ABDOMINAL AORTIC ANEURYSM
I. Risk factors
- Smoking
- Age
- Atherosclerosis elsewhere
- Hypercholesterolemia
- HTN
- Family Hx of AAA
II. Diagnosis
- In a cohort study of 334 patients who had
undergone endovascular AAA repair who had concurrent ultrasound and CT,
diameter of AAA's measured by CT were sig. greater on average than those
measured by ultrasound. In 49% of measurements, the difference was
> 1.0cm (J. Vasc. Surg. 38:466, 2003--abst)
III. Surgery traditionally recommended for AAA > 5cm or
1.5-2 times diameter of aorta at renal arteries.
IV. Natural history and risk of rupture
- Diameter
- At 5cm or greater, estimated 8%/yr with
lifetime risk 25-49% (Eur. J. Vasc. Surg
6:616, 1992; Br. J. Surg 85:1382, 1998)
- Usually expand 0.2-0.5 cm/yr
- Risk for rupture may be greater in pts with diastolic
hypertension and COPD
- Ass'd with higher risk for rupture in a prospective
trial of 2,257 pts (Ann. Surg. 230:289, 1999--JW)
- Female gender
- Higher mean arterial BP
- Smoking
- In an observational study of 790 men (mean age 69) with AAA's
3.0-3.9cm on screening ultrasound, over mean 3.9y f/u with serial u/s,
median rate of expansion was 0.11cm/yr; only 6.7% of AAA's expanded to
5cm or larger (J. Vasc. Surg. 35:666, 2002--JW)
V. Screening for AAA
- A diameter of 3cm or greater is generally considered to indicate an
aneurysm.
- In a trial of 67,800 men 65-74yo randomized to invitation for abdominal us
to r/o AAA vs. no such invitation (with f/u scans periodically if AAA
3-5.4cm and surgery if 5.5cm or greater, increase in diameter 1cm/yr or
greater, or sx), over avg. 3.9y f/u, AAA-related mortality
(w/intention-to-treat analysis) was 0.19% in u/s group vs. 0.33% in no-u/s
group (RR 0.58; sig.). No subgroup analysis was reported.
("MASS" study, Lancet 360:1531, 2002--abst)
- In a f/u report on the "MASS" study, over 7y f/u,
AAA-related mortality was still sig. lower in the screened group (HR
0.53) but no sig. diff. in all-cause mortality (Ann. Int. Med. 146:699,
2007--JW)
- 41,000 men 65-83yo randomized to a single screening
for AAA vs. no screening; over 5y, the age-adjusted rate of AAA-related
death was nonsig. lower for those men in the screening group and sig. lower
(RR 0.6) for those men in the screening group who actually attended
screening (7.5 vs. 18.9 deaths per 100,000 person-years) (BMJ 329:1259,
2004--JW)
- In a trial in 12,639 men 64-74yo randomized to
invitation for abdominal u/s to screen for AAA (and referral for surgery if
5cm or more diameter) vs. no such invitation; over mean 4.3y, the incidence
of AAA-related mortality was sig. lower in the screening group (number
needed to screen = 349) (BMJ 330:750, 2005--AFP)
- Current recommendations re: screening
VI. Trials of elective repair of small aneurysms
- Traditionally, surgery done if diameter is 5.5cm or greater
- 1090 pts 60-76yo with asymptomatic AAA 4.0-5.5cm
randomized to surveillance vs. elective repair; over
avg 4.6y f/u, mortality was 7.0% in early-surgery
group and 7.4% in surveillance group (nonsig.)
(Lancet 352:1649, 1998--JW)
- 8944 people aged 65-80yo were screened with u/s for
AAA over 8y. 356 had AAA 3cm or greater. Followed
those pts with Q3mo serial u/s. Used criteria for
repair if
- Diameter reached 6cm
- Expanded > 1cm/yr
- Caused sx
124 pts met criteria. Only one death from AAA (0.4% of
the 356 with AAA) in a pt who didn't meet criteria; this
occurred 5d post-op for a colon Ca. Authors assert that
risk for elective AAA surgery is 1-8% and thus greater
than risk of no surgery in pts with AAA not meeting
criteria. An accompanying editorial (p. 1377) urges
caution in switching old guidelines (above) for these new
ones given small # (28) of aneurysms 5-5.9cm in this
study (Lancet 342:1395, 1993)
- UK Small Aneurysm Trial (Lancet 352:1649, 1998--AFP)
- 1,090 pts 60-75yo with AAA < 5.5cm
randomized to early surgical intervention vs.
surveillance
- Surveillance group periodic u/s to monitor
growth (Q6mo if 4.0-4.9cm, Q3mo if >
4.9cm) & electively repaired if:
- Diameter reached 5.5cm
- Expanded > 1cm/yr
- Caused sx or tenderness
- No diff. in mortality over 6y f/u, including
after adjustment for age, sex, or initial
aneurysm size
- 1136 patients (age range, 50 to 79; 99% male) with AAAs 4.0 cm to 5.4 cm diameter randomized to immediate open repair or vs. surveillance with Q6mos u/s or CT. Surveillance pts underwent surgery if AAA's found to be > 5.5 cm, expanded by 0.7 cm within 6 months (or by 1.0 cm within 1 year), or became symptomatic. Over mean 5y f/u, no sig. diff. in total mortality (NEJM 346:1437, 2002)
VII. Tx with endovascular stent-graft, e.g. introduced through
femoral artery
- May be an alternate to open AAA repair; risks include
internal leaks and thrombosis, stenosis, or migration of stent-graft (J. Vasc.
Surg 29:292, 1999--JW)
- Ass'd with shorter hospital stays and similar
perioperative mortality as open repair (Ann. Surg.
230:298, 1999; Arch. Surg. 134:947, 1999--JW)
- Endovascular vs. open repair associated with sig. lower 30-day all-cause
mortality (1.7% vs. 4.7%) in a randomized study in 1082 pts with AAAs
> 5.4cm in diameter ("EVAR Trial 1"; Lancet 364:843,
2004--JW)
- In a follow-up study of the same cohort of patients, after
median 2.9y, there was no sig. diff. in all-cause mortality,
but endovascular group had sig. lower (RR about 0.5 per summary)
incidence of aneurysm-related death; also had sig. lower incidence
of reintervention (9% vs. 41%) (Lancet 365:2179, 2005--JW)
- In a randomized trial in 345 pts with AAAs 5cm diameter or greater,
endovascular vs. open repair was ass'd with no sig. diff. in 30d
incidence of (death or mod-severe complications) ("DREAM"
Trial; NEJM 351:1607, 2004--JW)
- In a follow-up study of the same cohort of patients, going up to
2y after randomization, there was no sig. diff. in the two groups
in survival, but the endovascular group had sig. higher
incidence of reintervention during f/u (13% vs. 3%) (NEJM
352:2398, 2005--JW)
- In a randomized trial in 881 pts > 49yo randomized to
endovascular vs. open AAA repair, over mean 1.8y f/u, endovascular
repair was associated with sig. lower 30d mortality (0.5% vs.
3.0%) but no sig. diff. in 2y mortlality (JAMA 302:1535,
2009-abst)
VIII. Beta-blockers may slow progression
- In a randomized trial of 548 pts with asymptomatic AAA's 3.0cm-5.0cm in
diameter randomized to propranolol (titrated to 80-120mg BID) vs. placebo x
2.5y, propranolol group had nonsig. lower risk of elective surgery (20% vs.
26%) in intention-to-treat analysis but sig. less looking just at those who
didn't withdraw b/c of adverse effects (RR = 0.63) (J. Vasc. Surg. 35:72,
2002--JW)