At #AHA22, the vascular community focused on the first report of the Best Endovascular vs. Best Surgical Therapy in Patients with Critical Limb Ischemia (BEST-CLI) trial. This NHLBI-sponsored trial persevered through the pandemic to enroll 1,830 patients with chronic limb-threatening ischemia (CLTI) and tested the hypothesis that bypass surgery would have superior amputation-free survival in patients whose anatomy permitted revascularization with either modality. The study had two cohorts, one in which participants could receive saphenous vein bypass grafts and the other in which participants received an alternative bypass conduit. The investigators reported that in the intention-to-treat population, those who received a vein bypass graft, rather than an endovascular intervention, had a significant reduction in the rate of major reinterventions (9.2 % vs. 23.3%) and amputation above the ankle (10.3% vs. 14.8%) but no difference in mortality (35% for the overall cohort) after 2.7 years of follow-up. In cohort 2, which compared alternative bypass conduit with endovascular approaches, no significant difference was noted in primary outcome of major adverse limb events or death from any cause, although the size of this cohort was much smaller (396 patients compared with more than 1,400 in cohort 1).