Long-term outcomes following use of a composite Wallstent-Z stent approach to iliofemoral venous stenting

被引:38
|
作者
Jayaraj, Arjun [1 ]
Noel, Chandler [1 ]
Kuykendall, Riley [1 ]
Raju, Seshadri [1 ]
机构
[1] St Dominic Hosp, RANE Ctr Venous & Lymphat Dis, Jackson, MS USA
关键词
Iliac vein stenting; May-Thurner syndrome; Nonthrombotic iliac vein lesion; Chronic iliofemoral venous obstruction; Post-thrombotic syndrome;
D O I
10.1016/j.jvsv.2020.08.020
中图分类号
R61 [外科手术学];
学科分类号
摘要
Objective: An endovascular approach has essentially replaced open surgery in the management of symptomatic chronic obstructive iliofemoral venous disease. In the last several years, such a minimally invasive approach has shifted from use of Wallstents alone to a combination of Wallstent-Z stent (composite stenting) to better deal with the iliocaval confluence. This study evaluates the clinical and stent related outcomes following use of composite stenting. Methods: A retrospective review of contemporaneously entered EMR data on 535 patients (545 limbs) with initial iliofemoral stents placed over a 4-year period from 2014 to 2017 for symptomatic chronic iliofemoral venous obstruction was performed. Patients who underwent stenting after intervention for acute deep venous thrombosis were excluded. The impact of stenting on clinical outcomes before and after the intervention were evaluated through use of the visual analog scale pain score (0-10), grade of swelling (0-4), and Venous Clinical Severity Score (0-27). Quality of life was appraised using the Chronic Venous Disease quality of life Questionnaire 20 instrument. Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to assess primary, primary assisted and secondary stent patencies, and paired and unpaired t-tests were used to examine clinical outcomes. Results: Of the 545 limbs that underwent stenting, 183 were in men and 362 were in women. The median age was 60 years. Laterality was right in 205 limbs and left in 340 limbs. Post-thrombotic syndrome was seen in 441 limbs and nonthrombotic iliac vein lesions/May-Thurner syndrome in 104 limbs. At 24 months, visual analog scale pain score went from 5 to 2 (P <.0001), grade of swelling went from 3 to 1 (P <.0001), and Venous Clinical Severity Score went from 6 to 4 (P <.0001). Ulcers were present in 67 limbs and had healed in 49 limbs (73%) over a median follow-up of 26 months. Global Chronic Venous Disease quality of life Questionnaire scores improved from 60 to 36 (P <.0001) after stenting. Cumulative primary, primary-assisted, and secondary patencies at 60 months were 70%, 99% and 91%, respectively. Thirty limbs (5.5%) required contralateral stenting. There was only one instance (0.2%) of contralateral iliofemoral deep venous thrombosis. One hundred eleven limbs (20%) underwent reintervention, including for in-stent restenosis in 44 limbs, stent compression in 2 limbs, in-stent restenosis and stent compression in 48 limbs, and stent occlusion in 17 limbs. Conclusions: In patients undergoing iliofemoral venous stenting for obstructive disease, clinical improvement, quality of life improvement, and stent patencies after use of a composite stent configuration are comparable with those seen after exclusive use of Wallstents. However, the use of a composite stent configuration not only decreases the need for contralateral stenting to relieve chronic obstruction, but also decreases the incidence of contralateral iliofemoral deep venous thrombosis.
引用
收藏
页码:393 / +
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Comparison between a dedicated venous stent and standard composite Wallstent-Z stent approach to iliofemoral venous stenting: Intermediate-term outcomes
    Powell, Thomas
    Raju, Seshadri
    Jayaraj, Arjun
    JOURNAL OF VASCULAR SURGERY-VENOUS AND LYMPHATIC DISORDERS, 2023, 11 (01) : 82 - +
  • [2] Long-term clinical outcomes and technical factors with the Wallstent for treatment of chronic iliofemoral venous obstruction
    Gagne, Paul J.
    Gagne, Nicole
    Kucher, Taras
    Thompson, Michael
    Bentley, Dana
    JOURNAL OF VASCULAR SURGERY-VENOUS AND LYMPHATIC DISORDERS, 2019, 7 (01) : 45 - 55
  • [3] Long-term Outcomes After Iliocaval Venous Stenting
    Hwang, Songhon
    Ramos, Julio
    Berger, Kelsey
    Veyg, Daniel
    Kim, Sungyup
    Marin, Michael
    Faries, Peter
    Ting, Windsor
    JOURNAL OF VASCULAR SURGERY, 2020, 72 (05) : E367 - E367
  • [4] Long-term outcomes following carotid artery stenting
    New, G
    Iyer, SS
    Roubin, GS
    Oetgen, ME
    Moussa, I
    Yates, V
    Liu, MW
    Moses, JW
    Vitek, JJ
    CIRCULATION, 1999, 100 (18) : 674 - 674
  • [5] VENOUS SINUS STENTING FOR IIH: WHAT ARE THE LONG-TERM OUTCOMES?
    Asif, H.
    Craven, C.
    Thorne, L.
    Watkins, L.
    Toma, A.
    JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY NEUROSURGERY AND PSYCHIATRY, 2019, 90 (03): : E16 - E16
  • [6] Long-term clinical outcomes following coronary stenting
    Anstrom, Kevin J.
    Kong, David F.
    Shaw, Linda K.
    Califf, Robert M.
    Kramer, Judith M.
    Peterson, Eric D.
    Rao, Sunil V.
    Matchar, David B.
    Mark, Daniel B.
    Harrington, Robert A.
    Eisenstein, Eric L.
    ARCHIVES OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2008, 168 (15) : 1647 - 1655
  • [7] Long-term outcomes following carotid artery stenting
    New, G
    Roubin, GS
    Lyer, SS
    Al-Mubarak, N
    Moussa, I
    Yates, V
    Liu, M
    Gomez, C
    Moses, JW
    Vitek, JJ
    EUROPEAN HEART JOURNAL, 2000, 21 : 127 - 127
  • [8] Long-term Outcomes of Cerebral Venous Sinus Stenosis Corrected by Stenting
    Xu, Yaoming
    Meng, Ran
    Rajah, Gary B.
    Ding, Yuchuan
    Wu, Yan
    Wu, Yali
    Ji, Kangxiang
    Wu, Chuanjie
    Zhao, Wenbo
    Ji, Xunming
    CURRENT NEUROVASCULAR RESEARCH, 2019, 16 (01) : 77 - 81
  • [9] Long-Term Outcomes of IVUS-Guided Femero-Ilio- Caval Stenting for Iliofemoral Venous Outflow Obstruction: A Retrospective Analysis
    Kundal, Sanchit
    Omar, Ali
    Elmariah, Hesham
    Maenza, Joe
    Ghotra, Maninderjit
    Gowda, Ramesh
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY, 2024, 84 (18) : B279 - B280
  • [10] The short-term and long-term clinical outcomes following coronary stenting
    Thakkar, A.
    Mehta, A.
    Patel, B.
    Raykundaliya, D.
    INDIAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY, 2008, 40 : 200 - 200