Journal of Vascular Surgery Cases and Innovative Techniques (Dec 2024)

Early experience with baroreflex activation therapy from a vascular surgery perspective

  • Christopher Yu Chow, MD,
  • Christopher Montoya, MD,
  • Matthew Sussman, MD,
  • Stefan Kenel-Pierre, MD,
  • Omaida Caridad Velazquez, MD,
  • Luanda Grazette, MD, MPH,
  • Tony Shao, MD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 6
p. 101464

Abstract

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Baroreflex activation therapy (BAT) is an emerging device-based treatment for patients with heart failure with a reduced ejection fraction refractory to maximally tolerated goal-directed medical therapy. Currently, there is sparse literature on the critical role that vascular surgeons serve in the delivery of this novel therapy. This single-institution series describes the creation of a BAT program and elaborates on the function of vascular surgeons in the multidisciplinary heart failure team. The preoperative evaluation, perioperative care, and postoperative course of patients receiving BAT from March 2022 to August 2023 were retrospectively analyzed. Eleven patients were evaluated by a dedicated heart failure cardiologist for medical eligibility and assessed by a vascular surgeon for technical feasibility. Of the 11 patients, 7 were men (63.6%). The median age was 60.5 years (range, 44-73 years). No patient (0.00%) had existing carotid artery disease, and one patient (9.1%) had undergone previous neck radiation therapy. All 11 patients (100%) had an existing cardiac implantable electronic device, and BAT implantation was performed on the same side as the cardiac implantable electronic device in two patients (18.1%). Four patients (36.4%) required preoperative hospital admission for medical optimization before surgery. The median length of surgery was 82 minutes (range, 58-113 minutes), and the median length of stay in the hospital after surgery was 1 day (range, 0-6 days). No major adverse neurologic or cardiovascular events, cranial nerve injuries, device complications requiring reintervention, or heart failure-related mortality at 6 months occurred. Three patients (27.3%) experienced extraneous stimulations, which affected BAT tolerability. Within 6 months after BAT implantation, no significant improvements were observed for several heart failure disease burden markers compared with 6 months before BAT implantation. Our early results demonstrate that BAT implantation is a safe procedure with rare complications. Vascular surgeons play an important role in the multidisciplinary delivery of this novel device-based therapy. More data are needed to understand whether BAT is beneficial in the treatment of heart failure with a reduced ejection fraction refractory to maximally tolerated goal-directed medical therapy.

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