Open and endovascular results compared for elective vs. ruptured aneurysms repairs

Newswise — CHICAGO - New data in the July 2011 issue of the Journal of Vascular Surgery®, the official publication of the Society for Vascular Surgery®, compares the effects of gender on long-term survival in different types of abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair.

Researchers from Mount Sinai School of Medicine and Columbia University Medical Center in New York City, and the University of Wisconsin in Madison, used the Medicare Beneficiary Database (1995-2006), to analyze survival in cohorts of patients. They evaluated data for patients who underwent open aneurysm repair (OAR) or endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR) for 322,892 elective (eAAA) and 48,865 ruptured (rAAA) aneurysms. Men and women were matched by propensity scores, accounting for baseline demographics, co-morbid conditions, treating institution and surgeon experience. Frailty models were used to compare long-term survival.

Perioperative mortality for eAAA's was significantly lower among EVAR vs. OAR recipients for men (1.84 percent vs. 4.80 percent) and women (3.19 percent vs. 6.37 percent,) according to co-author Natalia N. Egorova, PhD, MPH, assistant professor of health evidence and policy at Mount Sinai School of Medicine. “One difference was that the survival benefit of EVAR was sustained for the 6 years of follow-up in women but disappeared in 2 years in men,” said Dr. Egorova. “Similarly, the survival benefit of men vs. women after elective EVAR disappeared after 1.5 to 2 years.” Dr. Angeliki G. Vouyouka, assistant professor of the division of vascular surgery at Mount Sinai Hospital, added that for rAAA’s, 30-day mortality was significantly lower for EVAR recipients compared with OAR recipients, for both men (33.43 percent vs. 43.70 percent) and women (41.01 percent vs. 48.28 percent). Six-year survival was significantly higher for men who received EVAR vs. those who received OAR. There was also a subtle survival benefit for women who received EVAR compared with OAR that was evident only in procedures performed in the very recent years however this benefit disappeared in 6 months. Survival was also substantially higher for men than women after emergent EVAR for ruptured AAA. “Gender disparity is evident from long-term outcomes after AAA repair,” said Dr. Egorova. “In the case for rAAA, where the long-term outcome for women was significantly worse than for men, the less invasive EVAR treatment did not appear to benefit women to the same extent that it did for men. On a positive note in elective conditions, the survival benefit of EVAR versus open repair for women was sustained longer than for men. These associations require further study to isolate specific risk factors that would be potential targets for improving AAA management.”

### About Journal of Vascular Surgery®

Journal of Vascular Surgery® provides vascular, cardiothoracic and general surgeons with the most recent information in vascular surgery. Original, peer-reviewed articles cover clinical and experimental studies, noninvasive diagnostic techniques, processes and vascular substitutes, microvascular surgical techniques, angiography and endovascular management. Special issues publish papers presented at the annual meeting of the Journal's sponsoring society, the Society for Vascular Surgery®. Visit the Journal Web site at http:www.jvascsurg.org/.

About the Society for Vascular Surgery

The Society for Vascular Surgery® (SVS) is a not-for-profit professional medical society, composed primarily of vascular surgeons, that seeks to advance excellence and innovation in vascular health through education, advocacy, research, and public awareness. SVS is the national advocate for 3,350 specialty-trained vascular surgeons and other medical professionals who are dedicated to the prevention and cure of vascular disease. Visit its Web site at www.VascularWeb.org® and follow SVS on Facebook and Twitter.

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CITATIONS

Journal of Vascular Surgery (July, 2011)