Abstract

BackgroundThe iliac occlusive disease is usually treated with endovascular procedures in recent years. The effectiveness of different crossing approaches for these occlusions is not precisely known. We performed a retrospective study to explore the optimal crossing approach (antegrade versus retrograde) for iliac artery chronic total occlusions (CTOs) and to examine the long-term outcomes.Materials and methodsWe performed a study on 107 patients (116 iliac occlusive lesions, mean age 64.0 ± 11.1, 88 men) who underwent an iliac CTO endovascular intervention attempted with the use of both crossing strategies but were managed with one final crossing approach between August 2012 and August 2018. Baseline data, procedural characteristics, and outcomes were described. A Cox proportional hazard model and Kaplan-Meier method were developed to assess the differences in the two crossing approaches in terms of the 1-year and 5-year primary patency rates, target lesion revascularization (TLR) and major adverse limb events (MALEs).ResultsCommon iliac artery (CIA) lesions were more likely to be crossed successfully in the retrograde direction (6.8% for antegrade vs. 20.9% for retrograde, p = 0.005), while lesions in the CIA/ external iliac artery (EIA) were more prone to be crossed successfully in the antegrade direction (58.9% for antegrade vs. 39.5% for retrograde, p = 0.016). There were no significant differences in the crossing approach for EIA lesions between the two groups. The two crossing approaches were associated with similar estimates of 1- and 5-year primary patency, TLR and MALE rates.ConclusionThe antegrade approach was associated with a higher rate of successful crossing in CIA/EIA CTO lesions, while the CIA-only CTOs were more likely to be crossed successfully with the retrograde approach.

Highlights

  • The iliac occlusive disease is usually treated with endovascular procedures in recent years

  • There were no significant differences in the crossing approach for external iliac artery (EIA) lesions between the two groups

  • The two crossing approaches were associated with similar estimates of 1- and 5-year primary patency, target lesion revascularization (TLR) and major adverse limb events (MALEs) rates

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Summary

Introduction

The iliac occlusive disease is usually treated with endovascular procedures in recent years. Open surgery has been the standard method for severe occlusive lesions, but recent advances in interventional techniques and devices allow percutaneous revascularization and present comparable patency rates during long follow-up for patients with iliac occlusive disease regardless of lesion complexity. As a result, this endovascular-first concept has been a regular concept in the majority of institutions worldwide [2, 3]. We collected data of iliac CTO patients who had undergone endovascular treatment in our center and compared their immediate and long-term outcomes with antegrade crossing versus retrograde crossing approaches

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