Literature DB >> 31542273

Lower Extremity Venous Stent Placement: A Large Retrospective Single-Center Analysis.

Tarub S Mabud1, David M Cohn2, Victoria A Arendt2, Gyeong-Sik Jeon3, Xiao An4, Jinxin Fu5, Andre D Souffrant2, Anna M Sailer2, Rajesh Shah6, David Wang2, Daniel Y Sze2, William T Kuo2, Daniel L Rubin2, Lawrence V Hofmann2.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To study short-term and long-term outcomes of lower extremity venous stents placed at a single center and to characterize changes in vein diameter achieved by stent placement.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: A database of all patients who received lower extremity venous stents between 1996 and 2018 revealed 1,094 stents were placed in 406 patients (172 men, 234 women; median age, 49 y) in 513 limbs, including patients with iliocaval stents (9.4% acute thrombosis, 65.3% chronic thrombosis, 25.3% nonthrombotic lesions). Primary, primary assisted, and secondary patency rates were assessed for lower extremity venous stents at 1, 3, and 5 years using Kaplan-Meier analyses and summary statistics. Subset analyses and Cox regression were performed to identify risk factors for patency loss. Vein diameters and Villalta scores before and up to 12 months after stent placement were compared. Complication and mortality rates were calculated.
RESULTS: Primary, primary assisted, and secondary patency rates at 5 years were 57.3%, 77.2%, and 80.9% by Kaplan-Meier methods and 78.6%, 90.3%, and 92.8% by summary statistics. Median follow-up was 199 days (interquartile range, 35.2-712.0 d). Patency rates for the subset of patients (n = 46) with ≥ 5 years of follow-up (mean ± SD 9.1 y ± 3.4) were nearly identical to cohort patency rates at 5 years. Patients with inferior vena cava stent placement (hazard ratio 2.11, P < .0001) or acute thrombosis (hazard ratio 3.65, P < .0001) during the index procedure had significantly increased risk of losing primary patency status. Vein diameters were significantly greater after stent placement. There were no instances of stent fracture, migration, or structural deformities. In patients with chronic deep vein thrombosis, Villalta scores significantly decreased after stent placement (from 15.7 to 7.4, P < .0001). Perioperative mortality was < 1%, and major perioperative complication rate was 3.7%.
CONCLUSIONS: Cavo-ilio-femoral stent placement for venous occlusive disease achieves improvement of vein disease severity scores, increase in treated vein diameters, and satisfactory long-term patency rates.
Copyright © 2019 SIR. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 31542273     DOI: 10.1016/j.jvir.2019.06.011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Vasc Interv Radiol        ISSN: 1051-0443            Impact factor:   3.464


  2 in total

1.  Female Gender is a Predictor of Lower Iliac Vein Stenting Patency Rates.

Authors:  Mohamed S Zaghloul; Othman M Abdul-Malak; Patrick Cherfan; Catherine Go; Zein Saadeddin; Georges E Al-Khoury; Rabih A Chaer; Efthymios D Avgerinos
Journal:  Ann Vasc Surg       Date:  2021-08-28       Impact factor: 1.466

2.  Prevalence of hypercoagulable states in stented thrombotic iliac vein compression syndrome with comparison of re-intervention and anticoagulation regimens.

Authors:  Peyton Cramer; Cheryl Mensah; Maria DeSancho; Anuj Malhotra; Ronald Winokur; Andrew Kesselman
Journal:  World J Radiol       Date:  2021-12-28
  2 in total

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