Safety and effectiveness of the INVATEC MO.MA® proximal cerebral protection device during carotid artery stenting: Results from the ARMOUR pivotal trial

Objective: The multicenter ARMOUR (ProximAl PRotection with the MO.MA Device DUring CaRotid Stenting) trial evaluated the 30‐day safety and effectiveness of the MO.MA® Proximal Cerebral Protection Device (Invatec, Roncadelle, Italy) utilized to treat high surgical risk patients undergoing carotid ar...

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Published inCatheterization and cardiovascular interventions Vol. 76; no. 1; pp. 1 - 8
Main Authors Ansel, Gary M., Hopkins, L. Nelson, Jaff, Michael R., Rubino, Paolo, Bacharach, J. Michael, Scheinert, Dierk, Myla, Subbarao, Das, Tony, Cremonesi, Alberto
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Hoboken Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company 01.07.2010
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ISSN1522-1946
1522-726X
1522-726X
DOI10.1002/ccd.22439

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Summary:Objective: The multicenter ARMOUR (ProximAl PRotection with the MO.MA Device DUring CaRotid Stenting) trial evaluated the 30‐day safety and effectiveness of the MO.MA® Proximal Cerebral Protection Device (Invatec, Roncadelle, Italy) utilized to treat high surgical risk patients undergoing carotid artery stenting (CAS). Background: Distal embolic protection devices (EPD) have been traditionally utilized during CAS. The MO.MA device acts as a balloon occlusion “endovascular clamping” system to achieve cerebral protection prior to crossing the carotid stenosis. Methods: This prospective registry enrolled 262 subjects, 37 roll‐in and 225 pivotal subjects evaluated with intention to treat (ITT) from September 2007 to February 2009. Subjects underwent CAS using the MO.MA device. The primary endpoint, myocardial infarction, stroke, or death through 30 days (30‐day major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events [MACCE]) was compared to a performance goal of 13% derived from trials utilizing distal EPD. Results: For the ITT population, the mean age was 74.7 years with 66.7% of the cohort being male. Symptomatic patients comprised 15.1% and 28.9% were octogenarians. Device success was 98.2% and procedural success was 93.2%. The 30‐day MACCE rate was 2.7% [95% CI (1.0–5.8%)] with a 30‐day major stroke rate of 0.9%. No symptomatic patient suffered a stroke during this trial. Conclusions: The ARMOUR trial demonstrated that the MO.MA® Proximal Cerebral Protection Device is safe and effective for high surgical risk patients undergoing CAS. The absence of stroke in symptomatic patients is the lowest rate reported in any independently adjudicated prospective multicenter registry trial to date. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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ArticleID:CCD22439
Conflict of interest: Dr. Ansel has received speaker's bureau fees and research support from Abbott/Guidant Vascular and WL Gore, and research support from Boston Scientific, Cordis Johnson & Johnson, and Invatec; he also sits on the Boston Scientific, Cordis Johnson & Johnson, Lumen Biomedical, and WL Gore advisory boards. Dr. Hopkins has received research support from Boston Scientific, Cordis Johnson & Johnson, ev3, and Toshiba, and speaker's bureau fees and research support from Abbott; he sits on the Abbott, AccessClosure, Bard, Boston Scientific, Cordis Johnson & Johnson, Gore, Lumen Biomedical, Micrus, and Toshiba advisory boards, and claims ownership/financial Interest in AccessClosure, Boston Scientific, and Micrus. Dr. Jaff is a non-compensated consultant for Abbott, Boston Scientific, Medtronic Vascular, and sits on the VIVA Physicians, Inc. board. Drs. Rubino, Bacharach, and Myla claim no conflicts of interest. Drs. Scheinert and Das are compensated consultants for Invatec. Dr. Cremonesi has received research grants and consulting and teaching fees from Abbott, Bard, Boston Scientific, Cordis, ev3, Gore, Invatec, and Medtronic.
Conflict of interest: Dr. Ansel has received speaker's bureau fees and research support from Abbott/Guidant Vascular and WL Gore, and research support from Boston Scientific, Cordis Johnson & Johnson, and Invatec; he also sits on the Boston Scientific, Cordis Johnson & Johnson, Lumen Biomedical, and WL Gore advisory boards. Dr. Hopkins has received research support from Boston Scientific, Cordis Johnson & Johnson, ev3, and Toshiba, and speaker's bureau fees and research support from Abbott; he sits on the Abbott, AccessClosure, Bard, Boston Scientific, Cordis Johnson & Johnson, Gore, Lumen Biomedical, Micrus, and Toshiba advisory boards, and claims ownership/financial Interest in AccessClosure, Boston Scientific, and Micrus. Dr. Jaff is a non‐compensated consultant for Abbott, Boston Scientific, Medtronic Vascular, and sits on the VIVA Physicians, Inc. board. Drs. Rubino, Bacharach, and Myla claim no conflicts of interest. Drs. Scheinert and Das are compensated consultants for Invatec. Dr. Cremonesi has received research grants and consulting and teaching fees from Abbott, Bard, Boston Scientific, Cordis, ev3, Gore, Invatec, and Medtronic.
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ISSN:1522-1946
1522-726X
1522-726X
DOI:10.1002/ccd.22439