Терапевтический архив (Sep 2017)
Quality of life in patients with lower extremity atherosclerosis during standard treatment and therapeutic angiogenesis
Abstract
Aim. To compare the impact of standard conservative treatment (SCT) and its combination with therapeutic angiogenesis for 3 to 5 years on quality of life in patients with Stage II (according to the classification developed by A.V. Pokrovsky-Fontaine) lower extremity atherosclerosis. Subjects and methods. 92 patients (69 men and 23 women) (mean age 65.2±7.7 years) were examined and divided into 2 groups of 46 people each. Only SCT (statins at an individually adjusted dose, antiaggregants, and graded exercise walking 3 to 5 km daily were used in Group 1; while Group 2 received SCT in combination with double injection of a plasmid-based VEGF165 gene drug (1.2 mg) into the ischemic limb muscles. The Russian version of the standard SF-36 questionnaire was applied; pain-free walking distances were measured before treatment and then every year; limb preservation and survival rates were determined in the patients. Results. It was determined that standard treatment did not significantly affect patients’ quality of life throughout the follow-up period. Addition of gene therapy leads to a significant improvement in both physical (p=0.00001) and psychological (p=0.00002) health components just in the first year of the follow-up. This is achieved through a significant (500%) increase in the average leg pain-free walking distance; p=0.007). Conclusion. The obtained result is consistently high throughout the subsequent period. There was no statistically significant difference in survival rates between the groups; limb preservation remained comparable.
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