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Thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR) is now the standard of care for the management of aortic injury from trauma. Long-term outcomes stratified by the severity of the aortic injury are limited. This is a single-center, retrospective analysis of all patients who underwent TEVAR for trauma between January 2008 and November 2023. Long-term outcomes of mortality and reintervention were stratified and compared based on the blunt thoracic aortic injury score. The Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to compute 1- and 5-year survival. A total of 104 patients (aged 42 ± 15 years; 72 males; 69%) underwent TEVAR for trauma. Most repairs were for grade 3 (59 patients, 57%) or grade 4 (30 patients, 29%) blunt aortic injuries. The remaining patients included grade 1 (1 patient, 1%) and grade 2 (14 patients, 13%). Grade 4 injuries were not associated with higher rate of concomitant neurologic injuries (P = .33) or death (P = .74). Eighty-seven percent patients had a mean follow-up of 3.5 ± 3.4 years. Two patients died due to aortic-related causes within 30 days (intraoperative hemorrhage in one patient, graft collapse in one patient who had an unsuccessful exploratory thoracotomy). Overall, 1-year survival was 92%, and 5-year survival was 88% by the Kaplan-Meier analysis. Patients with neurologic injury trended toward higher mortality in the Kaplan-Meier analysis, but this was not statistically significant (Fig 1; log-rank = 0.22). The grade of injury was not significant for long-term survival (Fig 2; log-rank = 0.81). Early reintervention was required in 2% patients with none required in long term. Age >40 years (P = 0.17), female sex (P = .34), and graft diameter >26 mm (P = .41) were not significant for reintervention. None of the patients experienced endoleaks or spinal cord ischemia. TEVAR is a durable repair for patients with BTAI requiring no reintervention after 1-year follow-up. Computed tomography surveillance of TEVAR in the setting of trauma should be limited to 1 and 5 years after surgery. Long-term survival is not related to the severity of BTAI.Fig 2Kaplan-Meier survival curve demonstrating survival based on the grade of injury. Log=rank = 0.81.View Large Image Figure ViewerDownload Hi-res image Download (PPT)
Kumar et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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