Abstract
Abstract Objective The aim of the study is to evaluate in-hospital and mid-term outcome after complex endovascular aortic repair with fenestrated and branched stent-grafts (fEVAR / bEVAR). Methods This is a single-center retrospective analysis from a prospectively collected database of all patients treated electively with fEVAR or bEVAR for para/suprarenal (PAA) and thoraco-abdominal aortic aneurysm (TAAA) between September 2010 and June 2019. In-hospital and mid-term mortality, major adverse events and re-interventions were assessed. Results Fifty-one patient (84% male) with a mean age of 74±7 years were analysed. Eighteen patients (35%) had TAAA, four patients (8%) suprarenal, and 29 patients (57%) pararenal aortic aneurysms. Mean aneurysm diameter was 64±8 mm. Thirty-eight patients (75%) underwent fEVAR and 13 patients (25%) bEVAR. A total of 157 target vessels were incorporated: 22 celiac trunks (CT), 40 superior mesenteric arteries (SMA), 92 renal arteries (RA), two separate hepatic arteries and one splenic artery. No in-hospital death or stroke was recorded. One patient suffered from early postoperative paraplegia and did not recover and one had paraparesis after 38 days and recovered completely. Six patients (12%) with patent renal arteries experienced acute postoperative kidney injury; one required temporary dialysis. Five in-hospital re-interventions were stent-graft related (four bridging stents angioplasty and one iliac leg extension) and seven re-interventions were not stent-graft related. Mean follow-up was 19±17 months. Eleven patients (22%) died during follow-up: nine were not aortic-related and two were unknown. The Kaplan-Meier estimated survival rates at 1 and 2 years were 81% and 77%, respectively. Five renal stents (5%, 5/92) occluded during follow-up: three were successfully recanalized and two remained occluded. Ten stents (three CT, five SMA, and two RA stents required relining after 13±16 months postoperatively, resulting with estimated primary assisted patency at 2 years of 100%, 100%, 93%, and 95% for the CT, SMA, right RA and left RA, respectively. Conclusion Complex endovascular aortic repair with fEVAR / bEVAR for PAA and TAAA is safe with very low early mortality and morbidity. In-stent stenosis/occlusions occurred within the first two years. However, primary assisted patency was high. A surveillance program to detect potential stent-graft related complications is mandatory.
Published Version
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