4.5 Article

Serious complications that require surgical interventions after endoluminal stent-graft placement for the treatment of infrarenal aortic aneurysms

Journal

JOURNAL OF VASCULAR SURGERY
Volume 34, Issue 2, Pages 198-203

Publisher

MOSBY, INC
DOI: 10.1067/mva.2001.116975

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Background: Endoluminal stent-graft placement for the treatment of infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysms has gained widespread acceptance because it is associated with lower peri-interventional morbidity than conventional transabdominal surgery. In this study the long-term morbidity of the procedure was evaluated. Methods and Results: Between September 1994 and December 1998, 150 patients (age, 69.6 +/-8.49 years; 142 men, 8 women) with abdominal aortic aneurysms were treated with the placement of an intravascular nitinol stent-graft (Stentor [55] and Vanguard-System [95]); there were eight tubular grafts and 142 bifurcated grafts. Initial placement of the stent-graft was successful in 144 patients. Mean follow-up was 49 +/- 25 months. In 13.3% of stent-graft placements we encountered the following complications: 4 cases of migration or dislocation of the prosthesis (30.5 +/-7.4 months after placement); 2 ruptures of the aorta (26.7 and 15.0 months after placement); 3 recurrent thromboses of the stent-graft (25.5 +/-5.3 months after placement); 3 endoleaks (27.5 +/- 15.7 months after placement); and 5 infections of the prosthesis (26.6 +/- 16.5 months after placement). There was no correlation between the complications and the type of stent used. All of these patients were treated by surgical replacement of the prosthesis with a Dacron graft. Conclusions: (1) The results suggest that most complications are due to a continuation of the disease process leading to loosening of the prosthesis. (2) Explantation of the prosthesis and surgical repair is feasible but bears additional risks. (3) Because the onset of reperfusion of the excluded aneurysm cannot be predicted, all patients with infrarenal aortic stent-grafts require frequent computer tomographic follow-up. (4) Finally, the results call for further improvements in the design of the stent-graft.

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