Literature DB >> 19577067

Endovascular treatment of acute and chronic aortic dissection: midterm results from the Talent Thoracic Retrospective Registry.

Stephan Kische1, Marek P Ehrlich, Christoph A Nienaber, Hervé Rousseau, Robin Heijmen, Philippe Piquet, Hüseyin Ince, Jean-Paul Beregi, Rossella Fattori.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study examined midterm results after treatment with the endovascular Talent thoracic stent graft (Medtronic/AVE, Santa Rosa, Calif) in patients with acute or chronic aortic dissection.
METHODS: In the Talent Thoracic Retrospective Registry, 180 patients were treated for acute or chronic aortic dissection (mean age: 59.6 +/- 13.0 years). Thirty-seven (20.6%) patients had acute aortic complications with signs of rupture, distal malperfusion, or persistent pain; the remainder were in stable condition. Aortic diameter was 53.5 +/- 14.3 mm, the distance from the left subclavian artery to the proximal entry tear was 44.1 +/- 41.9 mm, and dissection extended beyond the celiac axis in 88.3% of cases. Length of covered aorta measured 138.9 +/- 45.7 mm, with one stent graft used in 125 (69.4%) patients.
RESULTS: Procedural success was 98.3%. Nine patients died within 30 days, yielding an overall early mortality of 5.0%. For in-hospital outcome, multivariate analysis showed that age greater than 75 years (odds ratio [OR] 4,9; 95% confidence intervals [CI] 1.6-15.1; P = .006), American Society of Anesthesiologists class greater than III (OR 2.8; 95% CI 1.0-7.5; P = .04), and emergency status (OR 3.5; 95% CI 1.3-8.9; P = .01) were independent predictors of major adverse events. Compared with electively treated patients, emergency status was associated with a higher incidence of in-hospital mortality (13.5% vs 2.1%; P = .003) and neurologic events (16.2% vs 4.2%; P = .01). However, patients with acute dissection had a smaller baseline diameter and were less often identified to have secondary endoleaks and progressive enlargement. Average follow-up for hospital survivors was 22.3 +/- 17.0 months with an estimated survival of 94.9% +/- 1.7% at 30 days, 90.6% +/- 2.3% at 12 months, 90.6% +/- 2.3% at 24 months, and 81.8% +/- 4.8 % at 36 months. During follow-up, 30 patients required a total of 32 secondary interventions including 12 open and 20 endovascular procedures, accounting for an estimated 71.5% freedom from reinterventions at 36 months. Follow-up imaging revealed stable or decreasing thoracic aortic diameter in 80.5% of patients.
CONCLUSION: Endovascular treatment for aortic dissection is associated with reasonably low morbidity and mortality. Long-term surveillance is crucial to define more comprehensively the durability of stent graft treatment of aortic dissection and to determine which patients are appropriate candidates for stent graft therapy.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19577067     DOI: 10.1016/j.jtcvs.2008.07.074

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg        ISSN: 0022-5223            Impact factor:   5.209


  7 in total

1.  Palliative stent graft placement combined with subsequent open surgery for retrograde ascending dissection intra-thoracic endovascular aortic repair.

Authors:  Kai Zhu; Hao Lai; Changfa Guo; Jun Li; Chunsheng Wang
Journal:  J Thorac Dis       Date:  2014-12       Impact factor: 2.895

Review 2.  Systematic review of outcomes of combined proximal stent-grafting with distal bare stenting for management of aortic dissection.

Authors:  Ludovic Canaud; Elsa Madeleine Faure; Baris Ata Ozdemir; Pierre Alric; Matt Thompson
Journal:  Ann Cardiothorac Surg       Date:  2014-05

3.  Implications of secondary aortic intervention after thoracic endovascular aortic repair for acute and chronic type B dissection.

Authors:  Kristina A Giles; Adam W Beck; Salim Lala; Suzannah Patterson; Martin Back; Javairiah Fatima; Dean J Arnaoutakis; George J Arnaoutakis; Thomas M Beaver; Scott A Berceli; Gilbert R Upchurch; Thomas S Huber; Salvatore T Scali
Journal:  J Vasc Surg       Date:  2018-12-13       Impact factor: 4.268

4.  Combined proximal descending aortic endografting plus distal bare metal stenting (PETTICOAT technique) versus conventional proximal descending aortic stent graft repair for complicated type B aortic dissections.

Authors:  Dan Rong; Yangyang Ge; Jie Liu; Xiaoping Liu; Wei Guo
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2019-10-30

5.  Acute ascending aortic intramural hematoma as a complication of the endovascular repair of a Type B aortic dissection.

Authors:  Clinton Kakazu; Jermaine Augustus; Christian Paullin; Inderjeet S Julka; Rodney A White
Journal:  J Anesth       Date:  2012-02-22       Impact factor: 2.078

6.  Optimal blood pressure control for patients after thoracic endovascular aortic repair of type B aortic dissection.

Authors:  Nan Lu; Xiaojing Ma; Tan Xu; Zhuoqiao He; Bayi Xu; Qingfeng Xiong; Xuerui Tan
Journal:  BMC Cardiovasc Disord       Date:  2019-05-27       Impact factor: 2.298

7. 

Authors:  Wilson Michaelis; Antônio Lacerda Santos; Rogério Akira Yokohama; Marianne Ariely Andretta; Mariana Vieira Delazari; Luciano Vieira; Erick Fernando Seguro; Lucas Mansano Sarquis
Journal:  J Vasc Bras       Date:  2017 Jul-Sep
  7 in total

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