| Literature DB >> 34164193 |
Paula R Keschenau1, Alexander Gombert1, Mohammed E Barbati1, Houman Jalaie1, Johannes Kalder1, Michael J Jacobs1,2, Drosos Kotelis1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The surgical treatment of aortic infections (AIs) is challenging. In situ aortic reconstructions represent nowadays the favored therapy for fit patients and xenogeneic materials are used increasingly. The aim of this study was to present our experience with xenogeneic reconstructions for AI using self-made bovine pericardium tubes and/or the biosynthetic Omniflow® II graft.Entities:
Keywords: Aneurysm; bioprosthesis; infected; prosthesis-related infections; transplants; vascular grafting
Year: 2021 PMID: 34164193 PMCID: PMC8182519 DOI: 10.21037/jtd-20-3481
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Thorac Dis ISSN: 2072-1439 Impact factor: 2.895
Figure 1Self-made bovine pericardium tube graft for aortic reconstruction. It is manufactured on-table from a rectangular pericardium patch by suturing it around a metal dilator or a syringe of the respective size. We use a double running suture line with intermittent knots so that the length of the graft can be adjusted as required.
Figure 2Omniflow® II graft used for xenogeneic reconstruction. (A) Reconstruction of the aortic bifurcation using only the Omniflow® II graft; (B) composite reconstruction of the aortic bifurcation consisting of a bovine pericardium tube and the Omniflow® II graft; (C) composite reconstruction of the visceral aorta using a bovine pericardium tube graft and the Omniflow® II graft for the visceral artery bypasses.
Patient characteristics
| Patient characteristics | Overall (n=28) | Subgroup death (n=11) |
|---|---|---|
| Basic demographics | ||
| Age (years) | 68 [28–84] | 68 [28–84] |
| Male, n [%] | 23 [82] | 9 [82] |
| Comorbidities, n [%] | ||
| Hypertension | 26 [93] | 9 [82] |
| Coronary artery disease | 11 [39] | 4 [36] |
| Chronic renal insufficiency | 6 [21] | 4 [36] |
| Diabetes | 6 [21] | 3 [27] |
| COPD | 3 [11] | 2 [18] |
| Malignoma | 4 [14] | 1 [9] |
| Under immunosuppression | 4 [14] | 2 [18] |
| Rheumatoid arthritis | 2 [7] | 1 [9] |
| Crohn’s disease | 1 [4] | 1 [9] |
| Psoriasis | 1 [4] | 0 [0] |
| PAD | 10 [36] | 3 [37] |
| Thrombophilia | 1 [4] | 0 [0] |
| Congestive heart failure | 1 [4] | 1 [9] |
| Obesity (BMI >25) | 10 [36] | 4 [36] |
| ASA class ≥4 | 15 [54] | 6 [55] |
| Graft infection | 18 [64] | 6 [55] |
| Native aortic infection | 10 [29] | 5 [45] |
| Prior aortic surgery | 18 [64] | 6 [55] |
| Urgent/emergent procedure | 5 [18] | 2 [7] |
| Prior open abdominal surgery (non-aortic) | 4 [14] | 2 [18] |
| Urgent/emergent procedure | 2 [7] | 1 [9] |
Data are presented as n [%] or median [range]. PAD, peripheral arterial disease; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; BMI, body mass index; ASA, America Society of Anesthesiologists.
Types of aortic graft infections/prior aortic procedures
| Type of graft infection/prior aortic procedure | Total patient number: n=28 |
|---|---|
| AEF | 3 [11] |
| After TEVAR | 2 [7] |
| After ascending + arch OAR | 1 [4] |
| ADF | 2 [7] |
| After infrarenal OAR | 2 [7] |
| Infrarenal OAR | 4 [14] |
| BEVAR | 1 [4] |
| TEVAR + chimney | 2 [7] |
| TEVAR + chimney left subclavian artery | 1 [4] |
| TEVAR + reverse chimney celiac trunc | 1 [4] |
| EVAR | 6 [21] |
Data are presented as n [%]. Percentages are calculated referring to the total study population of 28 patients. AEF, aortoesophageal fistula; ADF, aortoduodenal fistula; OAR, open aortic repair; EVAR, endovascular aortic repair; TEVAR, thoracic EVAR; BEVAR, branched EVAR.
Clinical presentation
| Clinical aspect | Overall (n=28) | Subgroup death (n=11) |
|---|---|---|
| Symptoms | ||
| Asymptomatic | 4 [14] | 1 [9] |
| Symptomatic | 24 [86] | 10 [91] |
| Unspecific/fatigue | 3 [11] | 2 [18] |
| Recurrent fever | 2 [7] | 1 [9] |
| Pain | 1 [4] | 0 [0] |
| Sepsis | 4 [14] | 1 [9] |
| Recurrent GI bleeding | 1 [4] | 1 [9] |
| Contained rupture | 8 [29] | 3 [27] |
| Hemorrhagic shock | 3 [11] | 1 [9] |
| Tracheal compression | 1 [4] | 1 [9] |
| Chronic cutaneous fistula | 1 [4] | 0 [0] |
| Laboratory parameters | ||
| WBC/nL | 11 [4–22] | 17 [6–22] |
| CRP mg/L | 61 [16–350] | 81 [16–350] |
| PCT mg/mL | 0.1 [0–12] | 0.8 [0–12] |
| Hb g/dL | 10 [6–15] | 9 [6–15] |
| Hct % | 30 [18–44] | 27 [18–41] |
Data are presented as n [%] or median [range]. WBC, white blood cell count; CRP, C-reactive protein; PCT, procalcitonin; Hb, hemoglobin; Hct, hematocrit.
Procedural characteristics
| Procedural characteristics | Overall (n=28) | Subgroup death (n=11) |
|---|---|---|
| Extent of procedure | ||
| Infrarenal repair | 11 [39] | 3 [27] |
| Juxtarenal repair | 7 [25] | 3 [27] |
| + left renal bypass | 1 [4] | 0 [0] |
| TAAA Type IV repair | 1 [4] | 0 [0] |
| TAAA Type V repair | 3 [11] | 3 [27] |
| TAA repair | 4 [14] | 1 [9] |
| + left subclavian bypass | 1 [4] | 0 [0] |
| Ascending + arch + proximal descending | 1 [4] | 0 [0] |
| Ascending + left carotid and left subclavian bypass | 1 [4] | 1 [9] |
| Urgency of procedure | ||
| Elective | 7 [25] | 2 [18] |
| Urgent | 10 [36] | 5 [45] |
| Emergent | 11 [39] | 4 [36] |
| Duration of procedure | ||
| Operating time (minutes) | 383 [247–585] | 385 [245–541] |
Data are presented as n [%] or median [range]. TAAA, thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm; TAA, thoracic aortic aneurysm.
Figure 3Overview over detected pathogens. Cand., Candida; E. coli, Eschericia coli; Bact., Bacteroides; Morg., Morganella; Staph.lugd., Stapylococcus lugdunensis; Staph. const., Stapylococcus constellatus; Staph. haem., staphylococcus haemolyticus; Staph.epi., Staphylococcus epidermidis; Strept.or., Streptococcus oralis; Strept. pneum., Streptococcus pneumonia; Lactobac.rhamn, Lactobacillus rhamnosus; Enteroc., Enterococcus; List.moncyt., Listeria monocytogenes; Prop., Propionibacterium; MSSA, methicillin-sensitive staphylococcus aureus; MRSA, methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus; VRE, vancomycin-resistant enterococcus.
Early complications
| Complication | Overall (n=28) | Subgroup in-hospital death (n=9) |
|---|---|---|
| No complication | 6 [21] | 0 [0] |
| Major bleeding | 4 [14] | 4 [44] |
| Acute cardiac insufficiency/severe arrhythmia | 2 [7] | 2 [22] |
| Pneumonia/pleural empyema | 8 [29] | 5 [56] |
| Sepsis | 11 [39] | 8 [89] |
| Transient dialysis | 12 [43] | 0 [0] |
| Death while on dialysis | 7 [21] | 7 [78] |
| Stroke | 1 [4] | 0 [0] |
| Minor subarachnoideal bleeding | 1 [4] | 1 [11] |
| Paraparesis | 1 [4] | 0 [0] |
| Extremity ischemia | 2 [7] | 1 [11] |
| Gluteal ischemia | 1 [4] | 0 [0] |
| Mesenteric ischemia | 1 [4] | 1 [11] |
| Compartment syndrome calf | 2 [7] | 1 [11] |
| Transient liver failure | 1 [4] | 0 [0] |
| Malignant hypertension due to stenosis distal anastomosis | 1 [4] | 0 [0] |
| Deep venous thrombosis | 1 [4] | 0 [0] |
| Anastomotic insufficiency of gastric esophagoplasty | 1 [4] | 0 [0] |
| Endokarditis | 1 [4] | 1 [11] |
Data are presented as n [%].
Figure 4Kaplan-Meier analysis of overall survival. A 10% standard error was used as cut-off point.