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Study
looks at off-label use of biliary stents
Newswise — Although approved by the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration as a palliative
treatment for cancer patients who have
developed bile-duct obstructions, biliary
stents are sometimes used “off-label” for
the treatment of peripheral vascular disease
(PVD).
A study in today’s issue of the American
Journal of Therapeutics finds that off-label
use of biliary stents is increasing, and
that the majority of adverse events and
device malfunctions associated with the use
of these stents occurs during off-label
usage.
“Our study found that more than 1 million
patients received biliary stents for
‘off-label’ treatments between 2003 and
2006,” explains cardiologist William Maisel,
MD, MPH, Director of the Medical Device
Safety Institute at Beth Israel Deaconess
Medical Center (BIDMC) and senior author of
the study.
“We also found that more than 80 percent of
the reported adverse events and device
malfunctions associated with these products
have occurred during ‘off-label’ use.”
The most common off-label use for biliary
stents is treatment of peripheral arterial
disease (PAD), which develops when leg
arteries become narrowed by cholesterol
plaques.
Patients who suffer from PAD can develop
pain, skin ulcers, reduced exercise
tolerance and even loss of limb.
The condition affects millions of patients
throughout the U.S. and is a significant
cause of morbidity and mortality.
“Clinical management of peripheral artery
disease can be challenging,” explains Maisel.
Although noninvasive treatment strategies
such as exercise training can help some
patients, for many others, pain and
discomfort persist. In an effort to unblock
the vessels, many physicians have turned to
stents, flexible tubular devices which can
keep the vessels propped open.
Because there is little data supporting the
clinical utility and safety of biliary
stents for treatment of vascular disorders,
Maisel and colleague Jonathan Bridges, MD,
of BIDMC’s Cardiovascular Institute decided
to take a closer look.
The authors determined that biliary stent
implants among PVD patients increased 21.4
percent, from 227,145 in 2003 to 275,795 in
2006; approximately 1 million biliary stents
were implanted off-label in the peripheral
vasculature in total.
Additionally, using the publicly available
MAUDE (Manufacturer and User Facility Device
Experience) database -- a compilation of
serious adverse events and malfunctions
associated with medical devices that have
been reported to the FDA -- the authors
reviewed all reports involving biliary
stents between 2003 and 2006.
During this time period, 1,036 confirmed
biliary-stent malfunctions were reported,
81.2 percent of which occurred during
off-label use. Malfunctions were most often
due to premature stent dislodgement,
premature deployment or failure of the
catheter/delivery system.
In addition, notes Maisel, 87.9 percent of
the 561 adverse events associated with
biliary stent use during the study period
occurred during off-label use, with retained
product, additional catheter procedures or
surgery being the most common adverse
events. Thirteen patient deaths were
reported during off-label use.
“Like the malfunctions, we found that many
more adverse events occurring during the use
of biliary stents in peripheral blood
vessels than when they were used in a
biliary or gastrointestinal location,” he
adds.
“Our analysis raises several important
issues,” says Maisel. “The frequent
off-label use of biliary stents for
treatment of peripheral vascular disease
implies an unmet clinical need in the
management of these patients. With the aging
of the U.S. population, the number of
patients with vascular disease can be
expected to grow. Efforts should be directed
at improving the evaluation of devices used
to treat peripheral vascular disease in
order to better identify those patients that
will most benefit from this promising
therapy.”
Maisel is an FDA consultant, immediate past
Chairman of the FDA Circulatory System
Medical Device Advisory Committee, and a
member of the Medicare Coverage Advisory
Committee.
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center is a
patient care, teaching and research
affiliate of Harvard Medical School and
consistently ranks among the top four in
National Institutes of Health funding among
independent hospitals nationwide.
BIDMC is clinically affiliated with the
Joslin Diabetes Center and is a research
partner of the Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer
Center. BIDMC is the official hospital of
the Boston Red Sox. For more information,
visit
http://www.bidmc.harvard.edu.
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