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Case Report

Long In-Stent Restenosis of the Superficial Femoral Artery Successfully Treated Using OCT-Guided Directional Atherectomy

Jaafer A. Golzar, MD

 

Advocate Christ Medical Center, Oak Lawn, Illinois

August 2017

Each year, approximately 200,000 patients in the United States receive stent implantation during intervention for peripheral arterial disease (PAD).1 It is estimated that within 12 months, 30%-40% of patients receiving stents will require repeat revascularization at the same lesion site following re-occlusion, termed in-stent restenosis (ISR).2,3 Despite recent advances in atherectomy tools for ISR, the clinical outcomes remain poor, with a recent randomized study demonstrating 39% primary patency and 57% reintervention rate at 12 months.4 Poor stent patency is multifactorial, likely including residual plaque burden, polymer-related inflammation, and mechanical disturbances.5  

In an attempt to improve both acute and long-term outcomes for endovascular therapies, interventionalists are increasingly adopting intravascular imaging, which has demonstrated clinical benefits during percutaneous coronary intervention for the diagnoses and characterization of plaque burden and location, and to gauge optimal therapeutic endpoints.6-8 Specifically, these imaging modalities include intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) and optical coherence tomography (OCT). With a 10-fold increased resolution compared to IVUS, OCT has been shown to reveal superior image resolution of vascular lumen surface, pathologic tissue morphology, disease distribution patterns, and stent strut positioning.5 Accordingly, interventionalists treating ISR using OCT may appreciate disease proximal and distal to scaffold edges, disease-free in-stent regions, strut malapposition, overall thrombus burden, and vulnerable plaque including thin-capped fibroatheromas. X-ray fluoroscopy does not provide plaque morphology insight and requires multiple angles with added contrast for accurate assessment of plaque distribution at lesion edges. Furthermore, a major advantage of OCT-guided therapies is the significant radiation and contrast reduction for lower-extremity revascularizations.9

Until recently, IVUS-guided and OCT-guided diagnostic catheters were independent from therapeutic catheters, adding time to procedures and ultimately limiting the benefit of direct visualization for real-time therapeutic guidance. The Pantheris catheter (Avinger) is the first device to incorporate real-time diagnostic imaging at the point of therapy. Specifically, it uses OCT to determine plaque location and morphology, and to guide its directional cutting blade for removal of plaque from the artery (Figure 1). Herein, we report a 400 mm ISR chronic total occlusion (CTO) of the superficial femoral artery (SFA) that was safely and effectively revascularized using OCT-guided directional atherectomy. At present, Pantheris has neither an indication nor contraindication for ISR. 

Case Report:

A 66-year-old female presenting with left lower-extremity rest pain was referred with Rutherford category 3 intermittent claudication. Previous treatment of the target lesion included balloon angioplasty and drug-eluting stent (DES) implantation. Diagnostic angiography revealed an ISR-CTO of the left SFA extending into the P1 segment. 

Contralateral access was gained with a 7 Fr sheath placed into the left common femoral artery. A 0.035˝ Trailblazer (Medtronic) and soft-angled Glidewire (Terumo) were used to cross the 400 mm SFA-CTO. After crossing, a 3 mm Spider filter (Medtronic) was deployed into the peroneal artery. 

Using OCT guidance, directional atherectomy of the left SFA was successfully performed with the Pantheris catheter. Atherectomy required two catheter insertions, with a total of seven cutting passes through the ISR region. OCT revealed dense disease 5 cm above the proximal stent edge extending to 6 cm below the distal stent edge. The neointima was most dense at the stent edges, with approximately 100 mm of intermittent intrastent disease-free segments. A large, mixed morphology thrombus burden was also noted within the ISR. The nose cone was cleaned following each insertion, with a large volume of plaque specimen removed each time. Angiography revealed post-Pantheris residual stenosis of <20%. 

Following OCT-guided atherectomy, the filter wire was removed with minor thrombotic debris noted. However, given the risk for distal embolization when treating ISR, routine use of filter wire is advised.10,11 A MiracleBros 12 gauge guidewire (Abbott Vascular) was placed into the left SFA and In.Pact drug-coated balloons (DCBs; Medtronic) were placed in the distal SFA (6.0 x 120 mm), mid SFA (6.0 x 120 mm), proximal SFA (6.0 x 120 mm), and ostial SFA (6.0 x 80 mm). Subsequent angiography demonstrated excellent results with <10% residual stenosis. Total therapy time was measured at 23 minutes.

Discussion

Endovascular intervention of ISR has evolved significantly over the last decade. The introduction of DCBs, DESs, and atherectomy (directional, orbital, and laser) has yielded significantly improved short-term results, yet these lesions are still characterized by a relatively high incidence of restenosis.12-14 Atherectomy along with cryoplasty shows poor overall patency in non-randomized trials, including 25% at 12 months15 and 43% at 6 months.16 Results from randomized DCB trials, such as PACUBA and FAIR, add to the growing body of evidence for the treatment of SFA-ISR. PACUBA reports 74 patients with claudication, randomized to DCB vs standard angioplasty treatment, with 12-month target-lesion revascularization (TLR) rates of 51% vs 78%, respectively.17 The FAIR trial included lesions half the length of the PACUBA trial, and reported TLR rates that were significantly improved for DCB vs angioplasty (9% and 47%, respectively).18 Lastly, the paclitaxel-eluting stent (Cook Medical) showed favorable results for SFA-ISR cases in a non-randomized study, with primary patency of 78.8% at 12 months.19 The wide variability in lesion sizes studied and long-term patency results across therapies suggests that there remains a lack of evidence to support a single solution. Accordingly, given the considerable population of patients with peripheral stents, innovative technologies and long-term datasets must continue to define an algorithmic approach to ISR therapy. 

Adverse events associated with ISR revascularization include the inability to accurately characterize proximal and distal disease with angiography, risk of catching stent struts,20 and appreciation of hibernating thrombus burden. In fact, secondary to commercial safety complaints, x-ray-guided directional atherectomy (Silverhawk; Medtronic) received a post-market contraindication for ISR therapy.15 The role of intravascular imaging may improve both safety and efficacy when treating ISR. For example, IVUS and OCT have been shown to detect the presence and depth of neointimal hyperplasia, strut malapposition, and scaffold-edge disturbances, which have the potential to provide the operator with valuable insights on vessel sizing for optimal therapy.7,21 In contrast to alternative devices such as the excimer laser, which utilizes light energy to vaporize matter and to modify the plaque, directional atherectomy removes the plaque mechanically, and thus has the advantage of achieving a larger luminal gain. It has been shown that achieving ≤30% residual stenosis improves long-term patency following revascularization.22 The visualization of the distinct arterial wall composition and the embedded stent struts during OCT-guided atherectomy allows maximal luminal gain.

Moreover, recent studies have shown that when treating ISR in the femoropopliteal region, a combination treatment of atherectomy and DCB is superior to stand-alone DCB. The results were significant in the retrospective single-center DEBATE-ISR study, with a reported 12-month freedom from restenosis rate of 84.7% for atherectomy + DCB vs 70.5% for DCB alone. Given these results, current studies looking at Pantheris + DCB will need to be monitored for their effectiveness in delivering improved long-term patency.

This case report demonstrates a challenging SFA-ISR, with heavy disease burden extending from the proximal SFA to the P1 segment. In this case, because of the length and complexity of ISR disease, we decided to treat using Pantheris’s real-time OCT capabilities. Our results demonstrate how intravascular OCT visualizes proximal and distal disease, stent struts, and thrombus burden (Figure 3). This is the first report of OCT-guided atherectomy successfully treating ISR. In this case, the visualization provided by the Pantheris catheter assisted the operators to safely and effectively revascularize a complex ISR lesion.

Conclusion

The proper treatment algorithm for femoral ISR is complex and represents an important challenge for peripheral interventionists. We present a complex SFA-ISR-CTO where OCT-guided atherectomy enabled identification of lesion extension beyond stent boundaries, thrombus burden within ISR, acute strut malapposition, and disease burden assessment, all without the need for contrast or fluoroscopy. OCT diagnostic visualization during therapy was safe, effective, and time efficient.

Editor’s Note

From Advocate Christ Medical Center, Oak Lawn, Illinois.

Disclosure: The author has completed and returned the ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest. The author reports no conflicts of interest regarding the content herein.

Manuscript submitted December 30, 2016, provisional acceptance given February 7, 2017, final version accepted June 26, 2017.

Address for correspondence: Jaafer A. Golzar, MD, Department of Cardiology, Advocate Christ Medical Center, 10837 South Cicero Avenue, Suite 200, Oak Lawn, IL 60453. Email: golzar1@yahoo.com 

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