Literature DB >> 23756338

Treatment strategies and outcomes in patients with infected aortic endografts.

Javairiah Fatima1, Audra A Duncan, Eileen de Grandis, Gustavo S Oderich, Manju Kalra, Peter Gloviczki, Thomas C Bower.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Endovascular abdominal (EVAR) and thoracic (TEVAR) endografts allow aneurysm repair in high-risk patients, but infectious complications may be devastating. We reviewed treatment and outcomes in patients with infected aortic endografts.
METHODS: Twenty-four patients were treated between January 1997 and July 2012. End points were mortality, morbidity, graft-related complications, or reinfection.
RESULTS: Twenty males and four females with median age of 70 years (range, 35-80 years) had 21 infected EVARs and 3 TEVARs. Index repairs performed at our institution included eight EVARs and two TEVARs (10/1300; 0.77%). There were 19 primary endograft infections, 4 graft-enteric fistulae, and 1 aortobronchial fistula. Median time from repair to presentation was 11 months (range, 1-102 months); symptoms were fever in 17, abdominal pain in 11, and psoas abscess in 3. An organism was identified in 19 patients (8 mono- and 11 polymicrobial); most commonly Staphylococcus in 12 and Streptococcus in 6. All but one patient had successful endograft explantation. Abdominal aortic reconstruction was in situ repair in 21 (15 rifampin-soaked, 2 femoral vein, and 4 cryopreserved) and axillobifemoral bypass in three critically ill patients. Infected TEVARs were treated with rifampin-soaked grafts using hypothermic circulatory arrest. Early mortality (30 days or in-hospital) was 4% (n = 1). Morbidity occurred in 16 (67%) patients (10 renal, 5 wound-related, 3 pulmonary, and 1 had a cardiac event). Median hospital stay was 14 days (range, 6-78 days). One patient treated with in situ rifampin-soaked graft had a reinfection with fatal anastomotic blowout on day 44. At 14 months median follow-up (range, 1-82 months), patient survival, graft-related complications, and reinfection rates were 79%, 13%, and 4%, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: Endograft explantation and in situ reconstruction to treat infections can be performed safely. Extra-anatomic bypass may be used in high-risk patients. Resection of all infected aortic wall is recommended to prevent anastomotic breakdown. Despite high early morbidity, the risk of long-term graft-related complications and reinfections is low.
Copyright © 2013 Society for Vascular Surgery. Published by Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23756338     DOI: 10.1016/j.jvs.2013.01.047

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Vasc Surg        ISSN: 0741-5214            Impact factor:   4.268


  22 in total

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Review 4.  Treatment of Aortic Graft Infection in the Endovascular Era.

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5.  Surgical and medical interventions for abdominal aortic graft infections.

Authors:  Osamah S Niaz; Ahsan Rao; Ahmed Abidia; Rebecca Parrott; Jonathan Refson; Pranav Somaiya
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2020-08-05

Review 6.  How To Diagnose and Manage Infected Endografts after Endovascular Aneurysm Repair.

Authors:  Carlo Setacci; Emiliano Chisci; Francesco Setacci; Leonardo Ercolini; Gianmarco de Donato; Nicola Troisi; Giuseppe Galzerano; Stefano Michelagnoli
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7.  The Results of In Situ Prosthetic Graft Replacement for Infected Aortic Disease.

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Journal:  World J Surg       Date:  2018-09       Impact factor: 3.352

8.  Operative technique and morbidity of superficial femoral vein harvest.

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9.  Explantation of an Infected Fenestrated Abdominal Endograft with Autologous Venous Reconstruction.

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Journal:  EJVES Short Rep       Date:  2017-03-14

10.  Aorto-enteric Fistula 15 Years After Uncomplicated Endovascular Aortic Repair with Unforeseen Onset of Endocarditis.

Authors:  M M K Kadhim; J B G Rasmussen; J P Eiberg
Journal:  EJVES Short Rep       Date:  2016-04-08
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