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AngioVac for extraction of venous thromboses and endocardial vegetations: A meta‐analysis
Author(s) -
Hameed Irbaz,
Lau Christopher,
Khan Faiza M.,
Wingo Matthew,
Rahouma Mohamed,
Leonard Jeremy R.,
Di Franco Antonino,
Worku Berhane M.,
Salemi Arash,
Girardi Leonard N.,
Gaudino Mario
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of cardiac surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.428
H-Index - 58
eISSN - 1540-8191
pISSN - 0886-0440
DOI - 10.1111/jocs.14009
Subject(s) - medicine , confidence interval , thrombosis , vegetation (pathology) , incidence (geometry) , venous thrombosis , meta analysis , surgery , pulmonary embolism , cardiology , physics , pathology , optics
Background AngioVac is a new device for filtering intravascular thrombi and emboli. Publications on the device are limited and underpowered to objectively estimate its safety and efficacy. We aimed to overcome this by performing a meta‐analysis on the results of AngioVac for treating venous thromboses and endocardial vegetations. Methods A systematic literature review was performed to identify all articles reporting cardiac vegetation and/or thrombosis extraction using AngioVac. Endpoints were successful removal, operative mortality, conversion to open surgery, hospital stay, recurrent thromboembolism, and follow‐up mortality. Random effect model was used, and pooled event rates (PERs) and incidence rate (IR) were calculated. Results A total of 42 studies with 182 patients (81 vegetation and 101 thrombosis) were included. Overall mean follow‐up times were 3.1 and 0.7 years in vegetation and thrombosis patients, respectively. The PERs for successful removal were 74.5 (confidence interval [CI]: 48.2‐90.2), 80.5 (CI: 70.0‐88.0), and 32.4 (CI: 17.0‐52.8) in vegetation, right atrial/caval venous thrombi, and pulmonary emboli (PE) patients, respectively. The PERs for operative mortalities were 14.6 (CI: 7.7‐25.8), 14.8 (CI: 8.5‐24.5), and 32.3 (CI: 15.1‐56.3), respectively. The PERs for conversion to open surgery were 25.0 (CI: 9.3‐51.9) and 12.3 (CI: 5.4‐25.6) in vegetation and thrombosis patients, respectively. The IR of recurrent thromboembolism was 0.18 per person per year (PPY) (CI: 0.00‐14.69) in vegetation and 0.19 PPY (CI: 0.08‐0.48) in thrombosis patients. IR of follow‐up mortality was 0.37 PPY (CI: 0.11‐1.21) in thrombosis patients. Conclusions AngioVac is a viable option for extracting right‐sided vegetations and right atrial/caval venous thrombi. Rates of successful extraction and mortality are significantly worse for PE.