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Predictive Factors for the Development of Type II Endoleaks

Marchiori, Andre; von Ristow, Arno; Guimaraes, MarceloView Profile; Schönholz, ClaudioView Profile; Uflacker, RenanView Profile. Journal of Endovascular Therapy18. 3 (Jun 2011): 299-305.

Abstract (summary)

To define predictive factors for endoleak type II (EL-II) based on quantifiable factors in the imaging studies of patients undergoing endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR). The data on 208 consecutive patients (137 men; mean age 75.2 years, range 62-84) who underwent EVAR between the years 2003 and 2008 were retrospectively reviewed. The abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) diameter ranged from 4.8 to 12.8 cm. Data were collected on the type of AAA; the type of stent-graft (aortomonoiliac versus bifurcated); the performance of hypogastric artery embolization; the presence, number, diameter, and patency of aortoiliac branches identified on the pre and post-EVAR imaging studies; and the presence and type of EL-II (transient vs. persistent) with the goal of identifying any imaging-based predictive factors for the development of EL-II. Among the 208 cases, 11 patients had endoleaks other than type II and were excluded, leaving 195 patients for analysis. In all, 28 (13.4%) patients were diagnosed with EL-II. All had ≥4 patent lumbar arteries (mean diameter >2.3 mm). Ten patients with a transient EL-II had a mean of 4.3 patent lumbar arteries, which had diameters <2 mm (mean 1.5 mm). In the 18 patients with persistent EL-II, the mean diameter of the 4 lumbar arteries was 2.7 mm; at least 1 of the lumbar arteries was >2 mm. The presence of at least 4 patent lumbar arteries (p<0.001) and at least 1 patent hypogastric artery (p<0.001) were predictive factors for EL-II. At least 1 lumbar artery >2 mm in diameter was a positive predictive factor for the development of persistent EL-II (p<0.001). Patent hypogastric and lumbar arteries are significantly associated with a higher risk of developing EL-II. Larger diameter lumbar arteries tend to be associated with persistent EL-IIs, while lumbar arteries <2 mm would more likely be seen with a transient EL-II. If substantiated in larger studies, these angiographic criteria may guide early treatment of EL-II to avoid aneurysm sac expansion and potential rupture.

Indexing (details)

Title
Predictive Factors for the Development of Type II Endoleaks
Volume
Issue
Pages
299-305
Number of pages
7
Publication year
2011
Publication date
Jun 2011
Year
2011
Section
CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Publisher
Allen Press Publishing Services
Place of publication
Phoenix
Country of publication
United Kingdom
ISSN
15266028
Source type
Scholarly Journals
Language of publication
English
Document type
Feature, Journal Article
Document feature
Diagrams;Tables;Photographs;References
Accession number
21679064
ProQuest document ID
874656685
Document URL
http://search.proquest.com/docview/874656685?accountid=9652
Copyright
Copyright Allen Press Publishing Services Jun 2011
Last updated
2012-03-07
Database
ProQuest Central

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