# The Performance of the Endurant Endoprosthesis in an Infrarenal Aortic Aneurysm with a Wide or Conical-Shaped Infrarenal Neck Anatomy

**Authors:** Maaike Plug, Suzanne Holewijn, Armelle Meershoek, Daphne van der Veen, Michel M. P. J. Reijnen

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm14124133 · 2025-06-11

## TL;DR

This study evaluates how well the Endurant endoprosthesis works in aortic aneurysm patients with wide or conical-shaped aortic necks compared to normal necks.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into the performance of the Endurant endoprosthesis in challenging aortic neck anatomies.

## Key findings

- Patients with wide necks had lower reintervention-free survival compared to those with normal necks.
- Proximal fixation failure was more common in the wide-neck group.
- The conical-neck group showed no significant difference in reintervention-free survival compared to the reference group.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: Wide and conical-shaped infrarenal necks are risk factors for neck-related complications after Endovascular Aorta Aneurysm Repair (EVAR). The aim of this study is to investigate the performance of the Endurant endoprosthesis in wide/conical-shaped aortic neck anatomies compared to its performance in a normal infrarenal neck (reference group). Methods: A single-center, retrospective observational cohort study was performed, including consecutive subjects with an infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm, treated electively with an Endurant endoprosthesis. The primary endpoint was the freedom from aneurysm-related reinterventions through 1 year. Secondary endpoints included proximal fixation failure, type IA endoleak, stent migration, aneurysm sac remodeling, aneurysm-related mortality, freedom from reinterventions throughout available follow-up, and rupture. Results: A total of 268 patients were included, with a mean age of 73.3 years, and 85.1% were male. Freedom from aneurysm-related reinterventions was significantly lower in the wide-neck group (60.0%) compared to the reference group (81.1%; p = 0.018) but not for the conical-neck group (70.3%; p = 0.286). Median time to first reintervention was 1.7 (IQR 0.8; 4.4 years) in the reference group, 2.9 years (IQR 0.3; 5.0 years) in the wide-neck group (p = 0.547) and 3.8 years (IQR 0.4; 6.5) in the conical-neck group (p = 0.123). The proximal fixation failure rate was 7.4% in the wide-neck group compared to 3.3% in the reference group (p = 0.155) and 1.7% in the conical-neck group (p = 0.525). The type IA endoleak rate was 4.9% in the wide-neck group versus 3.3% in the reference group (p = 0.250). Conclusions: In the group with wide necks, reintervention-free survival was lower compared to the reference group, which seems to be driven by proximal fixation failure.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** abdominal aortic aneurysm (MONDO:0005350)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** rupture (MESH:D012421), Infrarenal Aortic Aneurysm (MESH:D001014), Aneurysm (MESH:D000783), abdominal aortic aneurysm (MESH:D017544), endoleak (MESH:D057867)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12194267/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12194267