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Active clinical trials for "Peripheral Arterial Disease"

Results 151-160 of 1358

Randomized Phase IIb Trial of DVC1-0101

Intermittent ClaudicationPeripheral Arterial Disease

DVC1-0101 is a gene therapy medicine to treat peripheral arterial disease (PAD) based on recombinant F-gene-deleted, non-transmissible Sendai virus (rSeV/dF) expressing human fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2) gene. The primary objective of the current Phase IIb study is to investigate the clinical efficacy of DVC1-0101 (1x10^9 ciu/leg, 5x10^9 ciu/leg) in patients with IC.

Active34 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of the Safety and Efficacy of a Vascular Prosthesis as an Above-Knee Bypass Graft in...

Peripheral Arterial DiseasePeripheral Vascular Disease

The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and efficacy of a novel, tissue-engineered vascular prosthesis, the Human Acellular Vessel (HAV). The HAV is intended as an alternative to synthetic materials and to autologous grafts in the creation of an above-knee femoro-popliteal bypass graft in patients with peripheral arterial disease.

Active33 enrollment criteria

Prospective, Multi-center, Single-arm Study of the Auryon Laser System for Treatment of Below-the-Knee...

Peripheral Arterial Disease

The Auryon Laser Atherectomy System has been cleared by the FDA to treat infrainguinal arterial disease including in-stent restenosis

Active33 enrollment criteria

Exercise Rehabilitation in Veterans With PAD

Peripheral Arterial DiseaseIntermittent Claudication

Peripheral artery disease (PAD) results in blockages of arteries (blood vessels) and decreased blood flow to the legs. This may cause difficulty or pain with walking or other activities that use leg muscles. Exercise may help improve blood flow in the legs and improve the ability to walk. This research project will be conducted patients with PAD that require revascularization. The goal is to examine the effects of 3 months of exercise rehabilitation or neuromuscular stimulation on leg blood flow, physical function, quality of life and general health.

Active6 enrollment criteria

ILLUMENATE Below-The-Knee (BTK) Arteries: a Post Market Clinical Study

Peripheral Arterial Disease

The objective of this prospective, multi-center, single arm study is to obtain further data on the safety and performance of the StellarexTM 0.014" OTW Drug-coated Angioplasty Balloon in the treatment of lesions in "below the knee" popliteal (P3 segment) and infra-popliteal arteries according to the Instructions for Use in Rutherford-Becker Classification (RCC) 3, 4 and 5 patient populations. This study will be conducted in Europe across up to 10 centers in up to 75 subjects. Office visits will occur at 30 days, 6, 12, and 24 months post-index procedure.

Active19 enrollment criteria

The DETOUR2 Clinical Study

Peripheral Arterial Disease

Prospective, single-arm, multi-center, international clinical investigation to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the PQ Bypass System to access, deliver guidewires, and implant stent grafts for a percutaneous femoropopliteal (fem-pop) bypass.

Active39 enrollment criteria

Safety and Efficacy of the SurVeil™ Drug-Coated Balloon

Peripheral Arterial DiseasePeripheral Vascular Disease3 more

To demonstrate the safety and efficacy of the SurVeil Drug-Coated Balloon (DCB) for treatment of subjects with symptomatic peripheral artery disease (PAD) due to stenosis of the femoral and/or popliteal arteries.

Active46 enrollment criteria

Clinical Trial Investigating the BeGraft Peripheral Plus Stent Graft System for Iliac Lesion Treatment...

Peripheral Arterial Disease

The BeGraft Plus PMCF Trial investigates the efficacy of the BeGraft Peripheral Plus Stent Graft System in the treatment of iliac stenotic or occlusive lesions (TASC A, B, C and D). An expected total of 20 patients with TASC A and B lesions and an expected total of 50 patients with TASC C and D lesions will be treated. The lesion is located within the native Iliac arteries. Prior to stenting with the BeGraft Peripheral Plus Stent Graft System, pre-dilatation can be performed according to the physician's discretion. Also post-dilatation can be performed according to the physician's discretion. Patients will be invited for a follow-up visit at 1, 6, 12, 24 and 36- month post-procedure. The primary efficacy endpoint of the study is the primary patency at 12 months. The primary safety endpoint is the freedom of periprocedural Serious Adverse Events (SAEs). Secondary endpoint include primary patency rate at 1, 6, 24, and 36-month, stent graft occlusion rate at pre-discharge,1, 6, 24, and 36 month follow-up, anke-brachial index (ABI) at 1, 6, 12, 24 and 36-month follow-up, amputation rate at 1, 6, 12, 24 and 36-month follow-up, performance success rate, freedom from target lesion revascularization (TLR), technical success and clinical success at 1, 6, 12, 24 and 36-month follow-up. The extension in the Begraft Plus protocol is being made to evaluate the long-term safety and efficacy of the BeGraft Peripheral Plus Stent Graft.

Active63 enrollment criteria

A Trial to Evaluate the Safety and Efficacy of the Passeo-18 Lux Drug-coated Balloon of Biotronik...

Peripheral Arterial Disease

The BIOPACT RCT tiral investigates the efficacy and safety of stenosis, restenosis or occlusions in the femoropopliteal artery of patients presenting a rutherford classification 2,3 or 4 with a Passeo-18 Lux drug-coated balloon of Biotronik. The Paclitaxel eluting balloons are designed for percutaneous transluminal angioplasties in which the balloon will dilate the artery upon inflation and deliver the paclitaxel locally. An expected total of 151 patients will be treated with the Passeo-18 Lux and compared to a control group of another 151 patients that will be treated with the IN.PACT Admiral drug-coated balloon of Medtronic. Assignment to the treatment groups will be at random. The study will be conducted in two phases. A first pilot study phase of 120 patients distributed evenly over both treatment groups and a second phase to formally test the non-inferiority hypothesis. The balloon is coated with Paclitaxel intended to avoid cellular proliferation. The drug is released by means of rapid inflation as to release a high dose in a short amount of time. Patients will be invited for a follow-up visit at 1, 6 and 12 months post-procedure. The primary efficacy endpoints are defined as follows. Freedom from clinically-driven target lesion revascularization at 12 months. Freedom from device- and procedure-related death through 30 days post-index procedure, major target limb amputation through 12 months post-procedure and clinically-driven target vessel revascularization through 12 months post-index procedure. The secondary endpoints are defined as acute device success, acute procedural success , freedom from all cause of death, major target limb amputation and clinically driven target vessel revascularisation through 30 days post-procedure, sustained clinical improvement, no major adverse events through 6 and 12 months post-procedure, primary patency, target lesion revascularisation, target vessel revascularisation, binary restenosis, major target limb amputation, thrombosis at target lesion, change of walking impairment questionnaire score from baseline, change in target limb rutherford classification or ABI.

Active40 enrollment criteria

Structured Home-based Exercise Versus Walking Advice in Claudication Patients: a Randomized-controlled...

Peripheral Artery Disease

A recent position paper calls for effective home-based exercise program for patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD) and claudication to be implemented in real-world care. This randomized-controlled trial aims to test the effects on mobility, hemodynamics and cardiovascular outcomes of a structured home-based exercise program (SHB) compared to walking advice (WA) recommendation intended as usual care, in PAD patients. Male and females PAD patients at Leriche-Fontaine's stage II and aged more than 60 years old will be enrolled. Patients will be randomized in SHB or WA groups. Patients of SHB group will receive a prescription of a home-based walking program during serial testing sessions at the hospital. The program will include two 10-minute sessions/day (6 days/week) of intermittent walking (1-minute work and 1-minute rest while seated) at a prescribed speed converted into a walking cadence and followed at home using a metronome. Two follow-up visits (at weeks 8 and 16) will be performed to evaluate patient adherence and to update the exercise program by increasing the walking speed. Patients randomized in WA group will receive the advice to walk as suggested by the guidelines. In particular, patients will be recommended to gather almost 30 minutes of walking at least 3 times per week; when they will face claudication pain, they will be allowed to rest and restart walking as soon as possible. Outcome measures will be performed at the entry prior to randomization, at the end of exercise programs (6-month) and after 12-month follow up. Primary outcomes will be the pain-free walking distance and the 6-minute walking distance collected during the 6-minute walking test Secondary outcomes will include ankle-brachial index, quality of life, lower limb strength and long-term clinical outcomes including revascularization and mortality.

Active8 enrollment criteria
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