# FEMOSEAL CLOSE: multi-centre observational study with FemoSeal™ vascular closure device following peripheral percutaneous endovascular procedures

**Authors:** Yann Gouëffic, Koen Deloose, Maxime Dubosq, Thomas Zeller

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s42155-025-00522-5 · 2025-02-22

## TL;DR

This study evaluated the FemoSeal™ device for stopping bleeding after peripheral vascular procedures and found it to be safe and effective in most patients.

## Contribution

The study provides real-world evidence of the FemoSeal™ device's safety and effectiveness in routine clinical practice.

## Key findings

- The primary composite endpoint of safety and effectiveness was achieved in 95.1% of patients.
- The device achieved rapid haemostasis with a median time of 0.42 minutes.
- Low rates of access-site complications were observed up to 30 days post-procedure.

## Abstract

The purpose of the FEMOSEAL CLOSE study was to assess the safety and effectiveness of FemoSeal™ vascular closure device in achieving haemostasis following transfemoral peripheral procedures in routine clinical practice.

This prospective, European, multi-centre, single-arm, post-market clinical follow-up study enrolled patients undergoing diagnostic or interventional peripheral endovascular procedures with FemoSeal™ vascular closure device in inpatient or outpatient settings. The primary endpoint was a composite of safety and effectiveness, with effectiveness defined as cessation of arterial bleeding without adjunctive treatment, and safety as freedom from major vascular complications in the first 6 h. Secondary endpoints included: minor access-site complications and major complications 6 h to 30 days post-procedure, and time to haemostasis, ambulation and discharge. Quality of life was assessed at baseline, discharge and 30-day follow-up. Device usability was also surveyed.

Between December 2021 and July 2022, 230 patients were enrolled in three European centres. The primary composite endpoint was achieved in 95.1% (215/226) [95% confidence interval: 91.46–97.55] of patients. The effectiveness component was achieved in 96.9% (219/226) [95% confidence interval: 93.70–98.70], and the safety component in 95.2% (220/230) [95% confidence interval: 92.15–97.90] of patients. FemoSeal™ vascular closure device deployment failure occurred in 1.6% (4/230) of cases, with subsequent manual compression achieving haemostasis. The median time to haemostasis was 0.42 min.

The study device provides effective haemostasis and low rates of access-site complications up to 30 days post-procedure for patients undergoing peripheral endovascular interventions. It demonstrates good performance with rapid haemostasis.

The study is registered at clinicaltrials.gov. (ClinicalTrials identifier: NCT05027698).

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s42155-025-00522-5.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** vascular complications (MESH:D003925), bleeding (MESH:D006470), haemostasis (MESH:D020141)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11846783/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11846783