Abstract

Extending the time to definitive hemorrhage control in non-compressible torso hemorrhage (NCTH) is of particular importance in the battlefield where transfer times are prolonged and NCTH remains the leading cause of death. While REBOA is widely practiced as an initial adjunct for the management of NCTH, concerns for ischemic complications after 30 minutes of compete aortic occlusion deters many from Zone 1 deployment. We hypothesize that extended zone 1 occlusion times will be enabled by novel purpose built devices that allow for titratable partial aortic occlusion. This is a cross sectional analysis describing pREBOA-PRO zone 1 deployment characteristics at 7 level-1 trauma centers in the US and Canada (March 30, 2021 and June 30, 2022). In order to compare patterns of zone 1 aortic occlusion, the AORTA registry was utilized. Data was limited to adult patients who underwent successful occlusion in zone 1 (2013-2022). One hundred twenty-two patients pREBOA-PRO patients were included. Most catheters were deployed in zone 1 (73% n = 89) with a median zone 1 total occlusion time of 40 minutes (IQR 25-74). A sequence of complete followed by partial occlusion was used in 42% (n = 37) of zone 1 occlusion patients; a median of 76% (IQR 60-87%) of total occlusion time was partial occlusion in this group. As was seen in the prospectively collected data, longer median total occlusion times were observed in the titratable occlusion group in AORTA compared to the complete occlusion group. Longer zone 1 aortic occlusion times seen with titratable aortic occlusion catheters appear to be driven by the feasibility of controlled partial occlusion. The ability to extend safe aortic occlusion times may have significant impact to combat casualty care where exsanguination from non-compressible torso hemorrhage is the leading source of potentially preventable deaths. Level IV evidence.

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