Methods: This single-center, retrospective study included a total of 12 patients (9 males, 3 females; mean age 63.7±6.4 years; range 54 to 74 years) with persistent buttock claudication who underwent endovascular repair of bilateral internal iliac artery stenosis or occlusion and were treated with percutaneous transluminal angioplasty in another session at our center between July 2012 and February 2016. The iliac Doppler ultrasonography and/or computed tomography angiography were performed at six and 12 months to evaluate restenosis or occlusion. Symptom relief was considered a successful outcome.
Results: The median follow-up was 16.5±3.7 (range, 12 to 24) months. Four patients underwent a bilateral intervention and eight patients underwent unilateral intervention. There was a 100% technical success rate with no complications. The primary patency rate at 12 months was 87.5%. Six patients (50%) had complete and four patients (33.3%) had partial relief of the buttock claudication symptoms.
Conclusion: Percutaneous angioplasty of the internal iliac arteries is a technically feasible and safe method in patients with buttock claudication and bilateral internal iliac artery occlusion or stenosis. Complete or partial relief of symptoms can be achieved in the majority of patients with a high primary patency rate.
In the present study, we aimed to investigate the therapeutic value of endovascular treatment in patients with buttock claudication caused by stenosis or occlusion of the bilateral INIAs.
A written informed consent was obtained from each patient. The study protocol was approved by the institutional Ethics Committee. The study was conducted in accordance with the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki.
Procedural technique
The femoral artery was punctured under ultrasound
guidance. After a 5-6 French (Fr) introducer sheath was
inserted and diagnostic angiography was performed,
intravenous heparin (100 IU/kg) was administered.
The contralateral femoral approach was used in
patients with unilateral intervention, whereas both
ipsilateral (Figure 1a) and contralateral approaches
were used in patients with bilateral intervention.
The crossover technique using 0.035 hydrophilic
guide-wire, 5-6 Fr left internal mammary artery
guiding catheter was placed at the ostium of the INIA
(Figure 1a), when contralateral femoral approach was
preferred. The INIA PTA was, then, performed using
a 3- to 6-mm-diameter and 20-40 mm long balloon
catheter (Armada 35, Abbott Vascular Inc., Santa
Clara, CA, USA) with predilatation with the coronary balloon (2-4¥12-20 mm, Trek, Abbott Vascular Inc.,
Santa Clara, CA, USA) in eight patients (Figure 2b).
The coronary balloon catheter was delivered through
the guiding catheter, whereas the peripheral balloon
catheter was delivered without a guiding catheter over
through a 0.035 guidewire. Stent deployment in the
INIA was not systematic and was reserved in case
of flow-limiting dissection where we needed none
in our study. A completion angiogram concluded
the procedure (Figure 1c). Four patients underwent
bilateral intervention of the INIA (Figure 2a-c). The
femoral access site managed with digital pressure.
Operative data are summarized in Table 1. All patients
were discharged with one-month dual antiplatelet
therapy consisting of acetylsalicylic acid (100 mg per
day) and clopidogrel (75 mg per day) and continued
with aspirin alone, thereafter. Proper medication
for risk factors such as coronary artery disease,
hypertension and hyperlipidemia (particularly with
statins) were given after the intervention. The patency
rate during follow-up was evaluated with Doppler
ultrasonography (a peak systolic velocity ratio of 2.0 was established as the threshold for stenosis) and with
CT angiography, when indicated.
Table 1: Procedural data (n=16)
Statistical analysis
NCSS (Number Cruncher Statistical System)
2007 (Kaysville, Utah, USA) program was used
for the statistical analysis. Descriptive data were
expressed in mean ± standard deviation (SD),
median, number, and frequency. A p value of <0.05
was considered statistically significant with 95%
confidence i nterval (CI).
Table 2: Baseline and demographic characteristics of patients (n=12)
The median follow-up was 16.5±3.7 (range, 12 to 24) months. The technical success rate was 100%. The procedural characteristics are summarized in Table 1. Six patients (%50) had complete and four patients (33.3%) had partial relief of the buttock claudication symptoms (83.3% total). The primary patency rate was 87.5% (Table 3). There were two cases of restenosis (12.5%) in patients who underwent bilateral intervention. These patients were documented by Doppler ultrasonography of INIA, followed by CT angiography, and did not need angiography or re-intervention, since the other INIA was open and the patients did not have persistent buttock claudication. One case of accessrelated hematoma occurred, which resolved on digital pressure.
Although buttock claudication may have a vascular origin, symptoms may also mimic other entities, such as orthopedic diseases and neurogenic claudication. Therefore, it should be considered in the differential diagnosis at the time of admission. However, in our study, these entities were excluded, since the patients were evaluated clinically and, then, with CT by an orthopedic surgeon and neurologist for the spine, hip, and peripheral nerve diseases.
Open surgery has for years been the gold standard treatment of occlusive disease of the INIA.[9,10] Open surgery carries a high level of technical success and sustained benefit with an increased operative morbidity and mortality and longer hospital stay. In addition, all patients in our study had bilateral occlusion and stenosis of INIA"s, requiring a larger single incision or two separate retroperitoneal incisions. Several studies previously evaluated the endovascular treatment (PTA alone vs. stenting) in small case series and showed that the procedures either for PTA alone or stenting were efficient and safe without any complication.[11-15]
Furthermore, BA may be an effective alternative to stent deployment, as any technology without leaving in the vessel for the improvement of longterm patency may be preferable to the long-term persistence of a foreign body. However, it poses the risk of a stent being crushed or broken in the deep INIA in the osseofibromuscular gluteal canal and, therefore, it should be avoided in this portion of the INIA.[16] Potential problems with stentless strategy with BA, however, are the elastic recoil phenomenon, and the occurrence of flow-limiting dissection. Since there were no flow-limiting dissection and the lesions were mostly focal and non-calcified, we preferred BA rather than stent deployment with a patency rate of 87.5%, which can be considered high with BA alone.
Limitations of this study include the retrospective, single-center design with small sample size. Although impotency is a complaint often accompanying buttock claudication, we were unable to evaluate the outcomes due to the retrospective design of the study. Another limitation is that, although the gold standard for the diagnosis of INIA stenosis is conventional angiography, we were able to use Doppler ultrasonography in the follow-up of the symptomatic patients.
In conclusion, percutaneous angioplasty of the internal iliac artery is technically feasible and safe in patients with buttock claudication and bilateral internal iliac artery occlusion and stenosis. Complete or partial symptomatic relief can be achieved in the majority of patients with a high primary patency rate.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect to
the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the research
and/or authorship of this article.
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