Thoracoabdominal computed tomography (CT) revealed giant saccular aneurysmal dilatation of the abdominal aorta at the infrarenal level, with the diameter of the aneurysm measuring 8.5 cm at its widest. In addition, a laboratory analysis determined that the erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and C-reactive protein (CRP) levels were higher than normal (45 mm/h and 4.77 mg/dl, respectively).
The patient was then referred to our hospital with the diagnosis of an active form of BD and a leaking giant abdominal aortic aneurysm. The control ESR and CRP values continued to be high during his hospital stay despite optimal medical treatment. A control thoracoabdominal CT scan revealed that the aneurysm had increased in diameter and showed a leak. Surgery was not considered since the BD was still active. The Rheumatology department also ruled out any surgery due to the high levels of sedimentation and CRP. Therefore, endovascular treatment was planned instead. One gram of methylprednisolone (Prednol®, MN Pharmaceuticals, İstanbul, Turkey) was administered intravenously as part of the patient’s pulse steroid treatment before the intervention, and one gram of the prophylactic antibiotic cefazolin (Eqizoline®, Tüm-Ekip İlaç, İstanbul, Turkey) was admistered three times a day. Afterwards, the sheaths were inserted into the bilateral femoral arteries under local anesthesia, and aortic and pelvic angiographies were performed (Figure 1). After adjusting the ostia of the renal arteries, a Gore® Excluder® AAA Endoprotheses stent graft (W.L. Gore & Associates, Flagstaff, Arizona, USA) measuring 23 mm in diameter was inserted. We chose an aorto-bi-iliac stent-graft since the aneurysm involved the beginning of both iliac arteries (Figure 2). Afterwards, control aortography revealed no endovascular leak (Figure 3). The patient was followed up in the intensive care unit (ICU) where steroid and colchicine treatments for maintenance were administered for a day. The patient was then transferred to the regular clinic where he stayed for two more days.
Figure 1: Angiographic image of the abdominal aortic aneurysm.
Figure 3: Angiographic image of the aneurysm after endovascular stent graft interposition.
However, the patient was readmitted four months after the intervention because of a high fever and abdominal pain, and CT detected air and an abscess cavity around the stent graft (Figure 4). A diagnosis of graft infection was made, and treatment with the casesensitive antibiotic teicoplanin (Targocid®, Sanofi- Aventis Ltd., İstanbul, Turkey) was initiated (once a day) in combination with meropenem trihydrate (Meronem®, AstraZeneca, İstanbul, Turkey) (three times a day). The patient was discharged after control CT angiography demonstrated that the infection around the stent graft had regressed significantly, and this was verified by CT (Figure 5). However, CT angiography at the seven-month follow-up showed that the abscess around the graft had recurred at the level of the iliac bifurcation stent graft, and retroperitoneal abscess drainage was performed. Emergency axillofemoral and femorofemoral bypass graft surgery was then performed using a Flowline Bipore® expanded polytetrafluroethylene (ePTFE) vascular graft (JOTEC GmbH, Hechingen, Germany) because of a rupture during the endovascular procedure. Unfortunately, Escherichia coli was detected in the liquid culture, and the patient died on the postoperative sixth day because of septic shock and deterioration in his general condition.
Figure 4: The air and abscess detected by computed tomography around the stent graft.
The active stage in BD is an extremely susceptible phase because major surgery during this period has an unacceptably high morbidity. Hence, endovascular stent grafts are a reasonable alternative in high-risk surgical patients such as ours.[12] Successful results have been reported in the literature regarding the use of endovascular stent grafts since the early 1990s,[4,13] with graft-related septic complications following this procedure being rare. However, when they occur, these complications are associated with significant mortality.[14]
The clinical presentation of endovascular graft infection can be nonspecific. First of all, diagnostic imaging is important for the detection of this complication in order to analyze the extent of the infection and differentiate it from other infectious diseases, with CT being the gold standard. The presence of persistent perigraft air, fluid, or soft-tissue attenuation along with pseudoaneurysm formation or osteomyelitis can be suggestive of graft infection.[15] The consensus is that infected graft material should always be removed via extra-anatomic bypass and the use of long-term parenteral antibiotics.[16] In fact, this is exactly what we performed when we chose the axillofemoral and femorofemoral bypass. Potential complications of this surgery include aortic stump blowout, limb thrombosis, the need for amputation, recurrent infection, and death.[17,18] In our p atient, t he graft was removed, and axillobifemoral bypass graft surgery was performed. However, the patient died on the postoperative sixth day because of deterioration in his general condition and septic shock. In the literature, potential risk factors for endograft infection include adjunctive endovascular procedures during the primary implantation, immunesuppression, the treatment of pseudoaneurysms, and infected central venous catheters.[19] Veger et al.[20] discovered that prophylactic administration may decrease the likelihood of bacteremia before stent graft insertion. Additionally, the authors also postulated that poor intraluminal healing of stent grafts, as observed in several explant studies, may result in higher susceptibility to episodes of bacteremia than for patients for whom prosthetic vascular grafts were inserted during open repair. In our patient, systemic immunosuppressive medication, including steroids, colchicines, and cyclophosphamide, was given to the patient postoperatively.
In conclusion, for BD patients still on immunosuppressive therapy, endovascular stent grafting may be very risky. Abscesses that cause sepsis and death early in the diagnosis may appear; therefore, effective therapeutic intervention is especially critical for patients with active BD.
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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