Multi-center experience with an off-the-shelf... : Journal of Vascular Surgery (original) (raw)
Clinical research study: Thoracic aortic disease & dissections
Multi-center experience with an off-the-shelf single retrograde thoracic branch endoprosthesis for acute aortic pathology
- Kathryn L. DiLosa
- Michelle Manesh
- Lucas Ruiter Kanamori
- Mabel Chan
- Gregory A. Magee
- Fernando Fleischman
- Jason T. Lee
- Sara L. Zettervall
- Matthew P. Sweet
- Joel P. Harding
- Shahab Toursavadkohi
- Javairiah Fatima
- Gustavo S. Oderich
- Sukgu M. Han
- Steven Maximus
Journal of Vascular Surgery
81
(
4
)
:p
839
-
846
,
April 2025
.
| DOI: 10.1016/j.jvs.2024.12.007
Abstract
Objective
The thoracic branch endoprosthesis (TBE) (W.L. Gore) offers an off-the-shelf single option for thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR) of aortic arch pathology with sealing in zones 0 to 2. This study reports the early outcomes of TBE-TEVAR for acute indications.
Methods
Clinical data, imaging, and outcomes of patients treated with TBE-TEVAR at seven institutions were retrospectively reviewed (March 2017 to March 2024). Patients treated for complicated aortic dissection, symptomatic aneurysm/pseudoaneurysm, or blunt traumatic aortic injury by urgent/emergent repair were included. End points were 30-day mortality, major adverse events (mortality, myocardial infarction, prolonged intubation, stroke, paraplegia, dialysis, or bowel ischemia), and technical success.
Results
Of 356 patients treated by TBE-TEVAR, 107 (69.0% male; mean age, 60 ± 15 years) underwent repair for acute indications including 70 dissections (65%), 21 symptomatic aneurysms/pseudoaneurysms (20%), and 16 blunt traumatic aortic injuries (15%). Eight patients (8%) had repair immediately after open ascending repair of a type A dissection. Proximal sealing was in zone 2 in 91 patients (89%) and zone 0 to 1 in 11 patients (11%) who required cervical debranching. Technical success was achieved in all (99%) except one patient with acute dissection and aneurysmal degeneration requiring staged repair. At 30 days, two patients (2%) died, and 19 patients (18%) developed major adverse events, including stroke in six patients (6%) and paraplegia in six patients (6%). Five patients (5%; all Zone 2) had retrograde dissections, all treated for acute or subacute dissection, with no mortality. Mean follow-up was 55 ± 171 days, and 96 patients (94%) had follow-up imaging. Type IA or III endoleak occurred in seven patients (7%), retrograde branch occlusion in one (1%), and eleven (10%) required reintervention. Cumulative aortic-related mortality was three (3%) from aortic rupture.
Conclusions
Urgent/emergent TEVAR with the Gore TBE device in acute pathology offers low mortality, stroke, and paraplegia risk. Longer follow-up is needed to assess effectiveness of the repair.
Copyright © 2025Elsevier, Inc.