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Mid-Term Results of the Multicenter CAMPARI Registry Using the E-Liac Iliac Branch Device for Aorto-Iliac Aneurysms.

Journal of cardiovascular development and disease 2026 Vol.13(1)

Noce F, Accarino G, Angiletta D, Guercio LD, Zacà S, Massara M, Volpe P, Peluso A, Flora L, Serra R, Bracale UM

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: Intentional occlusion of the internal iliac artery (IIA) during endovascular repair of aorto-iliac aneurysms may predispose patients to pelvic ischemic complications such as gluteal claudication, er

🔬 핵심 임상 통계 (초록에서 자동 추출 — 원문 검증 권장)
  • 95% CI 77-100
  • 연구 설계 cohort study

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BibTeX ↓ RIS ↓
APA Noce F, Accarino G, et al. (2026). Mid-Term Results of the Multicenter CAMPARI Registry Using the E-Liac Iliac Branch Device for Aorto-Iliac Aneurysms.. Journal of cardiovascular development and disease, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/jcdd13010048
MLA Noce F, et al.. "Mid-Term Results of the Multicenter CAMPARI Registry Using the E-Liac Iliac Branch Device for Aorto-Iliac Aneurysms.." Journal of cardiovascular development and disease, vol. 13, no. 1, 2026.
PMID 41590875

Abstract

: Intentional occlusion of the internal iliac artery (IIA) during endovascular repair of aorto-iliac aneurysms may predispose patients to pelvic ischemic complications such as gluteal claudication, erectile dysfunction, and bowel ischemia. Iliac branch devices (IBDs) have been developed to preserve hypogastric perfusion. E-Liac (Artivion/Jotec) is one of the latest modular IBDs yet reports on mid-term performance are limited to small single-center cohorts with short follow-up. The CAMpania PugliA bRanch IliaC (CAMPARI) study is a multicenter investigation of E-Liac outcomes. : A retrospective observational cohort study was conducted across five Italian vascular centers. All consecutive patients undergoing E-Liac implantation for aorto-iliac or isolated iliac aneurysms between January 2015 and December 2024 were identified from prospectively maintained registries. Inclusion criteria comprised elective or urgent endovascular repair of aorto-iliac aneurysms in which an adequate distal sealing zone was not available without covering the IIA and suitability for the E-Liac device according to its instructions for use (IFU). Patients with a life expectancy < 1 year or hostile anatomy incompatible with the IFU were excluded. The primary end point was freedom from branch instability (occlusion/stenosis, kinking, or detachment of the bridging stent). Secondary end points included freedom from any endoleak, freedom from device-related reintervention, freedom from gluteal claudication, aneurysm-related and all-cause mortality, acute renal failure, and sac regression > 5 mm. : A total of 69 consecutive patients (68 male, 1 female, median age 72.0 years) received 74 E-Liac devices, including 5 bilateral implantations. The mean infrarenal aortic diameter was 45 mm and the mean CIA diameter 34 mm; 14 patients (20.0%) had a concomitant IIA aneurysm (>20 mm). Concomitant fenestrated or branched aortic repair was performed in 23% of procedures. Two patients received a standalone IBD without implantation of a proximal aortic endograft. Technical success was achieved in 71/74 cases (96.0%); three failures occurred due to inability to catheterize the IIA. Distal landing was in the main IIA trunk in 58 cases and in the posterior branch in 13 cases. Over a median follow-up of 18 (6; 36) months, there were four branch instability events (5.4%): three occlusions and one bridging stent detachment. Seven patients (9.5%) developed endoleaks (one type Ib, two type II, two type IIIa, and two type IIIc). Five patients (6.8%) required reintervention, and five (6.8%) reported gluteal claudication. There were seven all-cause deaths (10%), none within 30 days or related to aneurysm rupture; causes included COVID-19 pneumonia, acute coronary syndrome, melanoma, gastric cancer, and stroke. No acute renal or respiratory failure occurred. Kaplan-Meier analysis showed 92% (95% CI 77-100) freedom from branch instability in the main-trunk group and 89% (60-100) in the posterior-branch group (log-rank = 0.69). Freedom from any endoleak at 48 months was 87% (95% CI 75-95), and freedom from reintervention was 93% (95% CI 83-98). : In this multicenter cohort, the E-Liac branched endograft demonstrated high technical success and favorable early-mid-term outcomes. Preservation of hypogastric perfusion using E-Liac was associated with low rates of branch instability, endoleak, and reintervention, with no 30-day mortality or aneurysm-related deaths. These findings support the safety and efficacy of E-Liac for aorto-iliac aneurysm management, although larger prospective studies with longer follow-up are needed.