Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
The objective of this Early Feasibility Study (EFS) is to evaluate the initial safety and preliminary effectiveness of the PerQseal®+ VCD in a small number of subjects when used to achieve hemostasis of common femoral arteriotomies created by 14 to 22 F sheaths (arteriotomy up to 26 F) in subjects undergoing Percutaneous Transcatheter procedures.
This study is a prospective, multi-center, single arm EFS. Patients undergoing a percutaneous trancatheter procedure, requiring an arteriotomy created by 14 - 22 F sheaths (arteriotomies up to approx. 26 F), via the common femoral artery will be screened against the study inclusion/exclusion criteria. If the patient meets study eligibility requirements, they shall be invited to participate, provide informed consent, and shall subsequently be assigned a study ID number. Enrollment will occur at the point where the PerQseal®+ VCD study device first enters the patient's body.
The planned enrollment is 15 treated patients at a maximum of 5 study sites (minimum of 3) located in the United States.
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Subjects that receive PerQseal Plus Device | Experimental | Subjects undergoing large hole endovascular percutaneous procedures with a femoral arteriotomy created with 14 to 22 F sheaths (arteriotomy up to 26 F) |
|
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PerQseal Plus Device | Device | Percutaneous closure of femoral artery access site created by 14 to 22 F sheaths (up to 26 F arteriotomy) in patients undergoing Percutaneous Transcatheter procedures. |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Safety: Major Access Site Complications | The primary safety endpoint is the rate of major access site complications attributable to the PerQseal® device. As per FDA definitions for Major access site complications. | though 30 days |
| Efficacy: Time to Haemostasis | Elapsed time in minutes from PerQseal® Introducer sheath removal to first observed cessation of common femoral artery (CFA) bleeding (excluding cutaneous or subcutaneous oozing, and in the absence of a developing hematoma). | 20 minutes |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Safety: Incidence of Minor Access Site Complications | Incidence and severity of minor access site complications attributable to the PerQseal® device, adapted from FDA-provided definitions. | through 30 days |
| Efficacy: PerQseal® Device Technical Success Rate |
Not provided
Inclusion Criteria:
1. Age ≥ 19 years, 2. Clinically indicated for a large bore interventional transcatheter procedure, e.g., transcatheter aortic valve repair (TAVR) or endovascular abdominal aortic aneurysm repair (EVAR), or thoracic endovascular aneurysm repair (TEVAR) using a percutaneous common femoral arteriotomy created by a 14 to 22 F sheath, 3. Subject is willing and able to provide appropriate study-specific informed consent, follow protocol procedures, and comply with follow-up visit requirements, 4. Females who are not pregnant or lactating and not planning to become pregnant for the duration of the study.
-
Exclusion Criteria:
Baseline Exclusion Criteria 1. Evidence of systemic bacterial or cutaneous infection, including groin infection Baseline Exclusion Criteria
Procedural Exclusion Criteria If any Procedural Exclusion Criteria listed below, then closure with PerQseal®+ device is not permitted.
Initial common femoral arterial access achieved with manual palpation or blind arterial stick access, without use of an image guided approach (ultrasound or angiography).
Difficult dilation during initial target femoral artery access (e.g., that damages or kinks sheath dilators) while step-dilating up to the large-bore device,
During arterial puncture, the target femoral artery suspected to have experienced a back arterial wall needle puncture or underwent > one needle puncture during the primary procedure.
Subject has a tissue tract (i.e., estimated distance from skin entry point to arterial anterior surface at arteriotomy) expected to be greater than 8 cm,
Significant blood loss requiring transfusion of blood products during primary procedure or within 30 days prior to index procedure,
Activated clotting time (ACT) > 300 seconds immediately prior to sheath removal or if ACT measurements are expected to be > 300 seconds for more than 24 hours after index procedure,
Target puncture site is in a vascular graft,
Target arteriotomy greater than 26 F,
Target arteriotomy in the profunda femoris or superficial femoral artery or is in common femoral artery, but within 15 mm proximal of the bifurcation of the superficial femoral/ profunda femoris artery,
Target arteriotomy located at the level or above the inferior epigastric artery and/or beneath or above the inguinal ligament based on bony landmarks (above femoral head on A-P projection),
Subjects with an acute hematoma > 4 cm diameter, arteriovenous fistula, pseudoaneurysm, or intraluminal thrombosis at the target access site identified intra-procedurally,
Evidence of bleeding around the primary procedure sheath (BARC type 2 or higher),
Intra-procedural angiographic evidence of arterial laceration, dissection or stenosis within the femoral artery that would preclude use of the PerQseal®+ device,
Uncontrolled hypertension (systolic blood pressure > 180 mmHg or diastolic blood pressure > 110 mmHg) at the time of planned vascular closure,
Systolic blood pressure < 90 mmHg at the time of planned vascular closure.
-
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Valley Hospital | Ridgewood | New Jersey | 07450 | United States | ||
| Weill Cornell Medicine |
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D065506 | Vascular Closure Devices |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D053831 | Surgical Fixation Devices |
| D013523 | Surgical Equipment |
| D004864 | Equipment and Supplies |
Not provided
Not provided
Early Feasibility Study
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
|
PerQseal® Device Technical Success Rate, defined as the number of PerQseal® devices that are deployed and achieve hemostasis (i.e., cessation of bleeding (excluding cutaneous or subcutaneous oozing)) without need for firm, adjunctive manual compression for greater than 10 minutes or alternative treatment (other than adjunctive endovascular ballooning) at target access site, divided by the total number of PerQseal® devices where deployment was attempted. |
| 10 minutes |
| Efficacy: PerQseal® Treatment Success Rate | PerQseal® Treatment Success Rate, defined as the number of subjects who meet PerQseal® Device Technical Success without experiencing a Major Access Site Complication, divided by the total number of subjects where PerQseal® device deployment was attempted. | through 30 days |
| Efficacy: Time to Device Deployment | Time to Device Deployment, defined as the time from insertion of the PerQseal® device into the PerQseal Introducer sheath to complete removal of the PerQseal® device delivery system and PerQseal® Introducer sheath from the subject following PerQseal® deployment. | 20 minutes |
| Efficacy: Time to Ambulation | Time to Ambulation is defined as: the elapsed time from PerQseal® + removal until the subject can walk 20 feet without re-bleeding at the target access site. This endpoint will be evaluated only for subjects who are ambulatory at the point of enrollment. | through 5 day |
| Efficacy: Total Closure Time | Total Closure Time is defined as: Time to Hemostasis (TTH) plus Time to Device Deployment | 40 minutes |
| New York |
| New York |
| 10021 |
| United States |
| Stony Brook University Hospital | Stony Brook | New York | 11794 | United States |
| Montefiore Hospital | The Bronx | New York | 10467 | United States |
| Lankenau Heart Institute | Wynnewood | Pennsylvania | 10032 | United States |