1. Outcomes of thoracic endovascular aortic repair in patients with concomitant blunt thoracic aortic injury and traumatic brain injury from the Aortic Trauma Foundation global registry
- Author
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Cassra N. Arbabi, Joseph DuBose, Benjamin W. Starnes, Naveed Saqib, Elina Quiroga, Charles Miller, Ali Azizzadeh, Kristofer Charlton-Ouw, Rana Afifi, Michelle McNutt, Zain Al-Rustum, Binod Shrestha, Ben Starnes, Rami Gilani, David Turay, Xian Luo-Owen, Tiffany Bee, Suzanne Moyer, Joe DuBose, William Shutze, William Dockery, Laura Petrey, Timothy N. Phelps, Chuck Fox, Ernest Moore, Alexis Cralley, Pedro Teixeira, Emily Leede, Frank Buchanan, Emilio Ramos, Marielle Ngoue, Nicole Fox, Lisa Shea, Martin Zielinski, Marianna Martini Fischmann, Kenji Inaba, Desmond Khor, Gregory Magee, Malachi Sheahan, Marie Unruh, Neil Parry, Luc Dubois, John Berne, Ivan Puente, Mario F. Gomez, Dalier R. Mederos, John Bini, Karen Herzing, Claire Hardman, Andres Schanzer, Francesco Aiello, Edward Arous, Elias Arous, Douglas Jones, Dejah Judelson, Louis Messina, Tammy Nguyen, Jessica Simons, Robert Steppacher, Joao Rezende-Neto, James Haan, Kelly Lightwine, Julie Dunn, Brittany Smoot, Tal Horer, David McGreevy, Vincent Riambau, Gaspar Mestres, Xavier Yugueros, Marc Passman, Adam W. Beck, Mark Patterson, Ben Pearce, Emily Spangler, Graeme McFarland, Danielle Sutzko, Matt Smeds, Emad Zakhary, Michael Williams, Catherine Wittgen, Todd Vogel, Matt Eagleton, Bruce Gewertz, Galinos Barmparas, Cassra Arbabi, Rishi Kundi, Jonathan Morrison, Peter Rossi, Davide Pacini, Luca Botta, Ciro Amodio, Pierantonio Rimoldi, Ilenia D'Alessio, Nicola Monzio Compagnoni, Muhammad Aftab, Mohammed Al-Musawi, T. Brett Reece, Jay D. Pal, Donald Jacobs, Rafael D. Malgor, Devin Zarkowsky, Ravi Rajani, Jaime Benarroch-Gampel, Christopher R. Ramos, Marc Schermerhorn, Mark Wyers, Allen Hamdan, Lars Stangenberg, Andy Lee, Mark Davies, Lalithapriya (Priya) Jayakumar, Matthew J. Sideman, Christopher Mitromaras, Dimitrios Miserlis, Reshma Brahmbhatt, Ralph Darling, Xzabia Caliste, Benjamin B. Chang, Jeffrey C. Hnath, Paul B. Kreienberg, Alexander Kryszuk, Adriana Laser, Sean P. Roddy, Stephanie Saltzberg, Melissa Shah, Courtney Warner, Chin-Chin Yeh, Viktor Reva, Viktor Zhigalo, Alexander V. Krasikov, Santi Trimarchi, Maurizio Domanin, Trissa Babrowski, Ross Milner, Luka Pocivavsek, Christopher Skelly, Kimberly Malka, Brian Nolan, Mario D’Oria, and Sandro Lepidi
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Thoracic Injuries ,Traumatic brain injury ,Clinical Decision-Making ,Hemodynamics ,Aorta, Thoracic ,Wounds, Nonpenetrating ,Risk Assessment ,Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation ,Postoperative Complications ,Blunt ,Risk Factors ,Brain Injuries, Traumatic ,medicine ,Humans ,Hospital Mortality ,Prospective Studies ,Registries ,Stroke ,Multiple Trauma ,business.industry ,Endovascular Procedures ,Middle Aged ,Vascular System Injuries ,Vascular surgery ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Blood pressure ,Concomitant ,Injury Severity Score ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) and blunt thoracic aortic injury (BTAI) are the top two leading causes of death after blunt force trauma. Patients presenting with concomitant BTAI and TBI pose a specific challenge with respect to management strategy, because the optimal hemodynamic parameters are conflicting between the two pathologies. Early thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR) is often performed, even for minimal aortic injuries, to allow for the higher blood pressure parameters required for TBI management. However, the optimal timing of TEVAR for the treatment of BTAI in patients with concomitant TBI remains an active matter of controversy.The Aortic Trauma Foundation international prospective multicenter registry was used to identify all patients who had undergone TEVAR for BTAI in the setting of TBI from 2015 to 2020. The primary outcomes included delayed ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke, in-hospital mortality, and aortic-related mortality. The outcomes were examined among patients who had undergone TEVAR at emergent (6 vs ≥6 hours) or urgent (24 vs ≥24 hours) intervals.A total of 100 patients (median age, 43 years; 79% men; median injury severity score, 41) with BTAI (Society for Vascular Surgery BTAI grade 1, 3%; grade 2, 10%; grade 3, 78%; grade 4, 9%) and concomitant TBI who had undergone TEVAR were identified. Emergent repair was performed for 51 patients (51%). Comparing emergent repair (6 hours) to urgent repair (≥6 hours), no difference was found in delayed cerebral ischemic events (2.0% vs 4.1%; P = .614), in-hospital mortality (15.7% vs 22.4%; P = .389), or aortic-related mortality (2.0% vs 2.0%; P = .996) and no patient had experienced delayed hemorrhagic stroke. Likewise, repairs conducted in an urgent (24 hours) setting showed no differences compared with those completed in an emergent (≥24 hours) setting regarding delayed ischemic stroke (2.6% vs 4.3%; P = .548), in-hospital mortality (18.2% vs 21.7%; P = .764), or aortic-related mortality (1.3% vs 4.3%; P = .654), and no patient had experienced delayed hemorrhagic stroke.In contrast to prior retrospective efforts, results from the Aortic Trauma Foundation international prospective multicenter registry have demonstrated that neither emergent nor urgent TEVAR for patients with concomitant BTAI and TBI was associated with delayed stroke, in-hospital mortality, or aortic-related mortality. In these patients, the timing of TEVAR did not have an effect on the outcomes. Therefore, the decision to intervene should be guided by individual patient factors rather than surgical timing.
- Published
- 2022
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