Background: Retrograde false lumen perfusion is a common mode of failure after stent grafting chronic aortic dissection. Open fenestration during the first-stage elephant trunk (ET) creates a landing zone for second-stage endovascular ET completion in patients with a false lumen aneurysm. Our objectives were to assess long-term safety and durability of this technique.
Methods: From 2007 to 2014, 56 patients with thoracoabdominal dissection and aneurysm underwent stage 1 ET and open fenestration. Fifteen (26.8%) patients had DeBakey type III dissection, and 41 (73%) had type I, 38 (68%) with previous ascending repair. Mean maximum diameter was 5.8 ± 1 cm. Imaging follow-up was complete in all survivors.
Results: Endovascular ET completion was performed in 49 patients (87.5%), urgently in 11 (22%). Operative mortality after the first stage was 1.8%. The ET in 8 patients was performed prophylactically. Complications after the first stage included transient ischemic attack in 1 patient (1.8%), subdural hemorrhage in 1 (1.8%), tracheostomy in 1 (1.8%), bleeding in 5 (8.9%), and paraplegia in 1 (1.8%). All 48 patients had false lumen thrombosis in the treated segment without endoleak or retrograde perfusion. The aneurysm sac shrunk in 67%, with a mean overall aortic diameter reduction of 1 ± 0.8 cm. Median follow-up was 33.8 months. Eight patients (16%) underwent 11 late reinterventions, comprising thoracic endovascular aortic repair extension in 4 patients (36%), thoracic endovascular aortic repair and false lumen embolization in 3 (27%), open thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm completion repair in 2 (18%), and redo proximal repair for infection in 2 (18%). There were 6 late deaths.
Conclusions: Open aortic fenestration to create a distal landing zone during stage 1 ET facilitates endovascular completion for chronic dissection with false lumen aneurysm. The technique is safe, effective, and durable. It promotes reverse aortic remodeling and eliminates retrograde false lumen flow.
Copyright © 2017 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.