# The Western Aortic Collaborative: Multi-institutional Aortic Surgery, Education, and Research

**Authors:** Fenton H. McCarthy, Christopher R. Burke, Jason P. Glotzbach, Michael P. Fischbein, Anthony Caffarelli, Fernando Fleischman, T. Brett Reece

PMC · DOI: 10.1055/s-0045-1809344 · AORTA Journal · 2025-05-29

## TL;DR

The Western Aortic Collaborative is a new academic model that brings together aortic surgeons to advance surgery techniques, education, and multi-institutional research.

## Contribution

The WAC introduces a novel hybrid academic model combining in-person and remote collaboration for aortic surgery research and education.

## Key findings

- The WAC successfully created a regional community of aortic surgeons using remote platforms and annual meetings.
- A cloud-based database was developed to support multi-institutional aortic surgery research.
- Five high-priority research topics were identified based on knowledge gaps in aortic surgery.

## Abstract

The Western Aortic Collaborative (WAC) is a new, hybrid, multi-institutional academic model that seeks to perform aortic surgery research and education.

The WAC has three fundamental thoracic aortic surgery goals: (1) advancing surgical techniques, (2) furthering education and development of aortic surgeons, and (3) performing multi-institutional clinical research. The WAC utilizes a hybrid model of annual in-person meetings at the Western Thoracic Surgical Association (WTSA) combined with videoconferencing platforms that regularly connect surgeons dispersed throughout the Western region. The structure of WAC is intentionally horizontal. The goal is to promote cross-pollination of ideas, techniques, and experiences between surgeons at different institutions.

For its research goals, the WAC first identified the principal areas of aortic surgery with the greatest knowledge gaps and which of those knowledge gaps could best be addressed by institutional practice differences within WAC. Using this natural experiment design, five high-priority research topics from the aortic root to the left subclavian artery were created. In order to perform this subspecialized, multi-institutional research, the WAC created a novel, cloud-based database that piggybacks on the Society for Thoracic Surgeon database. The combined database also preserves the ability to generate subspecialized variables and to link with each institution's medical record system for semi-automated functionality.

In its inaugural year, the WAC succeeded in its primary goals of utilizing remote technology platforms and the annual WTSA meeting to create a regional community of aortic surgeons with shared research and educational goals.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** STS (MESH:C000719191), Thoracic Aortic Aneurysms (MESH:D017545), infected (MESH:D007239), aortic dissection (MESH:D000784), aortic disease (MESH:D001018), Cardiovascular Conditions (MESH:D002318), thoracic aortic disease (MESH:D013896), WAC (MESH:D020241)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12202023/full.md

## References

10 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12202023/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12202023