Endovascular Treatment of Aneurysms with Complex Aortic Anatomy

pp. 267-272

Authors

  • Luis Mariano Ferreira Clínica La Sagrada Familia / Hospital Alemán https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2530-783X
  • Miguel Ferrer Clínica La Sagrada Familia
  • Leonela Aloy Clínica La Sagrada Familia
  • Oscar Marcelo Dávila Vásquez Clínica La Sagrada Familia
  • Ricardo La Mura Clínica La Sagrada Familia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7775/rac.v91i4.189

Keywords:

Abdominal aortic aneurysm; Endovascular repair; Device modification; Durability; Fenestrated branched endovascular aortic repair; Long-term outcomes; Thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm; Yuxtarenal Aorta; Complex Aorta; Company-manufactured device; Physician-modified endo-grafts.

Abstract

Background: Arterial anatomy is the main limiting factor for standard endovascular aortic (EVAR) approach. We present our experience for endovascular repair of complex aortic aneurysms.
Methods: This is a retrospective observational study in patients with complex aneurysms (juxta/pararenal and thoracoabdominal) treated consecutively with: fenestrated (FEVAR), branched (BEVAR), EndoAnchors (ESAR), or chimney (ChEVAR) stents. The decision of the technique was determined based on the arterial anatomy.
Results: The last 50 procedures were evaluated (6 women; mean age 71.3 years; diameter 69.6 mm; and 3 patients with complicated aneurysms), among whom 22 received FEVAR (2.8 fenestrated stents/patient), 11 BEVAR, 11 ESAR and 6 ChEVAR (1.8 chimney stents/patient). Technical success rate was 100% (absence of type I or III endoleak with adequate patency of the visceral vessels). Three patients died within the first 30 days (6%). During follow-up, 5 patients presented with renal artery occlusion, treated successfully in 4 cases. Four patients developed type IA endoleak (3 secondary ESAR and one ChEVAR), one patient IC endoleak and almost a quarter of cases type IIIB endoleak (22%, 3 out of 11 patients receiving ESAR, none of the industrial FEVAR group). Overall survival was 88.6% at one year, and 86.5% of cases were free from reoperation.
Conclusions: This is the first publication in our setting that shows a global approach to the patient with complex aortic aneurysm, according to the anatomical characteristics. These technologies already play a primary role in the treatment of these patients.

How to cite this article:

Ferreira LM, Ferrer M, Aloy L, La Mura AR. Endovascular Treatment of Aneurysms with Complex Aortic Anatomy. Rev Argent Cardiol 2023;91:267-72. http://dx.doi.org/10.7775/rac.v91.i4.20561

Published

2023-09-06

Issue

Section

ORIGINAL ARTICLES

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