Objective: To report the impact of the learning curve on the outcomes of branched endovascular aortic repair (BEVAR) using an off-the-shelf preloaded inner branch device (E-nside, Artivion - Kennesaw, GA-USA). Methods: Data from a physician-initiated national multicenter registry, including patients treated with E-nside endograft (INBREED) were prospectively collected (2020-2024). Endpoints were early (30-days) technical success, mortality, major adverse events (MAE), and 2-years freedom from endograft instability and target vessel instability. Patients were divided into early and late cohorts based on the median date of the procedure in each center. Results: There were 215 patients treated with the E-nside, 108 (393 target vessels) in the early and 107 (395 target vessels) in the late cohort. Most patients had a degenerative aneurysm (Early: 82%, Late: 75%; P=.326) or a chronic dissection (Early: 6%, Late:15%; P=.025). Aneurysm extent was thoracoabdominal in 53% of patients and complex abdominal in 47%; and 23% were ruptured or symptomatic and 26% had aneurysm size >70mm, without differences between groups. A narrow paravisceral aortic lumen <25 mm was more frequent in the late cohort (late: 30%, early: 18%; P=.037). From the early to the late groups, there was an increase in the use of a total transfemoral approach (late: 29% vs early: 18%; P=.042), balloon-expandable bridging stents (late: 82% vs early: 76%; P=.032), and reinforcement bridging stents (late: 26%, early: 11%; P<.001). Operating time (late: 267±131 min, early: 244±130 min; P=.230), iodinated contrast volume (late: 181±81 ml, early: 210±141 ml; P=108; P=.302), and dose area product (late: 272±110 Gycm2, early: 291±118 Gycm2; P=.277) were similar in the two groups. Intraprocedural complications decreased in the later stage of the learning curve (late: 11%, early: 23%; P=.030), while overall 30-days mortality (late: 8%, early: 6%; P=.346), technical success (late: 99%, early: 98%; P=.286), and MAEs (late: 27%, early: 29%, P=.879) remained substantially stable. There were no differences in 2-years freedom from endograft instability (late: 100±0%, early: 96±5%, P=1.00), freedom from target vessel instability (late: 98±3%, early: 94±2%;P=.090), and target vessel primary patency (late: 97±2%, early: 97±2%; P=.321). Conclusion: The increased experience with the E-nside endograft was associated with a more frequent use of a total transfemoral approach and use of balloon expandable and reinforced bridging stents. From the early to the late stages, there was a significant decrease in intraoperative complications, while most centers were learning-independent and achieved a consistent mortality, MAE, procedural metrics, and mid-term results from the start.
Squizzato, F., Piazza, M., Piffaretti, G., Gatta, E., Tshomba, Y., Orrico, M., et al. (2025). Evolution of practice patterns and learning curve of aortic repair using the E-nside Off-The-Shelf Inner Branch thoracoabdominal endograft. JOURNAL OF VASCULAR SURGERY [10.1016/j.jvs.2025.05.036].
Evolution of practice patterns and learning curve of aortic repair using the E-nside Off-The-Shelf Inner Branch thoracoabdominal endograft
Pratesi, Giovanni;Stefano Fazzini;Eugenio Martelli;Giovanni Tinelli;Nicola Leone;
2025-05-26
Abstract
Objective: To report the impact of the learning curve on the outcomes of branched endovascular aortic repair (BEVAR) using an off-the-shelf preloaded inner branch device (E-nside, Artivion - Kennesaw, GA-USA). Methods: Data from a physician-initiated national multicenter registry, including patients treated with E-nside endograft (INBREED) were prospectively collected (2020-2024). Endpoints were early (30-days) technical success, mortality, major adverse events (MAE), and 2-years freedom from endograft instability and target vessel instability. Patients were divided into early and late cohorts based on the median date of the procedure in each center. Results: There were 215 patients treated with the E-nside, 108 (393 target vessels) in the early and 107 (395 target vessels) in the late cohort. Most patients had a degenerative aneurysm (Early: 82%, Late: 75%; P=.326) or a chronic dissection (Early: 6%, Late:15%; P=.025). Aneurysm extent was thoracoabdominal in 53% of patients and complex abdominal in 47%; and 23% were ruptured or symptomatic and 26% had aneurysm size >70mm, without differences between groups. A narrow paravisceral aortic lumen <25 mm was more frequent in the late cohort (late: 30%, early: 18%; P=.037). From the early to the late groups, there was an increase in the use of a total transfemoral approach (late: 29% vs early: 18%; P=.042), balloon-expandable bridging stents (late: 82% vs early: 76%; P=.032), and reinforcement bridging stents (late: 26%, early: 11%; P<.001). Operating time (late: 267±131 min, early: 244±130 min; P=.230), iodinated contrast volume (late: 181±81 ml, early: 210±141 ml; P=108; P=.302), and dose area product (late: 272±110 Gycm2, early: 291±118 Gycm2; P=.277) were similar in the two groups. Intraprocedural complications decreased in the later stage of the learning curve (late: 11%, early: 23%; P=.030), while overall 30-days mortality (late: 8%, early: 6%; P=.346), technical success (late: 99%, early: 98%; P=.286), and MAEs (late: 27%, early: 29%, P=.879) remained substantially stable. There were no differences in 2-years freedom from endograft instability (late: 100±0%, early: 96±5%, P=1.00), freedom from target vessel instability (late: 98±3%, early: 94±2%;P=.090), and target vessel primary patency (late: 97±2%, early: 97±2%; P=.321). Conclusion: The increased experience with the E-nside endograft was associated with a more frequent use of a total transfemoral approach and use of balloon expandable and reinforced bridging stents. From the early to the late stages, there was a significant decrease in intraoperative complications, while most centers were learning-independent and achieved a consistent mortality, MAE, procedural metrics, and mid-term results from the start.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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