Standard "off-the-shelf" multibranched thoracoabdominal endograft in urgent and elective patients with single and staged procedures in a multicenter experience
- Creators
- Silingardi R.
- Gennai S.
- Leone N.
- Gargiulo M.
- Faggioli G.
- Cao P.
- Verzini F.
- Ippoliti A.
- Tusini N.
- Ricci C.
- Antonello M.
- Chiesa R.
- Marone E. M.
- Mangialardi N.
- Speziale F.
- Veraldi G. F.
- Bonardelli S.
- Marcheselli L.
- Lonardi R.
- Saitta G.
- Lauricella A.
- Ferrer C.
- Simonte G.
- Pratesi G.
- Fontana A.
- Lucatelli P.
- Dall'Antonia A.
- Bertoglio L.
- Ronchey S.
- Mansour W.
- Mezzetto L.
- Cuomo R.
- Others:
- Silingardi, R.
- Gennai, S.
- Leone, N.
- Gargiulo, M.
- Faggioli, G.
- Cao, P.
- Verzini, F.
- Ippoliti, A.
- Tusini, N.
- Ricci, C.
- Antonello, M.
- Chiesa, R.
- Marone, E. M.
- Mangialardi, N.
- Speziale, F.
- Veraldi, G. F.
- Bonardelli, S.
- Marcheselli, L.
- Lonardi, R.
- Saitta, G.
- Lauricella, A.
- Ferrer, C.
- Simonte, G.
- Pratesi, G.
- Fontana, A.
- Lucatelli, P.
- Dall'Antonia, A.
- Bertoglio, L.
- Ronchey, S.
- Mansour, W.
- Mezzetto, L.
- Cuomo, R.
Description
Objective: The objective of this study was to assess immediate and midterm outcomes for urgent/emergent and elective patients with thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms (TAAAs) treated with the first commercially available "off-the-shelf" multibranched endograft for endovascular aneurysm repair, with a single-step or a staged surgical approach. Methods: A multicenter, nonrandomized, retrospective study was conducted of TAAA patients grouped by urgent/emergent and elective treatment with multibranched endograft for endovascular aneurysm repair at 13 Italian centers from November 2012 to August 2016. Urgent/emergent repair was classified as rupture in 16%, impending rupture in 9%, pain in 53%, or a maximum TAAA diameter ≥80 mm in 22%. Study end points were technical success, mortality, spinal cord ischemia, target visceral vessel (TVV) patency, and procedure-related reinterventions at 30 days and at follow-up. Results: Seventy-three patients (274 TVVs) were enrolled. Treatment was performed in elective (n = 41 [56%]) or urgent/emergent (n = 32 [44%]) settings, according to a single-step (n = 30 [41%]) or staged (n = 43 [59%]) approach. Technical success was 92%. Mortality within 30 days was 4% (n = 3 urgent/emergent patients) due to myocardial infarction. Spinal cord ischemia was recorded in two patients (3%; elective group). The primary patency of TVVs was 99% (three renal branch occlusions). Procedure-related reinterventions were required in five cases (7%). At least one adverse event from any cause ≤30 days was registered in 42% (n = 31). At a median follow-up of 18 months (range, 1-43 months), eight (11%) deaths (elective vs urgent/emergent, 2% vs 22%; P =.018), three (1%) cases of branch occlusion or stenosis, and five (7%) reinterventions were recorded. A survival of 88% (standard error [SE], 4%), 86% (SE, 4%), and 82% (SE, 5%) was evidenced at 12, 24, and 36 months, respectively. Urgent/emergent repair and female gender were identified as independent risk factors for all-cause mortality (P <.001 and P =.015, respectively), and the staged approach was identified as protective (P =.026). Freedom from reintervention was 86% (SE, 4%) and 83% (SE, 5%) at 12 and 24 months. Conclusions: The first off-the-shelf multibranched endograft seems safe in both urgent/emergent and elective settings. The staged surgical approach appears to positively influence overall survival. This unique device and its operators will usher in a new treatment paradigm for TAAA repair.
Additional details
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/1037041
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1037041
- Origin repository
- UNIGE