Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Circ Cardiovasc Interv
Abstract
Acute iliofemoral deep vein thrombosis and chronic iliofemoral venous obstruction cause substantial patient harm and are increasingly managed with endovascular venous interventions, including percutaneous mechanical thrombectomy and stent placement. However, studies of these treatment elements have not been designed and reported with sufficient rigor to support confident conclusions about their clinical utility. In this project, the Trustworthy consensus-based statement approach was utilized to develop, via a structured process, consensus-based statements to guide future investigators of venous interventions. Thirty statements were drafted to encompass major topics relevant to venous study description and design, safety outcome assessment, efficacy outcome assessment, and topics specific to evaluating percutaneous venous thrombectomy and stent placement. Using modified Delphi techniques for consensus achievement, a panel of physician experts in vascular disease voted on the statements and succeeded in reaching the predefined threshold of >80% consensus (agreement or strong agreement) on all 30 statements. It is hoped that the guidance from these statements will improve standardization, objectivity, and patient-centered relevance in the reporting of clinical outcomes of endovascular interventions for acute iliofemoral deep venous thrombosis and chronic iliofemoral venous obstruction in clinical studies and thereby enhance venous patient care.
First Page
012894
Last Page
012894
DOI
10.1161/CIRCINTERVENTIONS.123.012894
Publication Date
7-1-2023
Recommended Citation
Vedantham, Suresh; Gloviczki, Peter; Carman, Teresa L; Zelman Lewis, Sandra; Schneider, Peter A; Sabri, Saher S; and Kolluri, Raghu, "Delphi Consensus on Reporting Standards in Clinical Studies for Endovascular Treatment of Acute Iliofemoral Venous Thrombosis and Chronic Iliofemoral Venous Obstruction." (2023). Heart and Vascular Articles. 19.
https://scholarlyworks.ohiohealth.com/heart-vascular-articles/19