Abstract

To assess the performance of dynamic or 4D CT in characterizing endoleaks in advanced endovascular aortic repair (branched and fenestrated) when other modalities fail to fully characterize the leak, most often conventional CTA. Retrospective review of 13 patients from 2008 to 2021 who underwent 16 4D CTs to characterize endoleaks in branched and fenestrated endovascular aortic repair (FB-EVAR). The 4D CTs were performed covering up to 16cm of the z-axis, with anywhere between 10 and 40 iterations performed every 2s. These settings were adjusted depending on graft characteristics and type of endoleak suspected. The scans were assessed for their ability to detect the endoleak (sensitivity), and further to characterize the endoleak by type and subtype (specificity). Overall sensitivity in 16 scans for endoleak detection was 100%. There was a specificity of 87.5% for determining the type of endoleak (14/16). These results included two studies that were inconclusive and repeated due to technical difficulties. In patients where a specific subtype was not established, the leak was localized to the appropriate target vessel. Average dose for the 4D CT was 4724mGy*cm (1108-11069), with the outlining higher dose scans secondary to higher iterations in those scans. 4D CT is a useful adjunctive tool in FB-EVAR surveillance with excellent sensitivity and specificity in characterizing endoleaks. This allows for accurate localization of leaks, which is critical for management planning.

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