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The durability of endovascular treatment of multisegment iliac occlusive disease
Authors:Powell R J  Fillinger M  Bettmann M  Jeffery R  Langdon D  Walsh D B  Zwolak R  Hines M  Cronenwett J L
Institution:Section of Vascular Surgery, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, NH 03756, USA.
Abstract:PURPOSE: The effectiveness of endovascular treatment of multisegment iliac occlusive disease (involving two or more common and/or external iliac arteries) was determined. METHODS: All patients who underwent angioplasty or stenting of at least two separate iliac artery segments were identified. Demographic data were recorded. Technical success, hemodynamic success, and aortoiliac primary and primary-assisted patency were analyzed by using the Society for Vascular Surgery and International Society for Cardiovascular Surgery (SVS/ISCVS) criteria. Multivariate, life table analysis was used as a means of determining outcome predictors. RESULTS: Eighty-seven patients underwent 207 iliac artery angioplasties and 115 iliac artery stents, which were performed in 210 iliac segments for disabling claudication in 60% of cases, for rest pain in 17% of cases, and for tissue loss in 23% of cases. Two iliac segments were treated in 64% of patients, three segments were treated in 28% of patients, and four segments were treated in 8% of patients. The complication rate was 11%. Initial hemodynamic success was achieved in 72% of cases. Clinical improvement occurred in 88% of patients. Subsequent endovascular reintervention was required in 29% of patients, whereas surgical inflow procedures were required in 14% of patients to maintain aortoiliac patency. The mean time from the primary intervention to the first reintervention was 10 +/- 3 months. At 6, 12, and 36 months after intervention, the primary patency rates of the aortoiliac segment were 76%, 61%, and 43%, respectively, and the primary assisted patency rates were 95%, 87%, and 72%, respectively. Only the presence of an external iliac artery stenosis adversely affected both primary and assisted-primary patency. At 6, 12, and 36 months, the aortoiliac primary patency rates in patients without the presence of an external iliac artery stenosis were 88%, 78%, and 69%, respectively, compared with 68%, 47%, and 18%, respectively, in patients with external iliac artery lesions (P <. 0001). CONCLUSION: Endovascular therapy for multisegment aortoiliac occlusive disease has acceptable patency rates; however, reintervention is often needed. The presence of external iliac artery disease is a significant predictor of poor outcome.
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