Purpose: To describe a possible application of thoracic false lumen occlusion techniques with a Candy-Plug occluder to induce false lumen thrombosis for preconditioning the spinal cord during staged fenestrated repair of postdissecting thoracoabdominal aneurysms. Technique: A Candy-Plug occluder is deployed within the thoracic false lumen after proximal entry tear coverage with a standard thoracic stent-graft during staged repair of postdissecting thoracoabdominal aneurysms. The blockade of thoracic false lumen retrograde reperfusion from distal entry tears induces a controlled thrombosis of both the thoracic false lumen and intercostal arteries. Then, when the fenestrated device is delivered 4 to 6 weeks later, the procedure is completed with standard techniques according to the staging protocols of individual centers. Conclusion: A new possible application of a Candy-Plug false lumen occlusion technique might be an intermediate procedure aimed at preconditioning the spinal cord by occluding the thoracic false lumen during complex staged fenestrated thoracoabdominal repairs.
WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS Different staging options have been suggested during endovascular repair of thoraco-abdominal aneurysms; however, few studies have reported the results of the uniform application of one protocol. Standardisation of staging methods is mandatory to improve results of complex aortic procedures.Objective: To evaluate the safety and effectiveness of a multistaged approach for elective thoraco-abdominal aneurysm (TAAAs) repair by means of endovascular fenestrated and/or branched (F/B-EVAR) grafts. Methods: Between 2013 and 2018, 80 high risk surgical patients received elective F/B-EVAR for TAAAs with a protocolled multistaged approach (thoracic, visceral, and limb steps) and were enrolled in an ambispective single centre study called STEAR (STaged Endovascular Aortic Repair -NCT03342755). Data regarding all study participants, single step mortality and morbidity (systemic complications) rates were recorded and the overall results were considered for statistical analysis. Results: Previous aortic interventions (61/80 cases, 76.3%) combined with the TAAA extents resulted in different staging strategies: 58 patients (73%) had a thoracic step and 33 (41%) a limb step. The median TAAA treatment time was 77 days (50e107). The overall mortality was six cases (8%) and 30 day clinical success rate 64 cases (80%). The overall rate of grade 2 or 3 (including death) systemic complications was 19 cases (24%) and 20 patients (25%) experienced grade 1 complications. Three patients with type II or III TAAAs (4%) had permanent and fatal spinal cord (SC) impairment. On multivariable analysis, SC ischaemia was associated with an aortic coverage !350 mm (OR: 9.15, p ¼ .03, 95% CI: 1.3e66.4) and bovine arch (OR: 10.6, p ¼ .01, 95% CI: 1.6e68.6). The overall short term (six month) clinical success was 72 cases (90%) and none experienced SC ischaemia after late endoleak resolution or treatment. At mid term (mean follow up: 13.3 AE 15.4 months), the overall freedom from conversions, re-interventions, late rupture, or type I and III endoleaks was 57 of 72 survivors (79%). Conclusion: A multistaged approach with a third limb step in case of TAAAs is safe and technically feasible, with an acceptable rate of permanent spinal cord ischaemia. Different staging methods and protocols have been proposed and standardisation is required, especially for type I-II-III aneurysms.
Purpose: To evaluate the potential anatomical feasibility of using the off-the-shelf multibranched Zenith t-Branch for the treatment of thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms (TAAAs) in female patients. Materials and Methods: A total of 268 patients (median age 68 years; 69 women) with degenerative TAAA treated at a single institution by means of open or endovascular repair between 2007 and 2019 were retrospectively analyzed to determine the feasibility of using the Zenith t-Branch based on the manufacturer’s instructions for use. The factors determining overall anatomical feasibility were divided into vascular access, aortic anatomy, and visceral vessels. The results were stratified by sex and compared. A logistic regression model was constructed to determine any association between feasibility and clinical factors or potential confounding variables; results are expressed as the odds ratio (OR) with 95% confidence interval (CI). Results: The overall anatomical feasibility was 39% (22% women vs 45% men, p=0.001). The feasibility was negatively influenced by female sex (p<0.001) in multivariable analysis (OR 2.9, 95% CI 1.5 to 5.4, p=0.001). Vascular access feasibility was 82% (61% women vs 89% men, p<0.001). Aorta feasibility was 65% (52% women vs 69% men, p<0.001), and visceral vessel feasibility was 74% (78% women vs 73% men, p=0.260). An access diameter ≤8.5 mm excluded 17% of the patients (39% women vs 9% men, p<0.001). The aortic feasibility was limited by the infrarenal aortic diameter in 16% of patients (45% women vs 6% men, p<0.001) and the aortic lumen at the visceral vessels in 17% patients (19% women vs 17% men, p=0.741). The visceral vessel feasibility was mainly limited by inadequate numbers or diameters of target vessels. Location and orientation of the target vessels were adequate in 96% of patients. Conclusion: A little more than a third of an all-comers cohort of patients with degenerative TAAA could have been treated with on-label use of the Zenith t-Branch. However, only 22% of women could have been treated because of sex-related anatomical limitations. New generations of multibranched devices should address these differences.
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