Literature DB >> 34805892

Thoracic endovascular aortic repair with left subclavian artery reconstruction for blunt traumatic aortic injury in elderly patients.

Li Zhang1, Huaping Wu1, Xiang Li1, Kaiping Lv1, Huanhuan Song1, Cunliang Zeng1, Jianlin Liu2.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Blunt thoracic aortic injury (BTAI) is rare in elderly patients. As the population ages and life expectancy increases, the frequency of this injury will increase, while the treatment and outcomes remain unclear.
METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed the collected data of patients >60 years old with BTAI to investigate the mechanism of trauma; time interval from injury to diagnosis; type and timing of surgical intervention; aortic arch pattern; choice of left subclavian artery reconstruction; endograft to treat BTAI; length of the endovascular procedure; endoleaks; complications including stroke, paraplegia, and renal failure; length of hospital stay (LOS) and intensive care unit stay (L.ICUS); and 30-day mortality.
RESULTS: Five elderly trauma patients were found to have BTAI. Four (80%) were males, the cohort mean age was 68 years, the major mechanism of trauma was fall injury, and the associated injury was thoracic trauma. All patients were transferred to our hospital, and emergency computed tomography angiography showed BTAI in each patient. The average time interval from injury to diagnosis was 2.7 days. Two patients suddenly showed signs of instability in their vital signs and underwent immediate endovascular repair, while 3 patients underwent delayed endovascular repair. The injury site was located in the aortic isthmus just distal to the origin of the left subclavian artery; the aortic arch pattern was II (80.0%) in 4 cases and III in 1 case (20.0%). The choice of left subclavian artery reconstruction included chimney, double chimney, prefenestration, and chimney combined with in situ fenestration. Endografts to treat BTAI included the Ankura (Lifetech Scientific, Shenzhen, China) and the C-TAG (W.L. Gore & Associates, Flagstaff, AZ USA).The length of the endovascular procedure was 75.4 min; there were no endoleaks and no complications including stroke, paraplegia, or renal failure. The average LOS was 25 days, and the average L.ICUS of 2 patients was 15 days, with no 30-day mortality.
CONCLUSION: Elderly patients with fall injury should promptly exclude BTAI. Thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR) with a left subclavian artery reconstruction technique provided good results without procedure-related or neurological complications. Because of the low incidence of this type of injury, we are unable to provide any evidence to guide the treatment option for this life-threatening condition.
© 2019 Shanghai Journal of Interventional Medicine Press. Production and hosting by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of KeAi.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Blunt traumatic aortic injury; Reconstruction of left subclavian artery; Thoracic endovascular repair

Year:  2019        PMID: 34805892      PMCID: PMC8562287          DOI: 10.1016/j.jimed.2019.10.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Interv Med        ISSN: 2590-0293


Introduction

Blunt traumatic aortic injury (BTAI) is a life-threatening emergency associated with high mortality, most commonly caused by a rapid acceleration/deceleration injury sustained through a motor vehicle accident, falls from height, and/or blunt thoracic trauma. Open surgical repair had remained the standard treatment option for BTAI since it was successfully introduced in 1959. However, with technological advances, thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR) offers an alternative treatment option for BTAI. TEVAR is a less invasive surgical approach for the management of these already critical patients. The incidence of vascular injuries in patients aged 65 years or older is approximately 0.7% according to Konstantinidis and colleagues. As the population ages and life expectancy increases, the frequency of this injury will increase in the elderly and thus it behooves us to understand the treatments and outcomes in this patient population. Recently, Malgor et al. analyzed data from the US Trauma National Registry and found that BTAI was the most common vascular injury in that subset of elderly patients. The length of hospital stay (LOS), length of intensive care unit stay (L.ICUS), and mortality was significantly higher in geriatric patients sustaining any vascular injury compared with a general nongeriatric adult trauma population.

Methods

Data of patients with BTAI were retrospectively reviewed at our regional medical center from the records of patients treated from August 2016 to September 2018. Patients >60 years with BTAI were included, and the data recorded included the patient demographics, mechanism of trauma, associated injures, vital signs, the choice of diagnostic imaging, the time interval from injury to diagnosis, the type of surgical intervention (endovascular vs. open), the timing of surgical intervention (immediate vs. delayed), aortic arch pattern, the choice of left subclavian artery reconstruction, the endograft used to treat the BTAI, the length of the endovascular procedure, endoleaks, complications including stroke, paraplegia, and renal failure, length of hospital stay (LOS), length of intensive care unit stay (L.ICUS), and 30-day mortality.

Results

Over the past 2 years, only 5 elderly trauma patients were found to have BTAI. Four (80%) were males and 1 (20%) was female. The cohort mean age was 68 years (range: 62 to 77). All but one patient (in a motor vehicle accident) were involved in a fall injury. The most significant component of the associated injures was thoracic trauma. Computed tomography showed mediastinum widening and suspected aortic dissection in all cases. All patients were transferred to our hospital and emergency computed tomography (CT) angiography showed a BTAI for all patients. The average time interval from injury to diagnosis was 2.7 days (range: 6 h to 10 days), 2 patients suddenly showed signs of instability in their vital signs and underwent immediate endovascular repair and postoperatively entered the intensive care unit for mechanical ventilation, closed thoracic drainage, and blood transfusion. Three patients underwent delayed endovascular repair (Table 1). The injury site was located in the aortic isthmus just distal to the origin of the left subclavian artery (Fig. 1), the aortic arch pattern was II in 4 cases (80.0%) and III in 1 case (20.0%). The choices of left subclavian artery reconstruction were chimney (20.0%), double chimney (20.0%), prefenestration (40.0%), chimney combined with in situ fenestration (20.0%). Endografts used to treat the BTAI included Ankura (Lifetech Scientific, Shenzhen, China) and the C-TAG (W.L. Gore & Associates, Flagstaff, AZ USA) (Fig. 2). The length of the endovascular procedure was 75.4 min (range: 17–118 min); there were no endoleaks and no complications including stroke, paraplegia, and renal failure. The average length of hospital stay (LOS) was 25 days (range: 10–45 days), the average length of intensive care unit stay (L.ICUS) of 2 patients was 15 days (range:10–20 days) and there was no 30-day mortality (Table 2).
Table 1

Patient demographics and characteristics.

VariablesMean (range) or percentage (n = 5)
Age (years)68 (62–77)
Male4 (80.0%)
Mechanism of trauma
 Fall injury4 (80.0%)
 Motor vehicle accidents1 (20.0%)
Associated injures
 Rib fracture5 (100%)
 Clavicle fractures2 (40.0%)
 Vertebral fracture5 (100%)
 Pleural effusion4 (80.0%)
 Pulmonary contusion4 (80.0%)
 Brain injury1 (20.0%)
Vital signs stable3 (60.0%)
ICU admission2 (40.0%)
Mechanical ventilation2 (40.0%)
Closed thoracic drainage2 (40.0%)
Blood transfusion2 (40.0%)
Fig. 1

Aortic angiography pre-TEVAR shows aortic isthmus injury.

Fig. 2

Aortic angiography post-TEVAR showed no endoleak with good patency of the left subclavian artery

WXL:TEVAR ​+ ​double chimney, Ankura;

PLC:TEVAR ​+ ​prefenestration, Ankura

CSY:TEVAR ​+ ​prefenestration, Ankura

ZYK:TEVAR ​+ ​chimney+in situ fenestration, Ankura.

Table 2

Imaging diagnostic and intervention data.

Patient series
WXLFGHPLCCSYZYK
The time interval from injury to diagnosis10 days6 h8 h1 day2 days
Aortic arch patternIIII
Left subclavian arterydoublepre-pre-chimney+in situ
reconstructionchimneychimneyfenestrationfenestrationfenestration
The length of endovascular procedure (75.4min)109 min118 min17 min33 min100 min
EndograftANKURAC-TAGANKURAANKURAANKURA
LOS (25 days)41 days45 days17 days12 days10 days
L.ICUS (15 days)20 days10 days
Patient demographics and characteristics. Aortic angiography pre-TEVAR shows aortic isthmus injury. Aortic angiography post-TEVAR showed no endoleak with good patency of the left subclavian artery WXL:TEVAR ​+ ​double chimney, Ankura; PLC:TEVAR ​+ ​prefenestration, Ankura CSY:TEVAR ​+ ​prefenestration, Ankura ZYK:TEVAR ​+ ​chimney+in situ fenestration, Ankura. Imaging diagnostic and intervention data.

Discussion

BTAI is a life-threatening event associated with deceleration injuries. The incidence of BTAI is estimated between 1.5% and 2%, but the mortality rate is high. Eighty percent of patients with BTAI die before reaching a trauma center. For patients who survive till hospital arrival, 50% die within 24 h. Normal vital signs do not rule out aortic injury. A high degree of clinical suspicion and liberal use of imaging is necessary to prevent missed or delayed diagnoses. CT of the chest with intravenous contrast is strongly recommended to diagnose clinically significant BTAI. A study from Japan revealed that a longer time interval from hospital arrival to CT scan was associated with higher mortality in the emergency department in patients with BTAI. Besides surgical therapy, conservative treatment and endovascular therapy have been described. With the evolution of endovascular management of BTAI, there has been a transition from open repair to TEVAR. The rate of open repair decreased from 7.4% in 2007 to 1.9% in 2015, while TEVAR increased from 12.1% to 25.7% during the same period. We confirmed previous findings that endovascular repair is associated with decreased mortality, length of stay, and major complications including acute kidney injury. Single-center and multicenter studies demonstrated the feasibility of this technique with few post-procedural complications and reduced mortality rates., Despite the lack of randomized controlled trial evidence, clinicians are moving forward with endovascular treatment of BTAI based on meta-analyses of cohort studies and large clinical series. TEVAR for aortic isthmus injury just distal to the origin of the left subclavian artery (SCA) commonly requires covering the left subclavian artery to prevent an endoleak. Coverage of the left SCA showed a low incidence of complications in the follow-up period and revascularization of the left SCA seemed to be dispensable in most of these patients. However, in the patient cohort, the Disabilities of the Arm Shoulder and Hand (DASH) score increased with age. In elderly patients with BTAI combined with anemia and hypotension, an adequate and a favorable proximal sealing zone with the left subclavian artery reconstruction to prevent stroke, paraplegia, and left upper limb ischemia is optimal. In this study, the major mechanism of trauma for BTAI was a fall injury, and chest CT scanning with intravenous contrast as soon as possible can confirm the diagnosis and avoid treatment delay. Once the vital signs become unstable, endovascular repair should be expedited, but LOS and L.ICUS are significantly prolonged. TEVAR with several methods for reconstruction of the left subclavian artery have achieved satisfactory clinical results, no endoleak and no other complications including stroke, paraplegia, and renal failure. The length of prefenestration endovascular procedure is shorter than for the chimney procedure.

Conclusion

Elderly patients with a fall injury, especially those with unstable vital signs, should promptly exclude BTAI. TEVAR with a left subclavian artery reconstruction technique provided good results without procedure-related or neurological complications in elderly patients who had a BTAI located in the aortic arch. Because of the low incidence of this type of injury only a coordinated multicenter effort will be able to clarify the optimal management of BTAI, and this would be highly challenging due to the natural history of the condition.

Funding

None.

Declaration of competing interest

None.
  10 in total

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Review 4.  Do patients with blunt thoracic aortic injury present to hospital with unstable vital signs? A systematic review and meta-analysis.

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5.  Evaluation and management of blunt traumatic aortic injury: a practice management guideline from the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma.

Authors:  Nicole Fox; Diane Schwartz; Jose H Salazar; Elliott R Haut; Philipp Dahm; James H Black; Scott C Brakenridge; John J Como; Kimberly Hendershot; David R King; Adrian A Maung; Matthew L Moorman; Kimberly Nagy; Laura B Petrey; Ronald Tesoriero; Thomas M Scalea; Timothy C Fabian
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6.  Vascular trauma in geriatric patients: a national trauma databank review.

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Journal:  J Trauma       Date:  2011-10

7.  The Impact of Blunt Thoracic Aortic Injury on Patients Aged 80 Years or Older.

Authors:  R D Malgor; Th V Bilfinger; J McCormack; A K Tassiopoulos
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8.  Thoracic endovascular repair (TEVAR) versus open surgery for blunt traumatic thoracic aortic injury.

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9.  Treatment of blunt thoracic aortic injury in Germany-Assessment of the TraumaRegister DGU®.

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10.  Delay of computed tomography is associated with poor outcome in patients with blunt traumatic aortic injury: A nationwide observational study in Japan.

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