Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jan 2024)

Aortic Vascular Graft and Endograft Infection–Patient Outcome Cannot Be Determined Based on Pre-Operative Characteristics

  • Ilaria Puttini,
  • Marvin Kapalla,
  • Anja Braune,
  • Enrico Michler,
  • Joselyn Kröger,
  • Brigitta Lutz,
  • Natzi Sakhalihasan,
  • Matthias Trenner,
  • Gabor Biro,
  • Wolfgang Weber,
  • Thomas Rössel,
  • Christian Reeps,
  • Hans-Henning Eckstein,
  • Steffen Wolk,
  • Christoph Knappich,
  • Susan Notohamiprodjo,
  • Albert Busch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13010269
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
p. 269

Abstract

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Vascular graft/endograft infection (VGEI) is a serious complication after aortic surgery. This study investigates VGEI and patient characteristics, PET/CT quantification before surgical or conservative management of VGEI and post-intervention outcomes in order to identify patients who might benefit from such a procedure. PET standard uptake values (SUV) were quantitatively assessed and compared to a non-VGEI cohort. The primary endpoints were in-hospital mortality and aortic reintervention-free survival at six months. Ninety-three patients (75% male, 65 ± 10 years, 82% operated) were included. The initial operation was mainly for aneurysm (67.7%: 31% EVAR, 12% TEVAR, 57% open aortic repair). Thirty-two patients presented with fistulae. PET SUVTLR (target-to-liver ratio) showed 94% sensitivity and 89% specificity. Replacement included silver-coated Dacron (21.3%), pericardium (61.3%) and femoral vein (17.3%), yet the material did not influence the overall survival (p = 0.745). In-hospital mortality did not differ between operative and conservative treatment (19.7% vs. 17.6%, p = 0.84). At six months, 50% of the operated cohort survived without aortic reintervention. Short- and midterm morbidity and mortality remained high after aortic graft removal. Neither preoperative characteristics nor the material used for reconstruction influenced the overall survival, and, with limitations, both the in-hospital and midterm survival were similar between the surgically and conservatively managed patients.

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