Objectives: To compare management strategies for secondary abdominal arterio-enteric fistulas (AEFs).
Methods: This study is a review and pooled data analysis. Medline and Scopus databases were searched for studies published between 1999 and 2015. Particular emphasis was given to short- and long-term outcomes in relation to AEF repair type.
Results: Two hundred and sixteen publications were retrieved, reporting on 823 patients. In-hospital mortality was 30.7%. Open surgery had higher in-hospital mortality (246/725, 33.9%), than endovascular methods (7/98, 7.1%, p < .001, OR 6.7, 95% CI 3-14.7, including staged endovascular to open surgery, 0/13, 0%). In-hospital mortality after graft removal/extra-anatomical bypass grafting was 31.2% (66/226), graft removal/in situ repair 34% (137/403), primary closure of the arterial defect 62.5% (10/16), and for miscellaneous open procedures 41.3% (33/80), p = .019. Among the subgroups of in situ repair, homografts were associated with a higher mortality than impregnated prosthetic grafts (p = .047). There was no difference in recurrent AEF-free rates between open and endovascular procedures. Extra-anatomical bypass/graft removal and in situ repair had a lower AEF recurrence rate than primary closure and homografts. Late sepsis occurred more often after endovascular surgery (2-year rates 42% vs. 19% for open, p = .001). The early survival benefit of endovascular surgery was blunted during follow-up, although it remained significant (p < .001). Within the in situ repair group, impregnated prosthetic grafts were associated with the worst overall and AEF related mortality free rates and vein grafts with the best. No recurrence, sepsis, or mortality was reported following staged endograft placement to open repair after a mean follow-up of 16.8 months (p = .18, p = .22, and p = .006, respectively, compared with patients in other groups).
Conclusions: Endovascular surgery, where appropriate, is associated with better early survival than open surgery for secondary AEFs. Most of this benefit is lost during long-term follow-up, implying that a staged approach with early conversion to in situ vein grafting may achieve the best results in selected patients.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejvs.2016.09.014 | DOI Listing |
Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg
December 2016
Department of Surgical Sciences, Section of Vascular Surgery, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
Objectives: To compare management strategies for secondary abdominal arterio-enteric fistulas (AEFs).
Methods: This study is a review and pooled data analysis. Medline and Scopus databases were searched for studies published between 1999 and 2015.
Int Angiol
August 2014
Department of Radiology, Odense University Hospital, Odense, Denmark -
Aim: Para-anastomotic aneurysms, leakage due to anastomotic failure, aorto- and arterioenteric fistulas are some of the serious complications after aorto-iliac surgical reconstructions. Treatment of these complications is challenging and is either done by open surgery or by endovascular therapy. The mortality and morbidity is higher compared to the initial treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Case Rep
November 2010
Klinik für Rheumatologie und Physikalische Therapie, Katholisches Klinikum Mainz, An der Goldgrube 11, D-55131 Mainz, Germany.
Introduction: We report the first case of a patient who underwent simultaneous kidney and pancreas transplantation and who then suffered from repeated episodes of severe gastrointestinal bleeding over a period of seven years. Locating the site of gastrointestinal bleeding is a challenging task. This case illustrates that detection of an arterio-enteric fistula can be very difficult, especially in technically-challenging situations such as cases of severe intra-abdominal adhesions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKorean J Gastroenterol
August 2010
Department of Internal Medicine, Chonnam National University Medical School, Gwangju, Korea.
Arterio-enteric fistula is a very rare cause of massive lower gastrointestinal hemorrhage. We report here on a case of massive hematochezia caused by iliac arterio-colic fistula in a 60-year-old woman who had a recent history of spinal surgery for herniated nucleus pulposus. Abdomen computed tomography showed the extravasation of radiocontrast media from right iliac artery encased by an intraabdominal abscess into the adjacent dilatated colon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHPB (Oxford)
June 2010
Department of Surgery, Medical College of Ohio, Toledo, OH 43614, USA.
Background: Irradiation therapy is being evaluated widely as an adjunct to therapy of resectable and unresectable pancreatic exocrine carcinoma. Exsanguinating haemorrhage has been an occasional late complication.
Case Outlines: Two patients with unresectable cancer of the pancreas were treated by bypass, chemotherapy and both intra-operative and postoperative irradiation.
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