Spontaneous retroperitoneal hematoma treated with transarterial embolization: a systematic review and metanalysis

Author:

Tiralongo FrancescoORCID,Toscano Stefano,Mosconi Cristina,Iezzi Roberto,Giurazza Francesco,Castiglione Davide Giuseppe,Falsaperla Daniele,Vacirca Francesco,Ini’ Corrado,Corvino Fabio,Lavalle Salvatore,Venturini Massimo,Foti Pietro Valerio,Palmucci Stefano,Basile Antonio

Abstract

Abstract Purpose The purpose of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to evaluate the safety, technical, and clinical effectiveness of percutaneous Transarterial Embolization (TAE) in treating spontaneous retroperitoneal hematomas as well as assess treatment outcomes in patients who underwent target or empirical embolization. Materials and methods Through the PubMed, Embase, and Google Scholar databases, an extensive search was performed in the fields of spontaneous retroperitoneal hematomas treated with transcatheter arterial embolization. We collected pooled data on 141 patients from 6 separate articles selected according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Results Technical success rate was 100% in all six studies, for both targeted and empirical embolization. The clinical success rate varied from 56.3 to 89.5%. The total number of complications related to the embolization procedure was 10 events out of 116 procedures analyzed. Empirical or empirical embolization was performed in three studies, where the source of active bleeding was not evident during DSA. A meta-analysis compared the rebleeding rates between targeted and empirical embolization groups. The odds ratio from pooled data from the three assessed studies (72 patients) showed no significant difference in rebleeding rates after empirical TAE compared with targeted TAE. Conclusions TAE is a safe, effective, and potentially life-saving procedure for the treatment of life-threatening spontaneous retroperitoneal hematomas. Empirical and targeted TAE procedures demonstrate a relatively low risk of complications, compared to the high technical and relatively high clinical success rates.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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