Long-term Results of Endovascular AAA Repair Using a Homemade Aortomonoiliac PTFE Device

Author:

Ingle Hemant1,Fishwick Guy1,Garnham Andrew1,Thompson Matthew M.1,Bell Peter R.F.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Vascular Surgery and Radiology, Leicester Royal Infirmary, Leicester, England, UK

Abstract

Purpose: To assess the long-term results of a homemade aortomonoiliac polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) device used for endovascular abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair. Methods: A vascular audit database was interrogated to identify 58 consecutive AAA patients (all men; median age 73 years, range 56–88) who underwent aortomonoiliac stent-graft repair. AAAs were eligible for endovascular treatment if the infrarenal neck was ≥15 mm long and ≤28 mm in diameter. Results: Nine (15.5%) procedures failed, 8 during the procedure and 1 on the 7th postoperative day; 8(13.8%) patients were converted, but one was unfit for surgery. There was one intraprocedural stroke, and 3 (5.2%) patients died within 30 days. The primary success rate (no conversion or mortality) was 79.3%. Over a median follow-up of 45 months (range 23–80), there were 3 (5.2%) graft occlusions, 1 kink requiring stent implantation, and 1 expanding sac without identifiable endoleak. There were 11 (19.0%) endoleaks in 10 patients, 9 type I leaks (2 proximal) and 1 type II. One patient with a distal type I endoleak (treated) also exhibited a type III leak at 2 years, but the sac size had not increased. There was a 40% incidence of bilateral buttock claudication, which was serious in only 1 patient. The long-term survival rate by Kaplan-Meier life-table analysis was 57% at 4 years. Conclusions: Implantation of an aortomonoiliac PTFE device can be achieved with good primary success, and the stent-graft seems durable over the long term. Proximal type I endoleaks are rare, but distal endoleaks from the contralateral common iliac artery can be solved by using a different covered stent.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Surgery

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