One-year results for Japanese patients in RANGER II SFA.

2021 
The RANGER II SFA objective was to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the Ranger Drug-Coated Balloon (DCB) for treating superficial femoral artery and/or proximal popliteal artery lesions; the purpose of this cohort analysis is to assess the results among Japanese study participants. Patients eligible for RANGER II SFA had symptomatic lower limb ischemia (Rutherford classification 2–4) and were randomly assigned (3:1) to treatment with the Ranger DCB or standard percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA). At 12 months, assessments included freedom from major adverse events (i.e., target lesion revascularization, major amputations, or death within 1 month of the index procedure) and core laboratory-assessed primary patency. Japanese patients (n = 102) comprised 27.1% of the overall study sample. Mean lesion lengths were 79.5 ± 44.0 mm and 84.0 ± 56.8 mm among Japanese patients treated with Ranger DCB (n = 77) or PTA (n = 25), respectively. All major adverse events were clinically driven TLRs (6.6% [5/76] for Ranger DCB and 16.0% [4/25] for PTA; p = 0.2194). Kaplan–Meier estimates of primary patency were 89.3% and 72.0%, respectively, at 12 months (log-rank p = 0.2134). Japanese patients treated with Ranger DCB maintained a high patency rate through 12 months and a low re-intervention rate. Trial registration clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT03064126.
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