Reinforced aneurysmorrhaphy with an external mesh prosthesis is an effective method for treating true aneurysmal haemodialysis AV access, with excellent long-term patency and minimal complications due to infection.
WHAT THIS PAPER ADDSThe present study brings important additional information to current aneurysmal access guidelines.Objective: Aneurysms arising from arteriovenous fistulae are a common finding among dialysed patients and pose a risk of acute bleeding. The aim of this study was to perform a systematic review and meta-analysis evaluating the surgical options for the treatment of aneurysmal arteriovenous fistulae. Methods: A systematic review and meta-analysis of articles published between January 1973 and March 2019 describing the surgical treatment of arteriovenous fistulae aneurysms. Results: A total of 794 records were identified. After duplicate and low quality studies were removed, 72 full text articles were reviewed and from these 13 were included in the meta-analysis. The total number of patients was 597. Aneurysms were located in the upper arm in 289 (59%) cases and the smallest diameter of a treated aneurysm was 15 mm. The most frequent indication for treatment was bleeding prevention in 513 (86%) cases. Aneurysmorrhaphy was the surgical method of choice in all 13 studies. The pooled primary patency at 12 months was 82% (95% CI 69%e90%, 12 studies, I 2 ¼ 84%, p < .01). The 12 month primary patency rates were similar for aneurysmorrhaphy with external prosthetic reinforcement (85%, 95% CI 71%e93%, two studies, I 2 ¼ 0%, p ¼ .33) and aneurysmorrhaphy performed using a stapler (74%, 95% CI 61%e83%, four studies, I 2 ¼ 0%, p ¼ .48) and without a stapler (82%, 95% CI 60%e94%, six studies, I 2 ¼ 92%, p < .01). Conclusion: Aneurysmorraphy of arteriovenous fistulae is a procedure with acceptable short and long term results, with a low complication and aneurysm recurrence rate.
ObjectiveTo evaluate the role of human macrophage metalloelastase (HME) in pancreatic cancer. Summary Background DataHME, a member of the human matrix metalloproteinase family, possesses elastolytic activity and is critical for the degradation of extracellular matrix proteins. Inasmuch as tumor invasion and metastasis formation require lysis of extracellular matrix, HME plays a critical role in both processes. MethodsHME expression was analyzed by Northern blot analysis, reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction, Western blot analysis, and immunohistochemistry in 39 pancreatic cancer tissues and 13 normal controls. The molecular data were related to clinicopathologic parameters and patient survival. ResultsIn human pancreatic cancer, overexpression of HME mRNA was present in 25 of 39 pancreatic cancer tissues (64%) and in five pancreatic cancer cell lines. In contrast, low levels of HME mRNA expression were present in 13 normal pancreatic tissues samples. By Western blot analysis, high levels of HME were found in pancreatic cancer tissues and in the pancreatic cancer cell lines compared with the normal controls. Fifty-six percent of the cancer samples exhibited HME immunoreactivity in the cancer cells, and 63% in the stromal cells. Analysis of the survival data revealed that patients whose tumors exhibited HME mRNA overexpression lived significantly shorter compared with patients whose tumors did not overexpress HME. No relationship between HME expression and tumor stage, tumor grading, or presence of lymph node metastases was found. ConclusionsThese findings indicate that HME participates in pancreatic cancer progression and that its presence worsens the prognosis. These data suggest a benefit of its inhibition in the treatment of pancreatic cancer.
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