N/A
N=70
Belgian Trial Investigating the LifeStream Stent in Complex TASC C and D Iliac Lesions
Peripheral Arterial Disease
Bottom Line
View on ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03349996 ↗Enrolled (actual)
70
Serious AEs
54.3%
Results posted
Feb 2026
Primary outcome: Primary: Primary Patency Rate Before Completion of the 12-month Follow-up Period. — 3 participants
Study Design & Population
- Study type
- Interventional
- Phase
- N/A
- Interventions
- LifeStream Peripheral Stent Graft System (Device)
- Age
- Adult, Older Adult · 18+ yrs
- Sex
- All
- Sponsor
- ID3 Medical
- Primary completion
- Oct 2020
Outcome Measures
| Outcome | Result | p-value |
|---|---|---|
| PRIMARY Primary Patency Rate Before Completion of the 12-month Follow-up Period. |
3 | — |
| PRIMARY Number of Periprocedural Serious Adverse Events (SAEs) |
4 | — |
| SECONDARY Primary Patency at 1 ,6 ,24 ,36 ,48 and 60- Months Post Procedure |
0; 1; 4; 4; 4; 7 | — |
| SECONDARY Stent Graft Occlusion Rate |
0; 1; 2; 2; 2; 2 | — |
| SECONDARY Ankle-Brachial Index (ABI) |
56; 2; 4; 50; 1; 0 | — |
| SECONDARY Amputation Rate |
— | — |
| SECONDARY Number of Participants With Technical Success |
70 | — |
| SECONDARY Clinical Success |
67; 2; 0; 62; 0; 0 | — |
Summary
The BELSTREAM Trial investigates the efficacy of the LifeStream Peripheral Stent Graft System in the treatment of iliac stenotic or occlusive lesions (TASC C and D). An expected total of 70 patients will be treated. The lesion is located within the native Iliac arteries. Prior to stenting with the LifeStream Peripheral Stent Graft System, pre-dilatation can be performed according to the physician's discretion. Also post-dilatation can be performed according to the physician's discretion. Patients will be invited for a follow-up visit at 1, 6, 12, 24 ,36 ,48 and 60-month post-procedure. .The primary efficacy endpoint of the study is the primary patency at 12 months. The primary safety endpoint is the freedom of periprocedural Serious Adverse Events (SAEs). Secondary endpoint include primary patency rate at 1 ,6 ,24 ,36 ,48 and 60 month, stent graft occlusion rate at pre-discharge, 1 ,6 ,12 ,24 ,36 ,48 and 60-month follow-up, anke-brachial index (ABI) at 1 ,6 ,12 ,24 ,36 ,48 and 60-month follow-up, amputation rate at 1 ,6 ,12 ,24 ,36 ,48 and 60-month follow-up, technical success and clinical success at 1 ,6 ,12 ,24 ,36 ,48 and 60-month follow-up.
Eligibility Criteria
General inclusion criteria:
- Corresponding to the CE-mark indications/contra-indications and according to the current medical guidelines for minimally invasive peripheral interventions.
- Patient presenting with a stenotic or occlusive lesion at the iliac arteries suitable for stenting (on indication for primary stenting, based on the discretion of the investigator)
- Patient presenting a score from 2 to 4 following Rutherford classification
- Patient is willing to comply with specified follow-up evaluations at the specified times for the duration of the study
- Patient is >18 years old
- Patient (or their legal representative) understands the nature of the procedure and provides written informed consent, prior to enrolment in the study
- Patient is eligible for treatment with the Lifestream Peripheral Stent Graft System (Bard)
Angiographic inclusion criteria
- The target lesion is either a modified TASC-II class C or D lesion with one of the listed specifications:
- Type C lesions
- Bilateral Common Iliac Artery occlusions
- Bilateral External Iliac Artery stenoses 3-10 cm long not extending into the Common Femoral Artery
- Type D lesions
- Unilateral occlusions of both Common Iliac and External Iliac Artery
- Diffuse disease involving the aorta bifurcation
- Bilateral occlusions of External Iliac Artery
- The target lesion has angiographic evidence of stenosis or restenosis post percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) > 50% or occlusion which can be passed with standard guidewire manipulation
- There is angiographic evidence of a patent Common and Deep Femoral Artery
Exclusion criteria
- PTA is technically not possible (not feasible to access the lesion or a defect with the guidewire or balloon catheter)
- Presence of an aneurysm immediately adjacent to the site of stent graft implantation
- Lesions in or adjacent to essential collaterals(s)
- Lesions in locations subject to external compression
- Heavily calcified lesions resistant to PTA
- Patients with diffuse distal disease resulting in poor stent graft outflow
- Patients with a history of coagulation disorders
- Patients with aspirin allergy or bleeding complications and patients unable or unwilling to tolerate anticoagulant/antiplatelet therapy and/or non-responders to anticoagulant/antiplatelet therapy
- Fresh thrombus formation
- Patients with known hypersensitivity to the stent material (L605) and or polytetrafluroethylene (PTFE)
- The target lesion is either a modified TASC-II class C or D lesion with aortic or common femoral lesion involvement:
- Type C lesions
- Unilateral External Iliac Artery stenosis extending into the Common Femoral Artery
- Unilateral External Iliac Artery occlusion that involves the origins of the Internal Iliac and/or Common Femoral Artery
- Heavily calcified unilateral External Iliac Artery occlusion with involvement of the Common Femoral Artery
- Type D lesions
- Infra-renal aortoiliac occlusion
- Iliac stenoses in patients with an Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm (AAA) requiring treatment and not amenable to endograft placement or other lesions requiring open aortic or iliac surgery
- Diffuse multiple stenoses involving the unilateral Common Iliac, External Iliac and Common Femoral Artery
- Previously implanted stent(s) at the same lesion site
- Reference segment diameter is not suitable for the available stent graft design
- Untreatable lesion located at the distal outflow arteries
- Use of alternative therapy (e.g. atherectomy, cutting balloon, drug coated balloon (DCB), laser, radiation therapy) as part of the index procedure
- Patients refusing treatment
- Patients for whom antiplatelet therapy, anticoagulants or thrombolytic drugs are contraindicated
- Perforation at the angioplasty site evidenced by extravasation of contrast medium
- Patients with a history of prior life-threatening contrast medium reaction
- Patients with uncorrected bleeding disorders
- Female patient with child bearing potential not taking adequate co
Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03349996). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication.