Perioperative Events Following Open Versus Endovascular Revascularization for Chronic Limb-Threatening Ischemia: An NSQIP Analysis.

Journal: Journal Of The Society For Cardiovascular Angiography & Interventions
Published:
Abstract

The Best Endovascular vs Best Surgical Therapy in Patients with Critical Limb Ischemia (BEST-CLI) trial reported the superiority of surgical bypass compared with endovascular intervention for the treatment of chronic limb-threatening ischemia (CLTI) in patients deemed suitable for either; however, the generalizability of these findings to the broader CLTI population is in question. Herein, we analyzed perioperative (30-day) outcomes from the National Surgical Quality Improvement Project (NSQIP) for CLTI interventions. The NSQIP-Vascular targeted database was queried from 2014 to 2019, contemporaneous with BEST-CLI, for patients undergoing CLTI intervention. Surgical bypass groups included saphenous vein (OPEN-GSV) or alternative conduit (OPEN-Other) and were compared to the endovascular (intervention group) (ENDO). Inverse Probability weighting with regression adjustment assessed 30-day outcomes including perioperative death (POD), major amputation, major adverse limb events (MALE, major reintervention and/or amputation), composite MALE or POD, and major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE, myocardial infarction, or stroke). Results were provided as risk ratio (RR). Of the total cohort, 6780 (34.1%) were in the OPEN-GSV group, 4201 (21.1%) in OPEN-Other, and 8887 (44.7%) in ENDO. Compared to OPEN-GSV, ENDO exhibited a higher risk for major amputation (RR, 1.38; P = .002), higher risk of MALE (RR, 1.23; P = .004), lower risk of MACE (RR, 0.48; P < .001), and similar risk for all other outcomes. Compared to OPEN-Other, ENDO exhibited a lower risk of MACE (RR, 0.49; P < .001) and POD (RR, 0.76; P = .040) and was similar for all other outcomes. These data demonstrate a higher rate of early amputation and MALE among those who underwent ENDO vs OPEN-GSV. Conversely, early limb events were similar between ENDO and OPEN-Other. Both OPEN-GSV and OPEN-Other were associated with a higher risk of 30-day MACE. OPEN-Other was associated with a higher risk of MACE. These data highlight the importance of patient selection to optimize overall patient outcomes in CLTI.

Authors
Waseem Wahood, Edwin Takahashi, Robert Lookstein, Eric Secemsky, Randall Demartino, Joshua Beckman, Michael Conte, Sanjay Misra
Relevant Conditions

Stroke, Heart Attack