Along the years, scientific clinical data have been collected concerning the possible saphenous flow restoration without any ablation and according with the CHIVA strategy. Moreover, in 2013 a Cochrane review highlighted the smaller recurrence risk following a CHIVA strategy rather than a saphenous stripping. Nevertheless, the saphenous sparing strategy surely remains a not-so-worldwide-spread and accepted therapeutic option, also because considered not so immediate and easy to perform. Aim of this paper is to provide an easily accessible guide to an everyday use of a saphenous sparing strategy for chronic venous disease, highlighting how even apparently too complicated reflux patterns classifications can be fastly and successfully managed and exploited for a hemodynamic correction.
OBJECTIVES
Our goal was to report outcomes of the endovascular repair of urgent thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms (TAAAs) using the Cook Zenith t-Branch off-the-shelf multibranched endograft.
METHODS
Between 2010 and 2020, we collected patients with TAAAs who received an urgent endovascular repair using the Cook Zenith t-Branch (had a rupture, symptoms or diameter >80 mm). Thirty-day mortality, spinal cord ischaemia (SCI) and clinical success were assessed as early outcomes. Freedom from reintervention, target visceral vessel patency and survival were considered during follow-up.
RESULTS
Sixty-five cases were managed using the Cook Zenith t-Branch for 27 (42%) TAAA ruptures, 8 (12%) symptomatic TAAAs and 30 (46%) asymptomatic TAAAs with a diameter >80 mm. Crawford’s extent I–II–III and IV were noted in 54 (83%) and 11 (17%), respectively. Eleven (17%) patients had SCI with 3 (5%) cases of permanent paraplegia. Postoperative dialysis (P = 0.04) and ruptured TAAAs (P = 0.05) were associated with SCI. Sixteen (25%) patients had reinterventions within the first 30 days postoperatively. The 30-day mortality was 14% (9). Ruptured TAAAs (P = 0.05) and technical failures (P = 0.01) were correlated with in-hospital mortality. Clinical success was 78% (51 patients). The mean follow-up was 18 ± 14 months. Survival at 24 months was 47% with no late TAAA-related deaths. Patients with ruptured TAAAs had lower survival than those who did not have ruptured TAAAs (52% vs 60% at 1 year; P = 0.05). Target visceral vessel patency and freedom from reintervention at 24 months were 89% and 60%, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS
An off-the-shelf multibranched endograft is safe and effective for treating urgent TAAAs. Postoperative SCI and 30-day mortality are satisfactory for this challenging clinical scenario. The early reintervention rate is not negligible. Midterm survival is low, especially in patients with a ruptured TAAA; therefore, accurate patient selection is mandatory.
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