“…SAEF is estimated to occur in 0.4-4.0% of patients with prior aortic intervention, which is expected to increase with increased detection of aortic disease and the use of aortic prosthetic grafts [3,4]. The gold standard for the treatment of SAEF is surgical repair which involves graft excision, bowel repair, and extra-anatomic bypass (EAB) or in-situ repair (ISR) either as a staged or single procedure [4]. However, mortality and morbidity of open surgical aortic repair remain high, at 70%, with most complications being GI (30%), pulmonary (25%), and renal (21%) [4].…”