1. Practice Patterns and Outcomes of Retrievable Vena Cava Filters in Trauma Patients: An AAST Multicenter Study
- Author
-
Julie A Dunn, Randy J. Janczyk, William S. Hoff, Ram Nirula, Karen J. Brasel, Brandon H. Tieu, Jayna Harper, Gregory J. Jurkovich, Martin A. Schreiber, Michael M. McNally, Awori J. Hayanga, Daniel P. Link, Farouck N. Obeid, Gail T. Tominaga, Raul Coimbra, Linda Hird, Samuel R. Todd, John B. Kortbeek, David B. Hoyt, Christopher E. White, Elliott R. Haut, Felicia A. Ivascu, Mathew R. Rosengart, Raquel M. Forsythe, Jodi Grossman, Kathryn B. Schaffer, Ernest E. Moore, Robert C. Jacoby, Konstantinos Spaniolas, Imme Zengerink, C. Clay Cothren, Roger Huckfeldt, Michael McCann, George C. Velmahos, Debbie Gambrell, Kimberly Nagy, Nathaniel McQuay, David C. Sperling, West Livaudais, Rhonda Wood, Fausto Y. Vinces, Riyad Karmy-Jones, and Thomas Burdick
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Vena Cava Filters ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Postoperative Complications ,Occlusion ,medicine ,Humans ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,Thrombus ,Device Removal ,Retrospective Studies ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Vascular disease ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Retrospective cohort study ,Interventional radiology ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Surgery ,Pulmonary embolism ,Treatment Outcome ,Blunt trauma ,Wounds and Injuries ,Female ,Pulmonary Embolism ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND The purpose of this study is to describe practice patterns and outcomes of posttraumatic retrievable inferior vena caval filters (R-IVCF). METHODS A retrospective review of R-IVCFs placed during 2004 at 21 participating centers with follow up to July 1, 2005 was performed. Primary outcomes included major complications (migration, pulmonary embolism [PE], and symptomatic caval occlusion) and reasons for failure to retrieve. RESULTS Of 446 patients (69% male, 92% blunt trauma) receiving R-IVCFs, 76% for prophylactic indications and 79% were placed by interventional radiology. Excluding 33 deaths, 152 were Gunter-Tulip (G-T), 224 Recovery (R), and 37 Optease (Opt). Placement occurred 6 +/- 8 days after admission and retrieval at 50 +/- 61 days. Follow up after discharge (5.7 +/- 4.3 months) was reported in 51%. Only 22% of R-IVCFs were retrieved. Of 115 patients in whom retrieval was attempted, retrieval failed as a result of technical issues in 15 patients (10% of G-T, 14% of R, 27% of Opt) and because of significant residual thrombus within the filter in 10 patients (6% of G-T, 4% of R, 46% Opt). The primary reason R-IVCFs were not removed was because of loss to follow up (31%), which was sixfold higher (6% to 44%, p = 0.001) when the service placing the R-IVCF was not directly responsible for follow up. Complications did not correlate with mechanism, injury severity, service placing the R-IVCF, trauma volume, use of anticoagulation, age, or sex. Three cases of migration were recorded (all among R, 1.3%), two breakthrough PE (G-T 0.6% and R 0.4%) and six symptomatic caval occlusions (G-T 0, R 1%, Opt 11%) (p < 0.05 Opt versus both G-T and R). CONCLUSION Most R-IVCFs are not retrieved. The service placing the R-IVCF should be responsible for follow up. The Optease was associated with the greatest incidence of residual thrombus and symptomatic caval occlusion. The practice patterns of R-IVCF placement and retrieval should be re-examined.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF