| Literature DB >> 31263598 |
Michael D Dake1, Gary M Ansel2, Matthew S Johnson3, Robert Mendes4, H Bob Smouse5.
Abstract
The Sentry inferior vena cava (IVC) filter is designed to provide temporary protection against pulmonary embolism (PE) during transient high-risk periods and then to bioconvert after 60 days after implantation. At the time of bioconversion, the device's nitinol arms retract from the filtering position into the caval wall. Subsequently, the stable stent-like nitinol frame is endothelialized. The Sentry bioconvertible IVC filter has been evaluated in a multicenter investigational-device-exemption pivotal trial (NCT01975090) of 129 patients with documented deep vein thrombosis (DVT) or PE, or at temporary risk of developing DVT or PE, and with contraindications to anticoagulation. Successful filter conversion was observed in 95.7% of patients at 6 months (110/115) and 96.4% at 12 months (106/110). Through 12 months, there were no cases of symptomatic PE. The rationale for development of the Sentry bioconvertible device includes the following considerations: (1) the period of highest risk of PE for the vast majority of patients occurs within the first 60 days after an index event, with most of the PEs occurring in the first 30 days; (2) the design of retrievable IVC filters to support their removal after a transitory high-PE-risk period has, in practice, been associated with insecure filter dynamics and time-dependent complications including tilting, fracture, embolization, migration, and IVC perforation; (3) most retrievable IVC filters are placed for temporary protection, but for a variety of reasons they are not removed in any more than half of implanted patients, and when removal is attempted, the procedure is not always successful even with advanced techniques; and (4) analysis of Medicare hospital data suggests that payment for the retrieval procedure does not routinely compensate for expense. The Sentry device is not intended for removal after bioconversion. In initial clinical use, complications have been limited. Long-term results for the Sentry bioconvertible IVC filter are anticipated soon.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31263598 PMCID: PMC6556320 DOI: 10.1155/2019/5795148
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Vasc Med ISSN: 2090-2824
Figure 1The Sentry bioconvertible IVC filter in filtering (above) and bioconverted (below) configurations, with corresponding axial views on the right.
Postinjury incidence and time course of pulmonary embolism in trauma patients.
| Author | Trauma population | PE incidence | Postinjury time course of PE | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Owings [ | Patients admitted to single level 1 university trauma center from 1990 to 1995 | 63/18,255 (0.3%) | PEs occurred from days 1 to 30 following traumatic injury; one quarter of PEs occurred within first 4 days | 58 (92%) of the PE patients had at least one of the accepted risk factors for VTE |
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| Sing [ | Retrospective chart review of trauma patients with PE 2001 to 2004 at four level 1 trauma centers | 146/25,658 (0.6%) | Mean time to PE 7.9 ± 8.1 days, range 1 to 43 days; 24 PE occurred ≥15 days after injury, 16 (11%) ≥21 days (including 1 fatal) | IVC filters not deployed in these patients; the authors argued that the duration of filter implantation should be individualized |
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| Brakenridge [ | Patients admitted to single level 1 urban trauma center from 2003 to 2007 | 108/17,736 (0.6%) | 25% within first 72 hours, 50% within first 4 days, 95% within 20 days; 6 cases diagnosed between 24 and 74 days | Long bone fractures independently predicted early PE (≤4 days, OR 2.8); severe head injuries associated with late PE (>4 days, OR 11.1) |
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| Batty [ | Retrospective chart review of data collected prospectively July 2001 to July 2008 in Australian hospital trauma registry | 45/6344 (0.71%) | Mean time to PE 12 days postinjury (range 0 to 48 days) | Independent predictors of PE: absence of IVC filter, number of injuries to lower limb, central venous catheterization |
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| Coleman [ | Retrospective chart review of trauma patients with PE 2007 to 2013 at three level 1 trauma centers | 133/54,964 (0.24%) | Median time from admission to diagnosis of PE 4 hospital days (IQR 1–8), when 79 of PE occurred; 42.9% of PE diagnosed within first 3 days (early PE), 57.1% with late PE | Long bone fracture with extremity AIS score ≥3 significantly predicted early PE (p <0.05); severe brain injury, spinal cord injury, and blood transfusion ≤24 hours predicted late PE |
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| Van Gent [ | Retrospective chart review of all adult patients who had ≥1 duplex ultrasound July 2006 through December 2011 at San Diego level 1 trauma center | 2370 qualifying patients — 265 (11.2%) developed VTE: 235 DVT only, 19 PE only, 11 both DVT and PE | 58 (25%) of all DVT occurred in the first day versus 1 (5%) of all PE; within 2 days of admission, 38% of DVT had occurred versus 26% of PE | For the 19 patients with PE only, all but one of the events were diagnosed within 43 days after admission; risk factors for PE and DVT after injury were different |
AIS = Abbreviated Injury Scale; DVT = deep vein thrombosis; IQR = interquartile range; IVC = inferior vena cava; OR = odds ratio; PE = pulmonary embolism; VTE = venous thromboembolism
Postoperative incidence and time course of pulmonary embolism in surgical patients.
| Author | Surgery type and population | PE incidence | Postsurgical time course of PE | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hope [ | General, orthopedic, and other surgical procedures; 1999 to 2004 at a North Carolina medical center | 115/111,773 (0.9%) | <40 years of age, mean 2.6 days; 40 to 60 years, mean 11.2 days; >60 years, mean 6.7 days (p = 0.02) | The significantly longer interval to PE diagnosis in patients 40 to 60 years of age possibly due to delays in diagnosis, patient ambulation, and/or asymptomatic PE |
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| Arcelus [ | Major orthopedic surgery, cancer surgery, and other procedures; through 2005 in the RIETE registry of patients with symptomatic acute VTE | 13,599 registry patients, 1602 postoperative, 787 with PE | 19% of PE diagnosed during first 7 days, 48% during first 15 days, 77% during first 30 days | Clinically overt PE appeared significantly earlier than proximal DVT (20 ± 15 days vs 24 ± 16 days, p <0.0001) |
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| Sebastian [ | Thoracolumbar surgery; 2005 to 2012 in a national database | 202/43,777 (0.5%) | Mean 9.4 ± 7.3 days | For patients undergoing corpectomy, the incidence of PE was 1.7%, mean time to diagnosis 12.4 ± 8.1 days |
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| Jordan [ | Nephrectomy; 2006 to 2012 in a national database | 65/13,208 (0.5%) | Median 6 days (IQR 3–13); 63.1% of PE occurred prior to discharge | Median length of stay was 8 days for patients who developed PE (IQR 5–11) |
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| Thomas [ | Lung cancer resection; 2005 to 2015 in a national database | 116/14,308 (0.8%) | Median 11 days (IQR 5–17); 67 (58%) of PE occurred after discharge | Prolonged duration of operation and extended length of stay (both p <0.01) were associated with increased risk for postdischarge VTE |
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| Phillips [ | Elective total hip replacement (THR); July 1995 through June 1996 in analysis of Medicare claims data | Primary THR, 0.9% of 58,521; revision THR, 0.8% of 12,956 | Approximately 0.3% to 0.4% incidence of PE within the first week after THR, and about 0.7% to 0.8% by the sixth week | 26% of PE that developed within 6 months after primary THR occurred during acute inpatient stay, as did 38% of the PE in the revision THR patients |
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| Dahl [ | Total hip replacement (THR), knee replacement (TKR), or nailed hip fracture (NHF); 1989 through 1998 in a Scandinavian hospital administering LMWH to all patients | Overall 50/3954 (1.3%); THR, 19/1661 (1.1%); TKR, 3/386 (0.8%); NHF, 28/1907 (1.5%) | Overall mean 27 days (range 1–173); THR mean 35 days (range 5–94); TKR mean 9 days (range 2–17); NHF mean 24 days (range 1–173) | Overall annual PE incidence ranged from 0.4% to 3.4%. PE incidence remained high for at least 1–3 months following major hip surgery, less following TKR. |
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| Bjornara [ | Emergency hip fracture surgery or elective total hip replacement (THR) or total knee replacement (TKR); 1989 to 2001 at a Norwegian hospital | Overall, 1.1% of 5607; hip fracture, 32/2420 (1.3%); THR, 28/2512 (1.1%); TKR, 4/675 (0.6%) | Hip fracture, median 17 days (range 1–173); THR, median 34 days (range 3–150); TKR, median 12 days (range 2–150) | The cumulative risk of VTE lasted up to 3 months after hip surgery and for 1 month after TKR; 70% of postsurgery VTE were diagnosed after discharge |
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| SooHoo [ | Total knee arthroplasty (TKA); 1991 through 2001 in California linked hospital discharge database | During initial hospitalization, 1.79% of 222,684 | PE rate 0.30% during first 30-day period, then declined to 0.06% for second 30-day period; the rate remained in range of 0.03% to 0.05% through the first postoperative year | PE rate stabilized within 30 days after surgery, and proportion of cases was increased by <3% at 60 days; extending follow-up to 90 days had small effect on the proportion of first-year PE cases |
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| Parvizi [ | Total joint arthroplasty (TJA), patients receiving postprocedure warfarin; 2000 to 2010 at a university hospital in Philadelphia | 283/26,415 (1.07%), within 90 days | Median 2 days (range 1–87 days); 81% within first 3 days, 89% with first week, 94% within 2 weeks | The later PE after revision arthroplasty and in patients without atrial fibrillation possibly due to comorbidity-related delays in postoperative mobility/mobilization |
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| Kim [ | Femur fracture in adult patients who underwent CT for PE within 72 hours after admission; January 2010 to December 2014 at a Korean medical center | 28/453 (2.2%) | PE detected in 16 (57.1%) of the 28 patients in the first 24 hours after injury, and in 25 (89.3%) in the first 48 hours | PE in femur fracture patients occurred in the immediate period following injury at a relatively higher incidence than commonly appreciated for other types of trauma. However, the outcome of PE in these cases was not fatal. |
CT = computed tomography; DVT = deep vein thrombosis; IQR = interquartile range; LMWH = low molecular weight heparin; NHF = nailed hip fracture; PE = pulmonary embolism; THA = total hip arthroplasty; THR = total hip replacement; TKA = total knee arthroplasty; TKR = total knee replacement; VTE = venous thromboembolism
Figure 2Time course to pulmonary embolism (PE) in patients at level 1 trauma centers. AIS = Abbreviated Injury Scale. Adapted from Brakenridge et al. [19] and Coleman et al. [17]
Figure 3Median days to pulmonary embolism (PE) in large surgery populations. IQR = Interquartile range. Data from Jordan et al. [25], Thomas et al. [26], Parvizi et al. [31], and Bjornara et al. [29].
Selected complications of retrievable IVC filters reported in three systematic reviews and two analyses of the FDA MAUDE database.
| Complication | Reports |
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| (i) 0.5% (50/9509 patients) [ | |
| (ii) 6 of 14 articles reported fracture rates >10% [ | |
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| (i) 22.0% (2011) [ | |
| (ii) 23.9% (2014) [ | |
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| (i) 1.3% (35/2716 patients) [ | |
| (ii) 1.4% (160/11,679) [ | |
| (iii) 4 of 14 articles reported migration rates >10% [ | |
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| (i) 22.0% (2011) [ | |
| (ii) 12.1% (2014) [ | |
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| (i) 5.4% (379/7001 patients) [ | |
| (ii) 5 of 14 articles reported perforation rates >20% [ | |
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| (i) 20% (2011) [ | |
| (ii) 15.4% (2014) [ | |
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| (i) 7.7% (798/10,348) [ | |
| (ii) 5 of 14 articles reported tilting rates >10% [ | |
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| (i) 3.9% (2014) [ | |
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| (i) 5.4% (69/1277 patients) [ | |
| (ii) 7.1% (362/5092 patients) [ | |
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| (i) 2.8% (116/4078 patients), 37 studies [ | |
| (ii) 3.9% (345/8788 patients), 103 studies [ | |
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| (i) 2.3% (2014) [ | |
Sources: Systematic reviews: Angel et al. (2010) [3], Deso et al. (2016) [7], Jia et al. (2018) [9]; MAUDE analyses: Andreoli et al. (2014) [34], Angel et al. (2010) [3]
Cost and payment data extracted from the 2016 Medicare outpatient hospital standard analytical file for the common procedural terminology code 37193 (IVC filter removal) [57].
| Procedure | No anesthesia | With anesthesia | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cases | 5547 | 1140 | 6687 |
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| Median cost (IQR) | $3033.44 | $3865.22 | $3129.57 |
| Minimum cost | $448.12 | $846.91 | |
| Maximum cost | $70,881.80 | $37,540.94 | |
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| Median payment (IQR) | $1762.54 | $1795.42 | $1767.49 |
| Minimum payment | $753.52 | $809.18 | |
| Maximum payment | $20,797.21 | $10,959.56 | |
IQR: interquartile range
Figure 4Computed tomography imaging of the Sentry bioconvertible IVC filter for a single patient. (a) Coronal image acquired as part of helical dataset 1 month after filter placement, showing the Sentry device in filtering configuration. (b) Coronal image at 6-month follow-up showing the device in bioconverted configuration. ((c), (d), (e)) Axial views of the bioconverted device at 6-month follow-up, with the images keyed to the coronal view in (b). Reprinted with permission from Dake et al. [60]
Figure 5Histological images of the integration of the Sentry filter arms into the wall of the inferior vena cava. Above: section cut through the tips of the filter arms stained with hematoxylin and eosin. Below (dark red box in image above): residual filament material surrounding chronic inflammatory cells adjacent to the fully incorporated tip of a filter arm. Reprinted with permission from Gaines et al. [59]