Sex-Comparative Outcomes of the T-Branch Device for the Treatment of Complex Aortic Aneurysms

Author:

Nana Petroula1ORCID,Jama Katarzyna2,Kölbel Tilo1,Spanos Konstantinos13ORCID,Panuccio Giuseppe1,Jakimowicz Tomasz2,Rohlffs Fiona1

Affiliation:

1. German Aortic Center, Department of Vascular Medicine, University Heart and Vascular Center, University Medical Center Eppendorf, 20251 Hamburg, Germany

2. Department of General, Vascular and Transplant Surgery, Medical University of Warsaw, 02-006 Warsaw, Poland

3. Vascular Surgery Department, University Hospital of Larissa, Faculty of Medicine, University of Thessaly, 41110 Larissa, Greece

Abstract

Introduction: Females are at increased risk of mortality compared to males after complex endovascular aortic repair. This study aims to examine sex-related peri-operative and follow-up outcomes in patients managed with the t-Branch device. Methods: A two-center retrospective analysis of patients managed with the off-the-shelf t-Branch device (Cook Medical Inc., Bjaeverskov, Denmark) between 1 January 2014 and 30 September 2020 was performed. Primary outcomes were sex-comparative 30-day mortality, major adverse events (MAEs) and spinal cord ischemia (SCI). Results: A total of 542 patients were included; 28.0% were females. Urgent repair and type I–III thoracoabdominal aneurysms were more common among females (52.6% vs. 34%, p = 0.01, and 57.1% vs. 35.8%, p = 0.004). Technical success was similar (97.4% vs. 96.9%, p = 0.755), as well as early mortality (16.2% in females vs. 10.8% in males; p = 0.084). SCI rates were similar between groups (13.6% vs. 9.2% p = 0.183). MAEs were more common in females; 33.7% vs. 21.4% (p = 0.022). Multivariate analysis did not identify sex as an independent predictor of adverse events. The 12-month survival rate was 75.7% (SE 0.045) for females and 84.1% (SE 0.026) for males (log rank, p = 0.10). Conclusions: Sex was not detected as an independent factor of mortality, MAEs and SCI within patients managed with the t-Branch device. Feasibility was high in both groups. No significant difference was shown in survival during the 12-month follow-up.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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