Jonathan Misskey
University of British Columbia
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Annals of Vascular Surgery | 2015
Jonathan Misskey; Steven Johnson; Keith Baxter; Joel Gagnon
BACKGROUND The advent of branched and fenestrated aortic endografts has facilitated the treatment of increasingly complex aortic pathology. The management of complications and endoleaks involving the branches and fenestrations of these grafts represents an increasingly significant clinical and technical challenge. METHODS A 79-year-old woman developed a rare type IIIb endoleak from a tear in the graft fabric immediately posterior to the celiac axis branch 3 years after the placement of an off-the-shelf branched endograft for a type II thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm. The patient presented urgently with abdominal pain and a maximal aneurysm diameter of 15.3 cm. RESULTS The operative plan was to create a chimney graft completely within the original branched endograft to cover the defect and maintain celiac branch flow. The celiac trunk was accessed from a left axillary approach and access for the main endograft body was achieved via the left femoral artery. Two balloon-expandable covered stents were deployed from the celiac branch extending into the main endograft as a chimney and molded to 2 aortic extension cuffs to cover the fabric defect. The resultant configuration was a modified-sandwich graft within the original stent graft and resulted in successful exclusion of the endoleak. Postoperative imaging at 1, 6, and 12 months has demonstrated continued patency of the celiac trunk, no further endoleak, and a 16-mm reduction in aneurysm size. CONCLUSIONS The chimney technique was successfully applied as an endovascular option to salvage a multibranched endograft with a significant and anatomically unfavorable defect. Careful follow-up and additional clinical study are required to clarify the role of off-the-shelf solutions in complex endoleak management.
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2017
Jonathan Misskey; Jason Faulds; Ravi Sidhu; Keith Baxter; Joel Gagnon; York N. Hsiang
Objective: Current Kidney Disease Outcomes Quality Initiative guidelines do not incorporate age in determining autogenous arteriovenous hemodialysis access placement, and the optimal initial configuration in elderly patients remains controversial. We compared patency, maturation, survival, and complications between several age cohorts (<65 years, 65‐79 years, >80 years) to determine whether protocols should be modified to account for advanced age. Methods: All patients at two teaching hospitals undergoing a first autogenous arteriovenous access creation in either arm between 2007 and 2013 were retrospectively analyzed from a prospectively maintained database. Kaplan‐Meier survival and Cox hazards models were used to compare access patency and risk factors for failure. Results: There were 941 autogenous arteriovenous accesses (median follow‐up, 23 months; range, 0‐89 months) eligible for inclusion; 152 (15.3%) accesses were created in those >80 years, 397 (42.2%) in those 65 to 79 years, and 392 (41.8%) in those <65 years. Primary patencies in patients >80 years, 65 to 79 years, and <65 years were 40% ± 4%, 38% ± 3%, and 51% ± 3% at 12 months and 12% ± 5%, 13% ± 3%, and 27% ± 3% at 36 months (P < .001). Primary assisted patencies were 72% ± 4%, 70% ± 2%, and 78% ± 2% at 12 months and 52% ± 5%, 52% ± 3%, and 67% ± 3% at 36 months (P < .001). Secondary patencies were 72% ± 4%, 71% ± 2%, and 79% ± 2% at 12 months and 54% ± 5%, 55% ± 3%, and 72% ± 3% at 36 months (P < .001). Radiocephalic patencies were lowest among older cohorts; in those >80 years, 65 to 79 years, and <65 years, they were 65% ± 7%, 67% ± 4%, and 77% ± 3% at 12 months and 41% ± 8%, 51% ± 5%, and 68% ± 4% at 36 months (P = .019). Secondary brachiocephalic access patencies in these cohorts were 78% ± 5%, 80% ± 3%, and 82% ± 3% at 12 months and 68% ± 7%, 66% ± 5%, and 77% ± 4% at 36 months (P = .206). Both the age groups 65 to 79 years and >80 years demonstrated superior brachiocephalic vs radiocephalic secondary patencies (P = .048 and P = .015, respectively); however, no differences between configuration and secondary patency were observed within the cohort <65 years. Radiocephalic access maturation failure at 12 and 24 months was 25% ± 3% and 29% ± 4% in those <65 years, 32% ± 3% and 39% ± 4% in those 65 to 79 years, and 40% ± 7% and 48% ± 8% in those >80 years (P = .006). Brachiocephalic access maturation failures were 17% ± 3% and 20% ± 3% at 12 and 24 months in those <65 years, 21% ± 3% and 25% ± 4% in those 65 to 79 years, and 18% ± 5% and 21% ± 5% in those >80 years (P = .740). On multivariate analysis, coronary disease, female sex, previous ipsilateral or bilateral catheters, radiocephalic configuration, and age >65 years were associated with secondary patency loss. Conclusions: Patients aged 65 to 79 years and >80 years had inferior primary, primary assisted, and secondary patency and maturation compared with those <65 years. When stratified by configuration, radiocephalic accesses demonstrated lower patency and maturation compared with brachiocephalic accesses for patients aged 65 to 79 years and >80 years and were an independent predictor of secondary patency loss.
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2016
Jonathan Misskey; Cathevine Yang; Shaun MacDonald; Keith Baxter; York N. Hsiang
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2016
Jonathan Misskey; Jason Faulds; Ravi Sidhu; Keith Baxter; Joel Gagnon; York N. Hsiang
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2017
Joel Gagnon; Jacques G. Tittley; Jonathan Misskey
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2017
Ramin Hamidizadeh; Jonathan Misskey; Jason Faulds; Jerry Chen; Joel Gagnon; York N. Hsiang
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2017
Jonathan Misskey; Ramin Hamidizadeh; Jerry Chen; Jason Faulds; Joel Gagnon; York N. Hsiang
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2017
Joel Gagnon; Jacques G. Tittley; Jonathan Misskey
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2017
Gautamn Sarwal; Jonathan Misskey; John D.S. Reid; Ravindar Sidhu; Peter S. MacDonald
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2016
Shaun MacDonald; Jonathan Misskey; Matthew Robinson; Ravi Sidhu; Brad Munt; Jason J. Clement