Abstract

PurposeTo describe a technique in which two 5-F curved catheters were utilized to facilitate the wire-catheter approach for recanalizing chronic total occlusions (CTOs) in the iliac arteries concurrently affecting the common iliac artery and external iliac artery. MethodsThis was a single-center retrospective analysis involving endovascular recanalization of 17 iliac artery CTOs in 15 patients (mean age: 73.66 years; all men) between January 2019 and October 2022 using the subintimal arterial flossing with antegrade–retrograde intervention technique. With antegrade and retrograde guidewires in the subintimal spaces of CTOs, the location where the two guidewires seemed to overlap was identified as the rendezvous point. Although the two guidewires appeared to be in close proximity, there was no evidence that the bidirectional subintimal channels were connected. If several initial attempts failed, two 5-F multipurpose catheters were introduced to the rendezvous point, followed by twisting, pulling, and pushing maneuvers until the tips of the catheters touched, indicating that the bidirectional subintimal channels were joined. A second wire rendezvous attempt was then employed to create a flossing-type guidewire. Outcome measurements included technical success, rendezvous points, complications, and procedure duration. ResultsAmong this cohort, 80.0% smoked and 66.7% had hypertension. In 11 limbs (64.7%), when initial wire rendezvous attempts failed, the "catheter kissing" technique was employed to successfully recanalize iliac artery CTOs, taking an average of 3.80 ± 1.64 minutes to complete the secondary wire rendezvous. The average length of CTOs was 111.06 ± 9.99 mm, with 7 (41.2%) and 8 (47.1%) cases exhibiting severe calcification and flush occlusion, respectively. The wire rendezvous point for all cases was in EIA and the average time for successful secondary wire rendezvous was 3.80 ± 1.64 minutes. All patients were treated with iliac artery stents. No statistically significant difference was observed between the puncture sites of the common femoral artery and superficial femoral artery in relation to failure of the primary wire rendezvous (p = 0.644). No in-hospital deaths or complications were associated with the procedure, including iliac artery rupture, distal embolization, or access site complications. ConclusionIn patients with extensive iliac artery CTOs, the "catheter kissing" technique may offer an effective and time-efficient recanalization approach, without requiring additional specialized devices. Importantly, the risk of complications remains unchanged even when employing a wire rendezvous in a challenging subintimal space.

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