Emergency minimally invasive repair effectively
treats potentially fatal ruptured aneurysms in the abdomen without major
surgery, involves less recovery time and fewer discharges to in-patient care
facilities
A burst aneurysm (a local area of bulge) in the
abdominal aorta—the largest blood vessel in the body— is a deadly condition. In
fact, about half of these patients don't make it to the hospital in time. Those
who do more often than not face open surgery to repair the blood vessel. This
study finds that a minimally invasive interventional radiology treatment for
ruptured aneurysms called endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR) is safer than
open surgical repair and is associated with lower mortality rates, say researchers
Society of Interventional Radiology's 37th Annual Scientific Meeting in San
Francisco, Calif.
Abdominal aortic aneurysm is a local area of bulge
or dilatation in the abdominal aorta. If left untreated, this bulge can
increase in size and—after reaching a certain size--it can burst or rupture
causing fatal internal bleeding. In the United States, 9 percent of the
population over the age of 65 years has an abdominal aortic aneurysm, and there
are 15,000 deaths per year from ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysms. A man is
four times more likely to suffer an aneurysm of this kind than a woman, and
smokers are also four times as likely to develop the condition.
"People with peripheral arterial disease are at
risk of an aneurysm, which is a weakening and abnormal bulging of a major
artery. Once this area of bulge ruptures, this can lead to fatal internal
hemorrhage," explained Prasoon Mohan, M.D., co-author of the study from
the department of diagnostic and interventional radiology at Saint Francis Hospital
in Evanston, Ill. "Prior to the development of minimally invasive
endovascular repair, it was customary for individuals to undergo open surgery,
but now the majority of these elective aneurysm repairs are being done by
endovascular technique. It's only a question now of getting clinicians and
institutions to use the same technique in emergency settings for ruptured
aneurysms," he added.
"We found that endovascular aortic repair
resulted in significantly fewer hospital deaths after treatment compared to open
surgery, and the hospital stay associated with endovascular repair was less
than that of open surgery," said Mohan.
Once an abdominal aortic aneurysm reaches a
particular size, treatment is recommended to prevent its rupture. An abdominal
aneurysm can be treated by open surgery or by minimally invasive endovascular
technique. Open surgery requires a large incision in the abdomen and
replacement of the dilated portion of the aorta with a synthetic blood vessel.
In endovascular repair, an interventional radiologist makes a small incision in
the groin, which serves as an entry point for a thin wire catheter that is
guided through the femoral artery to the dilated portion of the aorta using
advanced medical imaging. Once in place, a stent graft that is compressed into
the catheter is opened up and the edges of the stent push against the aortic
wall and stays in place. Blood flows through the stent graft instead of the
abnormally dilated aorta and prevents it from rupturing.
For this retrospective study, researchers mined the
National Inpatient Sample (NIS), the largest national all payer database
containing information on around 8 million hospital encounters per year. This
database is a part of the larger Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project. The
objective was to find all cases of ruptured AAA from 2001 to 2009 that were
treated by either endovascular repair or open surgery and to compare their
outcomes. They found that 38,858 individuals, with an average age of 74, had
ruptured AAA and received one of these two treatments. Endovascular repair was
used to treat 6,790 patients; 32,069 individuals had open surgery.
The researchers reported that 39.7 percent of
patients who received open surgery died in the hospital, compared to 28.2
percent of patients who received EVAR. The average length of hospital stay for
people who had EVAR was about 11 days, but those who received open surgery
stayed almost 14 days. While 35 percent of patients were able to go home
without requiring further in-patient rehabilitation after endovascular repair,
only 22 percent of those who received open surgery were discharged to their
homes. Interestingly, regardless of the type of repair, women had worse
outcomes compared to men after the procedure.
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