Background: Little data guides revascularization of infrapopliteal peripheral arterial disease (PAD) in patients with claudication. We assessed outcomes after infrapopliteal-only intervention for claudication in the LIBERTY 360 observational study.
Methods: In this post hoc analysis, LIBERTY 360 patients (N = 128) with claudication and isolated infrapopliteal disease undergoing endovascular revascularization were divided by territory into anterior-vessel, posterior-vessel, or all-vessel groups. Patients were followed for periprocedural, in-hospital, and long-term outcomes. Logistic regression for odds ratios, Cox proportional hazard models, ANOVA, and Kaplan-Meier estimates were utilized to compare outcomes.
Results: Patients underwent anterior (N = 37), posterior (N = 76), or all-vessel (N = 15) infrapopliteal revascularization. Initial procedural success was 86%, 86%, and 69% for anterior, posterior, and all-vessel groups, respectively. Each group had improvements in Rutherford classification (RC) from baseline to 2 years (mean RC change: -1.3, -1.5, and -1.5, respectively). Compared with all-vessel intervention, both anterior and posterior groups had lower rate of major adverse events (MAE) and target vessel revascularization (TVR) at 3 years (MAE: 12% and 15% in anterior and posterior groups, respectively compared with 51% in the all-vessel group; hazard ratios and 95% CIs 0.22 [0.06-0.74], p = .015; 0.24 [0.09-0.64], p = .004). Other outcomes were similar among the three groups. The anterior group showed more improvement in pain subdomain and total VascuQoL scores compared with posterior and all-vessel groups at 2 years (p = .016, p = .020 and p = .068, p = .009, respectively).
Conclusions: Both anterior or posterior revascularization have favorable outcomes and may be beneficial for improvement of symptoms in claudicants with isolated infrapopliteal PAD.
Keywords: below-the-knee peripheral arterial disease; infrapopliteal peripheral arterial disease; peripheral arterial disease; tibial arterial disease; tibial-peroneal arterial disease.
© 2021 Wiley Periodicals LLC.