Safety and effectiveness of the Woven EndoBridge (WEB) system for the treatment of
wide necked bifurcation aneurysms : final 5 year results of the pivotal WEB Intra-saccular
Therapy study (WEB-IT)
The US Woven EndoBridge Intra-saccular Therapy (WEB-IT) study is a pivotal, prospective,
single arm, investigational device exemption study to evaluate the safety and effectiveness
of the WEB device for the treatment of wide neck bifurcation aneurysms (WNBAs). We
present complete 5 year data for the cohort of 150 patients.150 patients with WNBAs
were enrolled at 21 US and six international centers. Imaging from the index procedure,
6 month, 1 year, 3 year, and 5 year follow-up were reviewed by a core laboratory.
Adverse events were reviewed and adjudicated by a clinical events adjudicator.83 patients
had 5 year follow-up imaging and 123 had clinical follow-up. No ruptured (0/9) or
unruptured aneurysm (0/141) rebled or bled during follow-up. No new device or procedure
related adverse events or serious adverse events were reported after 1 year. At 5
years, using the LOCF method, complete occlusion was observed in 58.1% and adequate
occlusion in 87.2% of patients. For patients with both 1 year and 5 year occlusion
statuses available, 76.8% (63/82) of aneurysms remained stable or improved with no
retreatment. After 1 year, 18 aneurysms were retreated, 11 of which were adequately
occluded at 1 year, and 15 of which were retreated in the absence of any deterioration
in occlusion grade.Five year follow-up data from the WEB-IT study demonstrated that
the WEB device was safe and effective when used in the treatment of WNBAs. Aneurysm
occlusion rates achieved at 1 year follow-up were durable, with rates of progressive
thrombosis far exceeding rates of recurrence over time.