 vs 99
- 23 more active area
- 30 more energy
- 59 increased pentration area
- Working length 110cm
8The Wavelength Story
193nm
2090nm
308nm
10600nm
Infrared
Ultraviolet
CO2
Excimer (CVX-300)
HoYAG
Excimer (ophthalmology)
9Spectrophotometric Scan of Fresh Thrombus
Lee et al . Am J Card. 1983 52 876-877
10Lasers inhibit platelet aggregation
Topaz, et al. Thromb Haemost. 2001681087-1093.
11Laser Options - Sites and Clinical Settings
- SFA/CFA/POP
- BTK
- CLI
- Acute Thrombotic events
12Lesion Specific
- Atheroma
- Thrombus
- Restenosis - including stents
- Calcification
13(No Transcript)
14(No Transcript)
15(No Transcript)
16(No Transcript)
17(No Transcript)
18(No Transcript)
19Limb Salvage Following Laser-Assisted Angioplasty
for Critical Limb Ischemia
- Results of the LACI Multicenter Trial
- John R. Laird, MD Thomas Zeller, MD Bruce H.
Gray, DO Dierk Scheinert, MD Mitar Vranic, DO
Christopher Reiser, PhD and Giancarlo Biamino,
MD for the LACI Investigators
7030-0618
20Study Objective
- To evaluate the effectiveness of laser-assisted
angioplasty for patients with CLI who were poor
candidates for surgical revascularization
Multicenter prospective registry 14 sites (11 US
and 3 Germany) 145 patients / 155 critical
ischemic limbs
21Patient Enrollment
- Enrollment Period (April 01 April 02)
- Patients with CLI (Rutherford Category 4-6)
- Presence of ischemic rest pain
- Non-healing ulcers
- Gangrene affecting lower extremity
- Poor surgical candidates
- Absence of a suitable autologous vein
- Lack of undiseased distal vessels gt1 mm in
diameter - High risk of surgical mortality
22Definitions and Endpoints
- Procedural Success
- Was defined as lt50 residual stenosis in all
lesions in the treated limb - Primary Endpoint
- Limb salvage (avoidance of a minor amputation
above the level of the ankle) among surviving
patients at 6 months - Minor Amputation
- Amputation leaving an ambulatory foot i.e., below
the ankle - Secondary Endpoints
- Serious adverse events including any-cause death,
major amputation, need for surgical intervention,
MI, stroke, acute limb ischemia, access site
bleeding or any other event prolonging
hospitalization
23Patient Characteristics and Baseline Limb Status
Patients N145 Men 53 (N77) Mean age, years 72
10
24Angioplasty Technique
- Technical Objective
- To achieve straightline flow from the SFA origin
to the foot through at least 1 tibial artery - Treatment
- Standard guidewire to cross lesions in SFA,
popliteal and tibials - Excimer laser step-by-step procedure used with
lesions resistant to guidewire - Adjunctive PTA and optional stenting
- Included Catheters
- 0.9 2.5 mm Spectranetics peripheral laser
catheters
25Step-by-Step Technique
The guidewire advances a few mm into the
occlusion. The laser is activated while advancing
the laser catheter, ablating the lesion until its
tip is flush with the guidewire. The process is
then repeated until the occlusion is crossed.
26The LACI Studies
- The LACI Trial 6 Month Results
- Laird et al
- 145 pt, 155 critical ischemic limbs
- 423 lesions
- 41SFA, 15 Popliteal, 41 Infrapop
- 70 of Pts had combo occlusion and stenosis
- 29 Rutherford Class 4
- 71 Rutherford Class 5 or 6
27Procedure Results
- Guidewire crossing success 92
- Laser treatment delivered 99
- Adjunctive balloon 96
- Stent placement 45
- Procedure success 85
- lt50 residual stenosis at final
- Straightline flow to foot established 89
- Hospital stay (days) mean 3.0
-
Endovascular Today, October 2003 The LACI Trial
6-Month Results, p.2 Alicia
Fagan
28Procedure Results
93
- On average, 2.7 1.4 lesions were treated in
each limb, with a median lesion length of 4.0 cm
(range 0.250.0) - The median total length of treated artery per
limb was 11.0 cm (mean 16.2, range 0.2-123) - At 6-month follow-up limb salvage was achieved
in 110 (92) of 119 surviving patients or 118
(93) 127 limbs
29(No Transcript)
30(No Transcript)
31(No Transcript)
32(No Transcript)
33(No Transcript)
34(No Transcript)
35Study Conclusion
- Excimer laser-assisted atherectomy for CLI
offers high technical success and limb salvage
rates in patients identified as poor candidates
for traditional surgical revascularization - Limb salvage rate of 93 in surviving patients
is among the highest reported for endovascular
therapy in complex infrainguinal and
infrapopliteal disease - The excimer laser technology used during the
LACI study facilitated procedure success and limb
salvage with a minimum of in-hospital SAEs
36Turbo Booster
37Turbo Booster
Laser Catheter
Laser Catheter
Guidewire
Bias Sheath
Orientation band
Distal Marker
Orientation Band
38Turbo Booster
Top view
Rotated -90?
Orientation band
Rotated -180?
Rotated -270?
The view is such that you are looking directly
down on the device with the catheter above the
Turbo Booster
39(No Transcript)
40(No Transcript)
41Spectranetics Current Studies
- CELLO-CLiRpath Excimer Laser to Enlarge Lumen
Openings - Objective Assess the safety and efficacy of the
Turbo Booster. - Primary Efficacy Endpoint 20 reduction on
average in DS post turbo booster compared to
pre-procedure. - Secondary Endpoints To Achieve lt 30 residual
stenosis post all adjunctive therapy, volumetric
IVUS analyses. - Study Design 15 sites, 85 patients, de novo,
restenotic SFA and popliteal lesions/occlusions,
2cm-15cm treatment segment (single or multiple
lesions), Rutherford 1-3 - Follow-up Duplex doppler at 1,6, 12 months.
- Duration 18-24 months
42General Study Information
- CELLO - CLiRpath Excimer Laser System to Enlarge
Lumen Openings - Prospective, multi-center, non-randomized study
taking place at up to 15 centers in the United
States (later expanded to 20 sites) - Objective - evaluate the safety and efficacy of
the TURBO Booster, in combination with the
available laser catheters 2.0 mm, to create
larger lumens for treatment within the
superficial femoral and popliteal arteries.
43General Study Information
- Primary Endpoints
- Efficacy
- Laser success - defined as achieving ?20 average
reduction in the percent () diameter stenosis,
post-laser and prior to adjunctive therapy, based
on angiographic core laboratory analysis. - Safety
- Occurrence of major adverse events (clinical
perforation, major dissection requiring surgery,
major amputation, cerebrovascular accidents
(CVA), myocardial infarction, and death at the
time of the procedure), prior to release from the
hospital, at 30 days, and at six (6) months
post-procedure.
44General Study Information
- Secondary Endpoints
- Acute procedural success
- Achievement of ?30 final residual stenosis, (by
angiography after all adjunctive treatments) - Lumen diameters and volumetric plaque reduction
immediately after treatment with the Laser as
determined by IVUS
45Results
- 65 patients enrolled
- 61 patients supported the 510(k) premarket
notification for clearance of the Turbo-Booster
post 30-day follow-up. - 16 training cases
- 45 analysis cohort cases
- Demographics
- Average age was 69 years (42-87)
- 36 (59) males and 25 (41) females
- Average height and weight was 67 inches and 182
pounds
46General Study Information
- Anatomic Exclusion Criteria
- Identification of any lesion above the knee
and/or below the knee in the treated leg
(ipsilateral) that will require preplanned or
predicted treatment within six (6) months after
enrollment and prior to completion of the 6-month
follow-up. - Lesions proximal and distal to the treatment site
that are ? 50 DS - Contralateral leg disease that requires treatment
within the next 30 days and prior to completion
of 30 day follow-up - Cardiovascular surgical or cardiovascular
interventional procedures (including, but not
limited to, aortic, renal, cardiac, carotid,
femoro-popliteal, and below the knee) within 30
days prior to enrollment in this study and - Perforation or dissection of grade C or greater
seen during or after the creation of the pilot
channel.
47Results
- Demographics
- 5 of 61 patients had popliteal procedures above
the knee joint - Average lesion length 56 mm
- Average reference vessel diameter 4.9 mm
- Average percent diameter stenosis pre-procedure
was 78
48Safety
- Acute Patency (within 30 days)
- 59 of 61 (97) patients were patent by duplex
Doppler ultrasound (2 patients had a PSV gt 2.0 on
DUS at 30 days.) - 61 of 61 (100) patients freedom from TVR and TLR
at 30 days. - No acute complications or re-interventions were
reported.
49Efficacy
- Primary Efficacy Endpoint
- Reduction in diameter stenosis of greater than or
equal to 20 by core lab assessment - Greatly exceeded this endpoint with an average
reduction of 35 and a lower confidence interval
of 30
50Efficacy
- Other Efficacy Outcomes (per IFU)
- 60 of 61 (98) patients achieved a final residual
stenosis of to 30 by physician assessment - Angiographic Core lab mean percent stenosis
- Pre-procedure 78
- After Turbo-Booster 43
- Final 22
51Efficacy
- Clinical Efficacy Outcomes
- Average Rutherford Classification change of 2.4
at baseline to 1.0 at 30 days - Walking Impairment Questionnaire scores increased
55 from 46.2 to 71.5 at 30 days - ABIs increase from 0.78 at baseline to 0.97 at 30
days
52- PATENT
- Photo-Ablation using the Turbo-booster and
Excimer laser for iN-stent restenosis Treatment
53PATENT
- Study Milestones
- Prospective, non-randomized study
- Sample size 100 enrolled
- Up to 10 sites in Germany
- Follow-ups 1, 6 and 12 months post-procedure
- Duplex at 6 and 12 months
- Adverse events through 12 months
54- SALVAGE
- ProSpective Multi-Center TriAL to EValuate the
Safety and Performance of the Spectranetics Laser
with Adjunct PTAand GorE Viabahn Endoprosthesis
for the Treatment of SFA In-stent Restenosis
55SALVAGE
- Sponsor VIVA Physicians (VPI)
- Funding Spectranetics and Gore
56SALVAGE
- Objective To evaluate the safety and
performance of the Spectranetics laser used with
the Gore Viabahn endoprosthesis for the treatment
of SFA in-stent restenosis. - Design Multi-center, prospective non-randomized
registry with up to 100 patients at up to 15
sites in US and EU. - Primary Endpoint Duplex ultrasound at 12 months.
- Primary Safety Endpoints
- Stent integrity or migration at 12 months on
X-ray. - Major adverse event rate through 12 months
defined as death, MACE, unplanned amputation and
TVR. - Secondary Endpoints TLR 12 months, ABI and WIQ
1,6,12 months - Technical Success for Laser Achievement of a
3mm lumen with laser technology.
57Spectranetics Current Studies
- VIVA II Spectranetics Laser - Gore Viabahn PTFE
Covered Stent - Objective Assess patency at 12 months following
the treatment of ISR by maximally debulking wit
the 2.5 Turbo catheter followed by Viabahn
stent-graft placement. - Sponsor VIVA
- Study Design Multi-center prospective registry
- Long, diffuse SFA in-stent restenosis, Rutherford
1-4 - Sample Size 120
- Sites 10
- Follow-up 12 month duplex doppler ultrasound
- Goal SPNC will consider using data to support a
510(k) to expand CLiRpath indications to ISR.
58(No Transcript)
59(No Transcript)
60(No Transcript)
61(No Transcript)
62(No Transcript)
63(No Transcript)
64(No Transcript)
65(No Transcript)
66(No Transcript)
67(No Transcript)
68(No Transcript)
69(No Transcript)
70Laser Atherectomy
- Laser atherectomy offers effective treatment
options for patients with specific lesion
characteristics.
71WELCOME
Hilton Harrisburg, September 2007