TY - JOUR
T1 - Endovascular abdominal aortic aneurysm treatment with the excluder stent graft in the interventional cardiology suite in moderate to high-risk patients
AU - Bartorelli, AL
AU - Spirito, R
AU - Trabattoni, D
AU - Trabattoni, P
AU - Fabbiocchi, F
AU - Donati, Tommaso
AU - Lualdi, A
AU - Montorsi, P
AU - Ballerini, G
PY - 2003
Y1 - 2003
N2 - Background: Endovascular abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) exclusion with stent graft implantation has been shown to be feasible and safe in selected patients (pts). Current data suggest that the pts most likely to benefit from this procedure are those at increased risk for surgical repair. We report our initial experience of AAA endovascular treatment using the Excluder stent graft in the interventional cardiology suite in a moderate- to high-risk pt group.
Methods: The study included 32 pts (100% men; mean age 71.1
10.5 years, range 54–92) who underwent Excluder stent graft implantation (Gore & Associates, Sunnyvale, CA) to treat infrarenal AAA. Of these, 27 (84%) pts presented with a II–III American Society of Anesthesiologists risk score due to age and pulmonary or cardiac
comorbidity and were considered at moderate to high risk. Tortuous
iliac anatomy was present in 10 pts (31%). The first 7 procedures were
performed with epidural anesthesia, and the next 25 interventions with
local anesthesia only. Access for the 18-Fr bifurcated main segment
was via surgical exposure of the femoral artery, whereas that for the
12-Fr iliac limb device was obtained percutaneously. A clinical and
imaging (contrast computed tomography [CT] scan, delayed images
and 3-dimensional reconstruction) follow-up protocol was performed
in all pts.
Results: The mean interventional time was 128 +/- 24 minutes with
a total fluoro time of 15 +/- 5.5 minutes. The procedural success was
100%. Final angiography showed effective AAA exclusion in all pts.
No acute conversion to surgical repair was needed for any pt. The only
vascular complication was a femoral artery pseudoaneurysm at the
percutaneous access site requiring surgical repair. No in-hospital or
1-month procedure-related mortality was observed. One pt developed
acute renal failure but recovered completely in few days. Currently, 1-
and 3-month clinical and imaging follow-up is available for 31 and 30
pts, respectively; 6-month follow-up is available for 25 pts and 1-year
follow-up for 22 pts. Type II endoleaks were detected at 1-month CT
scan in 3 (9%) pts. One endoleak disappeared at 3-month follow-up.
Persistent type II endoleaks were observed in the remaining 2 (6%) pts
at 6-month and 1-year follow-up. In one of them, a secondary procedure for endoleak repair was needed because of aneurysmal sack enlargement. Overall, the baseline mean aneurysm diameter (49.7 +/- 8 mm, range 30–68 mm) decreased to 45.5 +/- 9.5 mm and 43 +/- 9.7 mm (p = 0.03) at 6- and 12-month CT scan follow-up, respectively.
Conclusions: Endovascular exclusion of infrarenal AAA with the
Excluder stent graft can be safely and successfully performed in an
interventional cardiology suite in moderate- to high-risk patients.
Longer follow-up will determine the long-term outcome of AAA
endovascular treatment with this device.
AB - Background: Endovascular abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) exclusion with stent graft implantation has been shown to be feasible and safe in selected patients (pts). Current data suggest that the pts most likely to benefit from this procedure are those at increased risk for surgical repair. We report our initial experience of AAA endovascular treatment using the Excluder stent graft in the interventional cardiology suite in a moderate- to high-risk pt group.
Methods: The study included 32 pts (100% men; mean age 71.1
10.5 years, range 54–92) who underwent Excluder stent graft implantation (Gore & Associates, Sunnyvale, CA) to treat infrarenal AAA. Of these, 27 (84%) pts presented with a II–III American Society of Anesthesiologists risk score due to age and pulmonary or cardiac
comorbidity and were considered at moderate to high risk. Tortuous
iliac anatomy was present in 10 pts (31%). The first 7 procedures were
performed with epidural anesthesia, and the next 25 interventions with
local anesthesia only. Access for the 18-Fr bifurcated main segment
was via surgical exposure of the femoral artery, whereas that for the
12-Fr iliac limb device was obtained percutaneously. A clinical and
imaging (contrast computed tomography [CT] scan, delayed images
and 3-dimensional reconstruction) follow-up protocol was performed
in all pts.
Results: The mean interventional time was 128 +/- 24 minutes with
a total fluoro time of 15 +/- 5.5 minutes. The procedural success was
100%. Final angiography showed effective AAA exclusion in all pts.
No acute conversion to surgical repair was needed for any pt. The only
vascular complication was a femoral artery pseudoaneurysm at the
percutaneous access site requiring surgical repair. No in-hospital or
1-month procedure-related mortality was observed. One pt developed
acute renal failure but recovered completely in few days. Currently, 1-
and 3-month clinical and imaging follow-up is available for 31 and 30
pts, respectively; 6-month follow-up is available for 25 pts and 1-year
follow-up for 22 pts. Type II endoleaks were detected at 1-month CT
scan in 3 (9%) pts. One endoleak disappeared at 3-month follow-up.
Persistent type II endoleaks were observed in the remaining 2 (6%) pts
at 6-month and 1-year follow-up. In one of them, a secondary procedure for endoleak repair was needed because of aneurysmal sack enlargement. Overall, the baseline mean aneurysm diameter (49.7 +/- 8 mm, range 30–68 mm) decreased to 45.5 +/- 9.5 mm and 43 +/- 9.7 mm (p = 0.03) at 6- and 12-month CT scan follow-up, respectively.
Conclusions: Endovascular exclusion of infrarenal AAA with the
Excluder stent graft can be safely and successfully performed in an
interventional cardiology suite in moderate- to high-risk patients.
Longer follow-up will determine the long-term outcome of AAA
endovascular treatment with this device.
KW - abdominal aortic aneurysm, endovascular repair, stentgraft, endoluminal repair of abdominal aortic aneurysms
KW - abdominal aortic aneurysm, endovascular repair, stentgraft, endoluminal repair of abdominal aortic aneurysms
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/259967
M3 - Meeting Abstract
SN - 0002-9149
SP - 84
EP - 84
JO - THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY
JF - THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY
ER -