Final 12-year follow-up of Surgery versus Surveillance in the UK Small Aneurysm Trial

Author:

,Powell J T1

Affiliation:

1. Vascular Surgery Research Group, Imperial College, Charing Cross Hospital, London, Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh and Medical Research Council Biostatistics Unit, Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK

Abstract

Abstract Background The aim was to determine whether early open surgical repair would benefit patients with small abdominal aortic aneurysm compared with surveillance on long-term follow-up. Methods The 1090 patients who were enrolled into the UK Small Aneurysm Trial between 1991 and 1995 were followed up for aneurysm repair and mortality until November 2005. Results By November 2005, 714 patients (65·5 per cent) had died, 929 (85·2 per cent) had undergone aneurysm repair, 150 (13·8 per cent) had died without aneurysm repair and 11 (1·0 per cent) remained alive without aneurysm repair. After 12 years, mortality in the surgery and surveillance groups was 63·9 and 67·3 per cent respectively, unadjusted hazard ratio 0·90 (P = 0·139). Three-quarters of the surveillance group eventually had aneurysm repair, with a 30-day elective mortality of 6·3 per cent (versus 5·0 per cent in the early surgery group, P = 0·366). Estimates suggested that the cost of treatment was 17 per cent higher in the early surgery group, with a mean difference of £1326. The death rate in these patients was about twice that in the population matched for age and sex. Conclusion There was no long-term survival benefit of early elective open repair of small abdominal aortic aneurysms. Even after successful aneurysm repair, the mortality among these patients was higher than in the general population.

Funder

The Medical Research Council and the British Heart Foundation supported this trial

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Surgery

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