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Acute and long-term outcome of endovascular therapy for aortoiliac occlusive lesions stratified according to the TASC classification : a single-center experience
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 1196185
Author(s) Sixt, Sebastian; Alawied, Abdul Karim; Rastan, Aljoscha; Schwarzwälder, Uwe; Kleim, Martin; Noory, Elias; Schwarz, Thomas; Frank, Ulrich; Müller, Christian; Hauk, Michael; Beschorner, Ulrich; Nazary, Taher; Bürgelin, Karlheinz; Hauswald, Kirsten; Leppänen, Olli; Neumann, Franz-Josef; Zeller, Thomas
Author(s) at UniBasel Müller, Christian
Year 2008
Title Acute and long-term outcome of endovascular therapy for aortoiliac occlusive lesions stratified according to the TASC classification : a single-center experience
Journal Journal of endovascular therapy
Volume 15
Number 4
Pages / Article-Number 408-16
Keywords peripheral artery disease, common iliac artery, external iliac artery, balloon angioplasty, stent, lesion morphology
Abstract PURPOSE: To compare acute and long-term outcomes of endovascular therapy for TASC (TransAtlantic Inter-Society Consensus) A and B lesions versus TASC C and D lesions. METHODS: Based on a prospectively maintained database, a retrospective analysis was conducted of 375 symptomatic patients (335 men; mean age 63+/-8 years) who underwent 438 interventions for aortoiliac arterial obstructions. Lesions were stratified according to the TASC II classification: 259 (59%) procedures involved TASC A/B lesions, while 113 (26%) were for TASC C and 66 (15%) for TASC D lesions. RESULTS: The baseline characteristics of patients with TASC A/B lesions differed significantly in the ankle-brachial index (ABI), occurrence of renal insufficiency, and lesion characteristics from those with TASC C or D lesions. Acute treatment success, defined as residual stenosis <30%, was 100%, 96%, 93%, and 100% for TASC A, B, C, and D lesions, respectively. The primary 1-year patency rate, which was 86% for the entire study cohort, was similar for all TASC classifications (89%, 86%, 86%, 85% for TASC A to D lesions, respectively). In the TASC A/B cohort, the 5-year event-free survival (70%) was not significantly better than in the C/D cohort (57%, p=0.124). The clinical outcome, as measured by Rutherford stage and ABI, improved significantly in all TASC subgroups after successful intervention and was maintained up to 1 year. Stenting was an independent predictor for lower restenosis rates (HR 0.517, 95% CI 0.317 to 0.842; p=0.008). CONCLUSION: In experienced hands, endovascular therapy of aortoiliac lesions can be successfully performed with sustained long-term outcome independent of the TASC II classification, even in class D lesions.
Publisher International Society of Endovascular Specialists
ISSN/ISBN 1526-6028
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/dok/A6006358
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1583/08-2359.1
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18729553
ISI-Number WOS:000260504500005
Document type (ISI) Article
 
   

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