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Technique and Clinical Outcomes of Combined Stent Placement for Postthrombotic Chronic Total Occlusions of the Iliofemoral Veins

Authors :
Huang Xintian
Wang Ruihua
Qin Jinbao
Wei-min Li
Yin Minyi
Ye Kaichuang
Liu Xiaobing
Wang Xin
Min Lu
Liu Guang
Xin-wu Lu
Source :
Journal of vascular and interventional radiology : JVIR. 28(3)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

To evaluate the technical aspects and early clinical results of combined stent placement for the management of postthrombotic syndrome (PTS) in chronic total occlusions (CTOs) of the iliofemoral veins.A total of 81 consecutive patients (mean age, 57 y; 37 men; 81 limbs; 65 left limbs) with postthrombotic CTO of the iliofemoral veins treated with combined stent placement in a single institution from January 2013 to December 2014 were retrospectively analyzed. Wallstents were used for femoral inflow and E-Luminexx stents for iliac outflow. Technical aspects, quality of life (QOL), stent patency, and Villalta scores were recorded at follow-up. Primary, primary assisted, and secondary patency rates were estimated with Kaplan-Meier methods with the log-rank test.Percutaneous recanalization was successful in 77 of 81 limbs (95.1%). Stents were deployed in all iliofemoral occlusions, with two stents in 63 lesions (77.8%) lesions and three stents in 18 lesions (22.2%). Venous perforation occurred in 32 patients (37.4%) and was resolved in all cases after stent placement. Back pain occurred during balloon angioplasty (93.8%) and persisted after stent placement in 56.8% of patients. However, the symptoms were self-limiting without further therapy. QOL and Villalta scores were significantly improved during a median follow-up of 19 months (range, 1-38 mo; P.01). The 2-year primary, primary assisted, and secondary cumulative stent patency rates were 81.5%, 91.4%, and 93.8%, respectively.Combined stent placement is an effective, safe, and feasible method of management of PTS in iliofemoral CTO until commercial venous stents designed for PTS become available.

Details

ISSN :
15357732
Volume :
28
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of vascular and interventional radiology : JVIR
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c0792c40f494857064f34d9a976a3b80