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The natural history of celiac artery aneurysms.
Vascular 2024 April 17
OBJECTIVES: The goal of this study was to document the natural history of celiac artery aneurysms (CAAs).
BACKGROUND: Celiac artery aneurysms are rare. Existing literature is skewed towards outcomes after intervention of large, symptomatic aneurysms but the behavior of untreated CAAs is poorly understood.
METHODS: This is a single institution, retrospective analysis of patients with CAA diagnosed by CT imaging (2015-2019) identified through an institutional radiology database. Radiologic, demographic, and follow-up data were analyzed. The primary endpoint was the mean growth rate of CAAs.
RESULTS: Of the 76 patients included, 86.8% were men with a mean age at presentation of 69.8 years. The mean CAA diameter on index imaging was 15.4 +/- 3.8 mm (range, 7-30 mm). All were classified as true aneurysms and 76.3% were saccular. All patients had clinical follow-up with mean follow-up 31.2 months +/- 21.6 months. No patient developed symptoms or rupture. The mean radiological follow-up among 45 patients was 25.2 +/- 16.8 months. Over this period, 16 CAAs (35.6%) enlarged, while 29 (64.4%) remained stable. One patient (1.3%) underwent intervention for increasing size in the setting of a chronic dissection. On multivariate analysis, age <70 was significantly associated with increased risk of aneurysm growth.
CONCLUSIONS: In this institutional review of patients with CAAs, the majority of aneurysms remained stable in size, with no patients developing symptoms or rupture over clinical follow-up. Given the observed benign behavior of these aneurysms, guidelines that suggest conservative management of CAAs less than 2 cm seems appropriate.
BACKGROUND: Celiac artery aneurysms are rare. Existing literature is skewed towards outcomes after intervention of large, symptomatic aneurysms but the behavior of untreated CAAs is poorly understood.
METHODS: This is a single institution, retrospective analysis of patients with CAA diagnosed by CT imaging (2015-2019) identified through an institutional radiology database. Radiologic, demographic, and follow-up data were analyzed. The primary endpoint was the mean growth rate of CAAs.
RESULTS: Of the 76 patients included, 86.8% were men with a mean age at presentation of 69.8 years. The mean CAA diameter on index imaging was 15.4 +/- 3.8 mm (range, 7-30 mm). All were classified as true aneurysms and 76.3% were saccular. All patients had clinical follow-up with mean follow-up 31.2 months +/- 21.6 months. No patient developed symptoms or rupture. The mean radiological follow-up among 45 patients was 25.2 +/- 16.8 months. Over this period, 16 CAAs (35.6%) enlarged, while 29 (64.4%) remained stable. One patient (1.3%) underwent intervention for increasing size in the setting of a chronic dissection. On multivariate analysis, age <70 was significantly associated with increased risk of aneurysm growth.
CONCLUSIONS: In this institutional review of patients with CAAs, the majority of aneurysms remained stable in size, with no patients developing symptoms or rupture over clinical follow-up. Given the observed benign behavior of these aneurysms, guidelines that suggest conservative management of CAAs less than 2 cm seems appropriate.
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