Endovascular treatment of patients with types A and B thoracic aortic dissection using Relay thoracic stent-grafts: results from the RESTORE Patient Registry
- PMID: 21521051
- DOI: 10.1583/10-3233MR.1
Endovascular treatment of patients with types A and B thoracic aortic dissection using Relay thoracic stent-grafts: results from the RESTORE Patient Registry
Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the safety and performance of Relay stent-grafts in patients with acute or chronic aortic dissections.
Methods: Patients with types A or B aortic dissections suitable for treatment with Relay stent-grafts and followed for 2 years after thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR) were identified from a company-sponsored registry database established in January 2006. Ninety-one consecutive patients (69 men; mean age 65 years) underwent TEVAR with Relay stent-grafts for dissection. Most patients (76, 84%) had type B dissections; 61 of all patients were classified as chronic and 30 as acute.
Results: The technical success rate was 95% (97% in acute, 95% in chronic, and 93% in type B dissections). The type I endoleak rate was 7% (7% in acute and 8% in chronic dissections); all occurred in patients with type B dissections. Paraplegia, paraparesis, and stroke occurred in 4, 1, and 2 patients, respectively; 2 cases of paraplegia occurred in patients with acute type B dissections. Thirty-day mortality was 8% (13% in acute and 5% in chronic dissections); all deaths occurred in patients with type B dissections. The 2-year survival rate was 82% in the overall population and 84% in patients with type B dissections.
Conclusion: The combination of Relay's features, such as stent conformability, radial force, atraumatic design, and controlled deployment and fixation, may contribute to the safety of the Relay stent-grafts for the treatment of thoracic aortic dissections, including acute and chronic type B dissections.
Comment in
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Stent-grafts for aortic dissection: what is really needed?J Endovasc Ther. 2011 Apr;18(2):144-5. doi: 10.1583/10-3233C.1. J Endovasc Ther. 2011. PMID: 21521052 No abstract available.
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