Purpose: To examine the outcomes of all first-line strategies for
the treatment of critical limb ischemia (CLI), identify factors that influenced
the treatment choice, and determine the risk of amputation or death after each
treatment. Methods: CRITISCH (ClinicalTrials.gov
identifier NCT01877252) is a multicenter, national, prospective registry
evaluating all available treatment strategies applied in 1200 consecutive CLI
patients in 27 vascular centers in Germany. The recruitment started in January
2013 and was completed in September 2014. Treatment options were endovascular
revascularization (642, 53.5%), bypass surgery (284, 23.7%), femoral artery
patchplasty (126, 10.5%) with or without concomitant peripheral intervention,
conservative treatment (118, 9.8%), and primary major amputation (30, 2.5%). The
primary endpoint of this study was amputation-free survival (AFS). The Society
of Vascular Surgery’s suggested objective performance goal (OPG) for AFS (71%)
was used as the effectiveness criterion. Multivariable regression methods were
employed to identify variables that influenced the treatment selection and AFS
after each treatment; results are presented as the hazard ratio (HR) and 95%
confidence interval (CI). Results: The 12-month AFS estimates
following endovascular therapy, bypass grafting, femoral patchplasty, and
conservative treatment were 75%, 72%, 73%, and 72%, respectively. Factors
influencing treatment choice were age, chronic kidney disease (CKD), diabetes,
smoking, prior vascular procedures in the index leg, TransAtlantic Inter-Society
Consensus II C/D lesions, and absence of runoff vessels. Cox regression analysis
identified CKD (HR 2.07, 95% CI 1.26 to 3.41, p=0.004), the use of a prosthetic
bypass conduit (HR 1.97, 95% CI 1.23 to 3.14, p=0.004), and previous vascular
intervention in the index limb (HR 1.52, 95% CI 0.94 to 2.43, p=0.085) as
independent risk factors for diminished AFS after bypass surgery. CKD (HR 1.47,
95% CI 1.09 to 1.99, p=0.012) and Rutherford category 6 (HR 1.81, 95% CI 1.30 to
2.52, p<0.001) compromised the performance of endovascular revascularization.
Conclusion: CRITISCH registry data revealed that all first-line
treatment strategies selected and indicated by the treating physicians met the
suggested OPGs. CKD was an important determinant of patient prognosis after
treatment regardless of the revascularization method.
Supplementary Material
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