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Clinical Trial
. 2024 Nov;80(5):1326-1335.e4.
doi: 10.1016/j.jvs.2024.05.020. Epub 2024 Jun 20.

Early outcomes from the pivotal trial of a four-branch off-the shelf solution to treat complex abdominal and type IV thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms

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Free article
Clinical Trial

Early outcomes from the pivotal trial of a four-branch off-the shelf solution to treat complex abdominal and type IV thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms

Mark A Farber et al. J Vasc Surg. 2024 Nov.
Free article

Abstract

Background: This study reports the 30-day outcomes of the primary arm of the GORE EXCLUDER Thoracoabdominal Branch Endoprosthesis (TAMBE) pivotal trial for complex abdominal aortic aneurysm repair.

Methods: This multicenter, nonrandomized, prospective study of the TAMBE device included patients enrolled in the primary study arm of extent IV thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms and pararenal aneurysms. Technical success and major adverse events were analyzed per the Society for Vascular Surgery guidelines.

Results: The 102 patients of the primary arm who underwent endovascular repair using the TAMBE device were a mean age of 73 ± 6.4 years (range, 58-82 years) and 84 (84.2%) were male. The mean body mass index was 28.3 ± 5.0 kg/m2. Fifty-nine patients (57.8%) were treated for extent IV and 43 (42.2%) pararenal aneurysms; the mean maximum diameter of the aneurysms was 59.4 ± 7.8 mm. A prophylactic cerebral spinal fluid drain was used in 10 patients (9.8%). Technical success was achieved in 99% of patients, with the single failure owing to unsuccessful cannulation of the left renal artery. Mean procedure time was 315 ± 103 minutes (range, 163-944 minutes), estimated blood loss was 300 ± 296 mL (range, 10-2000 mL), and contrast administration was 153.6 ± 73.5 mL (range, 16-420 mL). The intensive care unit length of stay was 58.7 ± 52.7 hours (range, 1-288 mL). In 28 patients (27.5%), a total of 32 additional endovascular components were deployed to manage procedural complications including aortic and target vessel dissections and injuries not related to access. Bridging stent grafts were deployed to incorporate 407 target vessels (mean 1.6/per vessel; range, 1-4). Postoperative transfusion was required in 14 patients (13.7%). Major adverse events occurred in seven patients (6.9%) through 30 days. Events included respiratory failure (n = 2), disabling stroke (n = 1), new-onset renal failure requiring dialysis (n = 2), and paraplegia (n = 2). At 30 days, there was one patient with intraoperative rupture; no severe bowel ischemia or lesion-related/all-cause mortality were reported. The Core lab-reported patency was 100% in the aortic component, superior mesenteric artery, and celiac artery, and 95.9% in the left renal and 99.0% in the right renal branch components through 30 days of follow-up. Reinterventions through 30 days were performed in 9 of 96 patients (9.4%) and were all minor.

Conclusions: Early TAMBE device outcomes demonstrate a high technical success rate, no 30-day lesion-related mortality, and a low rate of safety events within 30 days of the index procedure.

Keywords: Aneurysm; Endovascular grafting; Endovascular interventions; Endovascular repair; Parasuprarenal; Thoracic/thoracoabdominal.

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Conflict of interest statement

Disclosures M.F. is a consultant for W. L. Gore & Associates, Cook Medical, Getinge, and ViTAA; and has received research support from Cook Medical, clinical trial support from Centerline Biomedical, W. L. Gore Associates, Cook Medical, and ViTAA; an has stock options in Centerline Biomedical. J.M. has received a research grant from W. L. Gore Associates (granted to University of Colorado). S.H. is a consultant for Cook Medical, Terumo Aortic, and W. L. Gore & Associates (all honoraria paid to USC, no personal income); is on the scientific advisory board for Cook Medical, Terumo Aortic, W. L. Gore & Associates, and Vestek; and has received educational grants from W. L. Gore & Associates and Terumo Aortic, M.M. is on the advisory board of W. L. Gore & Associates. B.S. is a consultant for W. L. Gore & Associates, Cook Medical, Endologix, and Astute Imaging. C.T. has received consulting fees and research support from Cook Medical, W. L. Gore & Associates, and Philips Healthcare. B.M. reports payments to Mayo Clinic, with no personal income, for work on the advisory boards of Cook Medical and Medtronic; as a consultant for Cook Medical and W. L. Gore Associates; and research grants from W. L. Gore Associates and Cook Medical. G.O. reports a consulting agreement with Cook Medical, W. L. Gore Associates, GE Healthcare, and Centerline biomedical; and a research grant from GE Healthcare.

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