Introduction: Large bore thrombectomy is increasingly used to treat acute PE. Post-market surveillance using the U.S. FDA Manufacturer and User Facility Device Experience (MAUDE) database may capture serious device adverse events (AE) not described in small pre-market clinical trials. We aim to analyze serious AE associated with use of the Inari Medical (Irvine, California) large bore thrombectomy system to treat PE. Methods: All MAUDE events between January 1, 2018 and May 1, 2024 involving PE treatment with Triever and Flowtriever devices were reviewed and categorized based on device type, incident year, and clinical event. Based on narrative description, AE were placed into categories of cardiac, pulmonary, device malfunction, anemia, and other. Results: A total of 58 AE reports representing 50 unique clinical episodes were included. MAUDE event types were death (n=32), injury (n=23) and malfunction (n=3), and the majority (45/58) involved the larger aspiration catheters (Table 1). Death occurred in 27 of 50 unique episodes. Cardiac injury (n=19) and pulmonary injury (n=18) were most common and included 25 serious perforations. Serious AEs are listed in Table 2. Device malfunction/improper use was rare (n=7) and was not associated with death. Paradoxical embolism was described causing stroke and coronary occlusion. 3 of 4 blood loss AEs occurred prior to 2021. Conclusion: This report includes the largest description of reported AEs with large bore aspiration thrombectomy systems used to treat PE. This report describes serious events, often associated with death, that are likely infrequent and were not detected in pivotal studies or registries. Understanding these AEs may guide future technique and device refinement, and the current findings demonstrate the importance of large post-approval studies.
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