Study Stopped
required catheters not available
Paclitaxel for the Treatment of Distal Radial Artery Arteriovenous Access Fistula Stenosis (PaciFIST-2)
PaciFIST-2
The Use of Intravascular Paclitaxel for the Treatment of Distal Radial Artery Arteriovenous Access Fistula Stenosis: A Randomized Study (PaciFIST-2)
1 other identifier
interventional
N/A
1 country
1
Brief Summary
The objective of this study is to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the use of intravascular paclitaxel, in addition to standard therapy, for the treatment of arteriovenous dialysis access fistula stenosis. A fistulogram will be performed in standard fashion. The diagnostic component will include evaluation of the inflow artery, arterial anastomosis and full length of the fistula vein or graft, plus venous return up to the heart. The location, vessel size, lesion diameter and percent stenosis for each lesion will be recorded. Enrollment and randomization will occur at this point. All patients will then receive standard therapy for their stenosis. This will include intravenous heparin administered in a standard dose of 70 units/kg. Lesions that respond poorly to angioplasty (\>30% residual stenosis after angioplasty treatment with 2 inflations) will be stented. Stent selection will be based on clinical setting. Initial stent treatment will utilize an uncovered nitinol stent. Treatment of in-stent restenosis will include initial balloon angioplasty, and use of a covered stent (Viabahn, GORE, or Fluency, Bard). Documentation of location and type of treatment for each lesion treated will be recorded. Once standard treatment is completed, the operating surgeon will be informed of the results of randomization: treatment (paclitaxel) or control. For subjects assigned to treatment, the whole fistula vein outflow segment of the fistula will be treated with paclitaxel. The full length of the radial artery from 1 cm of its origin to fistula anatomosis will be treated with paclitaxel. In addition the anastomosis and first 4 cm of the fistula vein will be treated. Paclitaxel solution treatment of each lesion encountered will be attempted until the 20 mg Paclitaxel dose limit is met. The volume administered will depend on the diameter and length of the vessels treated. Maximization of the length of vessel and lesions treated will be undertaken when there are more lesions than can be accommodated by the 12 mg, 10 ml dose available. A 5 F sheath, 20 cm in length, will be used to administer the paclitaxel. This will be advanced from its distal position in the radial artery over the guidewire so that the tip of the sheath is in the proximal radial artery. Prior to removal of the sheath, a final angiographic study of all areas treated is performed to document patency and lesion appearance. Any additional lesions identified with this study are then treated appropriately following standard technique. For the control group, instead of paclitaxel administration, a sham treatment period of 10 minutes is allowed to elapse followed by the performance of the final completion angiogram. Any additional lesions identified with this study are then treated appropriately following standard technique. All patients will follow the same follow up evaluation schedule
Trial Health
Trial Health Score
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Started Mar 2014
1 active site
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Trial Relationships
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Study Timeline
Key milestones and dates
First Submitted
Initial submission to the registry
January 16, 2014
CompletedFirst Posted
Study publicly available on registry
January 20, 2014
CompletedStudy Start
First participant enrolled
March 1, 2014
CompletedPrimary Completion
Last participant's last visit for primary outcome
February 1, 2016
CompletedStudy Completion
Last participant's last visit for all outcomes
October 1, 2016
CompletedFebruary 2, 2015
January 1, 2015
1.9 years
January 16, 2014
January 30, 2015
Conditions
Outcome Measures
Primary Outcomes (2)
Target Lesion Revascularization.
Target lesion revascularization (TLR) is defined as the need for subsequent clinically driven repeat angioplasty, stent placement or other intervention to correct the recurrence of a stenosis at the site treated within 6 months of the initial treatment.
6 months
Target Segment Revascularization.
Target segment revascularization (TSR) is defined as the need for secondary clinically driven repeat angioplasty, stent placement or other intervention to correct the recurrence of a stenosis in the radial artery or peri-anastomotic segment of cephalic or basilica vein treated with paclitaxel.
6 months
Secondary Outcomes (7)
Safety
6 months
Binary Restenosis
6 months
Primary Patency: Fistula
6 months
Primary Assisted Patency: Fistula
6 months
Secondary Patency: Fistula
6 months
- +2 more secondary outcomes
Study Arms (2)
Standard Therapy Plus Paclitaxel
ACTIVE COMPARATORStandard Therapy - heparin, angioplasty, stent Paclitaxel - single intravascular dose up to 20 mg
Standard Therapy Alone
SHAM COMPARATORheparin, angioplasty, stent
Interventions
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if:
- Age 18 years or older
- Patient or guardian able to provide a signed informed consent
- Stenosis of the radial artery or initial 4 cm of the cephalic or basilic vein fistula with the anastomosis in the wrist greater than or equal to 50% treated satisfactorily (less than 20% residual stenosis) with balloon angioplasty alone or balloon angioplasty and stent placement
- Secondary fistulogram: the patient will have at least one prior fistulogram of the fistula to be treated.
- Either gender
You may not qualify if:
- Women who are pregnant or who are expected to or might become pregnant
- Women of child-bearing potential who do not use contraception
- Life expectancy less than 12 months
- Known allergy to paclitaxel
- Known allergy to contrast media not previously demonstrated to be controllable with premedication on a prior study using contrast
- Known allergy to the pre-medications (dexamethasone, famotidine, diphenhydramine)
- Pre-fistulogram thrombosis of the fistula
- Thrombectomy of the fistula within 14 days of the procedure
- Patient receiving chemotherapy
- Patients with an immunodeficiency disease or condition
- Documented hypercoagulable state
- WBC \< 2000/mm3
- Platelet count less than 100,000/mm3
- Chronic hepatitis or jaundice
- Simultaneous enrollment in another investigational device or drug study
Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.
Sponsors & Collaborators
Study Sites (1)
Englewood Hospital and Medical Center
Englewood, New Jersey, 07631, United States
MeSH Terms
Interventions
Intervention Hierarchy (Ancestors)
Study Officials
- PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
Kurt Wengerter, MD
Englewood Hospital and Medical Center
Study Design
- Study Type
- interventional
- Phase
- phase 2
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Masking
- DOUBLE
- Who Masked
- PARTICIPANT, OUTCOMES ASSESSOR
- Purpose
- TREATMENT
- Intervention Model
- PARALLEL
- Sponsor Type
- OTHER
- Responsible Party
- SPONSOR
Study Record Dates
First Submitted
January 16, 2014
First Posted
January 20, 2014
Study Start
March 1, 2014
Primary Completion
February 1, 2016
Study Completion
October 1, 2016
Last Updated
February 2, 2015
Record last verified: 2015-01