Abstract

This study aimed to determine the optimal surgical procedure for arch aneurysm in the elderly based on preoperative comorbidities, especially focusing on renal function. The medical records of 374 patients who experienced arch surgery between 2008 and 2019 were reviewed. Among the 374 patients, 92 who underwent total arch replacement (TAR) were assigned to the TAR group and the remaining 152 who underwent debranching thoracic endovascular aortic repair (DTEVAR) were assigned to the DTEVAR group. Chronic kidney disease (CKD) was an independent risk factor of mortality (hazard ratio, 2.85; p = 0.029) in the TAR group but not in the DTEVAR. In the Grade I/II category CKD (estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) > 60mL/min), freedom from all-cause mortality was significantly higher in the TAR group than in the DTEVAR group (p = 0.0155, log-rank). Freedom from all-cause mortality was comparable between the two groups in the Grade IIIa CKD (eGFR, 45-60) (p = 0.584, log-lank), Grade IIIb (eGFR, 30-45) (p = 0.822), and Grade IV/V (eGFR < 30) (p = 0.548). In elderly patients who underwent TAR, CKD was the independent risk factor of the mortality, but not in the patients who underwent debranching TEVAR. Conversion of surgical strategy from TAR to debranching TEVAR in the treatment of aortic arch aneurysms in the elderly with CKD below Grade IIIa is acceptable considering that less-invasiveness. While, in the elderly with Grade I/II CKD, TAR still remains as a primary choice for the arch repair for better mid-term survival.

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