The establishment of standardized clinical endpoints by the IAASSG aims to unify reporting and enable robust multi-institutional comparisons in aortic arch surgery.
Since the introduction of hypothermic circulatory arrest for aortic arch surgery in 1975,1 there has been considerable progress in addressing this complex surgical pathology.2–4 However, the rapidity with which operative techniques have evolved has outpaced methodical appraisal of their clinical merit, leaving behind a wealth of perfunctory data. In particular, existing emphasis on neurological outcomes has neglected other critical end points, whereas inconsistent definitions and reporting formats limit the applicability of the results of some studies. Robust comparisons between institutional reports are therefore difficult, restricting critical appraisal and summary of existing surgical approaches. The International Aortic Arch Surgery Study Group (IAASSG) has been formed to enable multi-institutional collaboration to better explore the impact of surgical techniques on patient outcomes, using uniform definitions of events and clinical end points. A key endeavor is to standardize reporting formats to facilitate effective comparisons. Such a concerted effort, with the combined expertise of leading academic surgeons, paves the way for a unified language specific for aortic arch surgery that promotes closer cooperation and systematic evaluation and is essential in forming a framework of existing knowledge and guiding progress and research for the future.5,6 The IAASSG has devised a management-orientated classification system for significant clinical end points specific for aortic arch surgery and has undertaken a consensus survey of leading arch surgeons. The following report describes this classification scheme and reports the results of the consensus.
Yan et al. (Mon,) studied this question.