Outcomes for patients who underwent elective CAA repair using open repair and FEVAR between 2005 and 2010 were analyzed using the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program database. CAA was defined as aneurysm of the aorta involving the visceral and/or renal arteries.
This study compared 1091 patients who underwent open repair (group A: male, 71.5 % ; age, 71 ¡À 9 years) with 264 patients treated with FEVAR (group B: male, 82.2 % ; age, 74 ¡À 9 years). The 2 groups did not significantly differ with respect to American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) classification (ASA III/IV: A, 93 % ; B, 95 % , P = 0.6), severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (A: 21 % ; B: 22 % ; P = 0.7), prior cardiac surgery (A: 24 % ; B: 20 % ; P = 0.19), or preoperative renal function (glomerular filtration rate: A: 69 ¡À 2; B: 70 ¡À 27; P = 0.535). Group A had significantly higher risk of any complication (A: 42 % ; B: 19 % ; P < 0.001), nonsurgical complications (A: 30 % ; B: 8 % ; P < 0.001), pulmonary complications (A: 21 % ; B: 2 % ; P < 0.001), renal complications (A: 10 % ; B: 1.5 % ; P = 0.001), and any cardiovascular complication (A: 8 % ; B: 2 % ; P < 0.001). The composite end point of surgical site infections/graft failure/bleeding transfusions were also higher in group A (A: 22 % ; B: 15 % ; P = 0.014). Thirty-day mortality was significantly lower for FEVAR (A: 5.4 % ; B: 0.8 % ; P = 0.001), as was total length of hospital stay (A: 11 ¡À 10 days; B: 4 ¡À 5 days; P < 0.001).
This nationwide real-world database suggests that in similar patient populations, repair of CAAs with FEVAR is associated with reduced 30-day morbidity and mortality compared with open repair. Although long-term comparative studies are needed, FEVAR may represent a preferred treatment alternative to open repair for patients with CAAs.