| Literature DB >> 32290189 |
Anita Rybicka1, Paweł Rynio2, Rabih Samad2, Halina Szumiłowicz2, Paweł Szumiłowicz2, Sebastian Kazimierczak3, Tomasz Zakrzewski2, Piotr Gutowski2, Elżbieta Grochans1, Agata Krajewska4, Arkadiusz Kazimierczak2.
Abstract
Technical errors have an impact on the results of surgical lower limb revascularization. Use of ultrasound scanning or angiography on the operating table is inconvenient and, in case of angiography, carries a certain risk of radiation and contrast exposure. A simpler method of screening for errors is required. This study assessed the accuracy of a new simple hydrostatic bypass flow technique during surgical limb revascularization. In all, 885 patients were included in the retrospective study. All were treated for Chronic Limb-Threatening Ischemia (CLTI) with a femoropopliteal bypass. Preoperatively, the radiological Vascular Surgery/International Society of Cardiovascular Surgery (SVS/ISCVS) score was used to assess the complexity of the anatomical changes. The surgeon made a subjective runoff assessment for every surgery. In 267 cases, the hydrostatic bypass flow (HBF) technique was used, and, in 66 cases, a digital subtraction angiography (DSA) was used. In each case, a postoperative Doppler ultrasound (DUS) examination was performed following the HBF. Good early results were achieved in 89.46%, and 154 errors (17.4%) were detected (85 were detected on the operating table, including 57 technical errors). Independent efficacy in error detection was proven with a postoperative Doppler examination (Aera Under Curve (AUC) = 0.89; criterion mid-graft peak systolic velocity (PSV) <24 cm/s, p = 0.00001) and hydrostatic bypass flow (AUC = 0.71, criterion HBF < 53 mL/min, p = 0.00001) during surgery. The hydrostatic bypass flow technique is an effective intraoperative screening method in bypass surgery. Algorithmic use of HBF, DSA if needed, and DUS postoperatively improves the outcome. HBF sufficiently reduced the need for on-table angiography.Entities:
Keywords: auto-vein bypass; blood flow measurement; chronic limb-threatening ischemia; error detection
Year: 2020 PMID: 32290189 PMCID: PMC7230340 DOI: 10.3390/jcm9041079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Subjective runoff assessment (SRA).
Figure 2Hydrostatic bypass flow.
Figure 3Bypass screening algorithm in the examined group. HBF—hydrostatic bypass flow; DSA—digital subtraction angiography; DUS—Doppler ultrasound.
Epidemiology.
| Epidemiology | Number/Median | %/SD | Range | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||||
| Male | 194 | 72.66% | ||
| Female | 73 | 27.34% | ||
| Age (years) | 65.18 | ±10.18 | 50–90 | |
| CLTI | Rutherford 4 | 438 | 49.49% | |
| Rutherford 5 | 218 | 24.6% | ||
| Rutherford 6 | 229 | 25.87% | ||
| ABI | 0.59 | ±0.48 | 0–1.9 | |
| Previous vascular interventions | 413 | 46.7% | ||
| Mean number of previous interventions | 1.56 | ±1.07 | 1–11 | |
| V-POSSUM risk of death (%) | 2.15% | ±2.88 | 0.2–53 | |
| V-POSSUM risk of complications (%) | 4.2% | ±8.09 | 0.4–91 | |
| Risk of cardiological complication (Goldman-Detsky) | 13.77 | ±8.79 | 0–50 | |
| Hypertension | 621 | 70.17% | ||
| Diabetes | 253 | 28.59% | ||
| Ischemic heart disease | 324 | 36.61% | ||
| Stroke/TIA | 130 | 14.69% | ||
| Contralateral amputation | 12 | 1.36% | ||
| Chronic circulatory failure (NYHA ≥ 2) | 111 | 12.54 | ||
| Atrial fibrillation | 103 | 11.64% | ||
| Chronic kidney disease | ||||
| I stage | 115 | 19.59% | ||
| II stage | 329 | 56.05% | ||
| III stage | 94 | 16.01% | ||
| IV stage | 32 | 5.45% | ||
| V stage | 17 | 2.9% | ||
| Together: CKD ≥ III | 143 | 24.7% | ||
| Gastric/duodenal ulcer | 63 | 7.12% | ||
| Heavy smokers | 306 | 35.96% | ||
| COPD | 70 | 7.91% | ||
CLTI—chronic limb-threatening ischemia; ABI—Ankle Brachial Index; V-POSSUM—Vascular-Physiological and Operative Severity Score for the enumeration of Mortality and Morbidity; TIA—Transient Ischemic Attack; NYHA-New York Heart Association; CKD—Chronic Kidney Disease; COPD—Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.
Surgical treatment.
| Technical Details | Number | % |
|---|---|---|
| Vein quality * | ||
| Good | 598 | 67.57 |
| Bad | 287 | 32.42 |
| Types of anastomosis | ||
| Classic (end to side) | 838 | 94.69 |
| End to end | 9 | 10.01 |
| Extra-anatomical (intercostal) | 10 | 1.13 |
| Extra-anatomical (other) | 4 | 0.45 |
| Jump graft on the calf vessels | 11 | 1.24 |
| Y-graft on the calf vessels | 13 | 1.47 |
| Additional procedures | ||
| Endarterectomy of iliac artery | 21 | 2.37 |
| Endarterectomy of common femoral artery | 118 | 13.33 |
| Profundoplasty | 123 | 13.9 |
| Endarterectomy of popliteal artery | 28 | 3.16 |
| Endarterectomy of below the knee | 14 | 1.58 |
| PTA of iliac artery | 30 | 3.39 |
| Necrectomy/small amputation | 243 | 26.44 |
* Assessed by the surgeon as good if the size of the vein exceeded 4 mm and if no stenosis, varicose veins, or any other condition that might compromise the patency of the graft was present. PTA—Percutaneous Transluminal Angioplasty.
List of errors and reasons for early failures.
| Error Type | Number | % |
|---|---|---|
| Complete list of discovered errors | 154 | 17.4 |
| Radiological insufficient “runoff” | 29 | 3.27 |
| Too much tissue loss in critical limb ischemia | 20 | 2.26 |
| Anesthetic complication, hypotension, cardiac arrest, other | 12 | 1.36 |
| Treatment delay and strategy mistake: e.g., lack of fasciotomy | 9 | 1.02 |
| Peripheral embolization | 9 | 1.02 |
| Unrecognized irreversible limb ischemia | 6 | 0.7 |
| Technical errors | 69 | 7.79 |
| Anastomosis error | 38 | 4.29 |
| Iatrogenic damage of target vessels | 17 | 1.92 |
| Vein dissection or torsion | 6 | 1.02 |
| Other mechanical bypass damage | 5 | 0.56 |
| Bypass compression | 3 | 0.34 |
Comprehensive error detection efficacy using various methods (ROC analysis).
| Examination Method | TP | FN | AUC | Criterion | Sensitivity | Specificity | 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DUS | 37 (29.4%) | 3 (2.4%) | 0.898 | <24 cm/s | 80% | 80% | 0.792–1.0 | 0.00001 |
| SRA | 7 (1.13%) | 22 (3.56%) | 0.71 | <6 pt | 65% | 60% | 0.618–0.802 | 0.00001 |
| HBF | 57 (21.35%) | 2 (0.75%) | 0.709 | <53 mL/min | 70% | 70% | 0.613–0.806 | 0.00001 |
| SVS/ISCVS | 68 (7.68%) | 25 (5.8%) | 0.685 | >6 pt | 40% | 37% | 0.263–0.368 | 0.00001 |
| DSA | 34 (51.51%) | 2 (3.03%) | 0.494 | Visible mistake | NA | NA | 0.431–0.556 | 0.8412 |
TP—true positive, a detected error; FN—false negative, undetected error; AUC—Area Under Curve; 95% CI—95% confidence interval; DUS—Doppler ultrasound postoperative scan measuring the mid-graft PSV (peak systolic velocity); SRA—subjective runoff assessment (1–8), HBF—hydrostatic bypass flow; SVS/ISCVS—preoperative assessment of SVS/ISCVS scale (1–20) in addition to the Global Limb Anatomic Staging System (GLASS) score; DSA—intraoperative digital subtraction angiography (error/no error visible). The percentage of the TP and FN percentage presented in the table refers to the absolute number of tests presented in Figure 4.
Figure 4The rising number of detected errors and its influence on the early results.
Comparison of runoff assessment methods.
| Advantage | HBF | DSA | SRA | Doppler | SVS/ISCVS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control of peripheral (1) “runoff” | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Screen errors intraoperatively | Yes | Yes | Yes (2) | Yes (3) | No |
| Improve early outcome | Yes | Yes | Yes (2) | Yes (3) | No |
| Repeatable | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| Prevent unnecessary reoperation | Yes | Yes | No | No | No |
| Sensitive to discreet occlusion | Yes | Yes | No | Yes (3) | No |
| Fast (in performance) | Yes | No | Yes | No | No |
| Cheap | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes |
| Additional equipment not needed | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes |
| No contrast needed | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No |
| Does not extend operation time | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes |
| Easy to learn | Yes | Yes (2) | No | Yes (2) | Yes |
| Predicting long result | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| No risk of infection transfer | Yes (4) | Yes (4) | Yes (4) | No | Yes |
| Control of inflow and proximal anastomosis | No | Yes | No | Yes | No |
Key: (1) means distal anastomosis, graft and its tissue channel, distal runoff vessels; (2) depends on the clinician’s experience; (3) if used intraoperatively; (4) very low; green box—advantage; yellow box—conditional advantage/disadvantage; pink box—disadvantage.