Comparison of one-year prognosis of patients classified as chronic critical lower limb ischaemia according to TASC II or European consensus definition in the COPART cohort

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TitreComparison of one-year prognosis of patients classified as chronic critical lower limb ischaemia according to TASC II or European consensus definition in the COPART cohort
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2015
AuteursVircoulon M, Boulon C, Desormais I, Lacroix P, Aboyans V, Bura-Riviere A, Cambou J-P, Becker F, Constans J
JournalVASA-EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF VASCULAR MEDICINE
Volume44
Pagination220-228
Date PublishedMAY
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN0301-1526
Mots-clésamputation, critical limb ischaemia, Definition, Peripheral occlusive arterial disease, prognosis
Résumé

{Background: We compared one-year amputation and survival rates in patients fulfilling 1991 European consensus critical limb ischaemia (CLI) definition to those classified as CLI by TASC II but not European consensus (EC) definition. Patients and methods: Patients were selected from the COPART cohort of hospitalized patients with peripheral occlusive arterial disease suffering from lower extremity rest pain or ulcer and who completed one-year follow-up. Ankle and toe systolic pressures and transcutaneous oxygen pressure were measured. The patients were classified into two groups: those who could benefit from revascularization and those who could not (medical group). Within these groups, patients were separated into those who had CLI according to the European consensus definition (EC + TASC II: group A if revascularization, group C if medical treatment) and those who had no CLI by the European definition but who had CLI according to the TASC II definition (TASC: group B if revascularization and D if medical treatment). Results: 471 patients were included in the study (236 in the surgical group, 235 in the medical group). There was no difference according to the CLI definition for survival or cardiovascular event-free survival. However, major amputations were more frequent in group A than in group B (25 vs 12%

DOI10.1024/0301-1526/a000432