Transcatheter Closure of Coronary Artery Fistulae: Considerations and Approaches Based on Fistula Origin

Yunbin Xiao, Srinath T. Gowda, Zhi Chen, Jeffrey W. Delaney, Zahid Amin, Larry A. Latson, Shelby Kutty

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objectives To investigate technical approaches for transcatheter closure of coronary artery fistula based on anatomic type of the fistula. Background The variability in coronary artery fistulae (CAF) anatomy that necessitates different transcatheter closure (TCC) approaches has not been well documented. Methods Records of patients with CAF who underwent TCC at 2 centers were reviewed for technical details and procedural outcome. CAF were classified as proximal and distal. TCC approaches employed were arterio-venous or arterio-arterial loop, retrograde arterial, and antegrade venous. Results Eighteen patients with CAF, mean age 12.6 years (0.07-60), 11 male (61%), underwent TCC. All CAF drained predominantly into the right side of the heart. Types of CAF were proximal in 15 and distal in 3 patients. CAF calibers were large in 7, medium in 9, and small in 2 patients. The arterio-venous loop approach was used in the majority of the cases (11 patients) and the CAF size were medium to large. The retrograde arterial approach was used in 4; of these, 3 patients had small to medium sized CAF. In 2 patients with long tortuous CAF an antegrade venous approach was employed. TCC was successful in 17 of the 18 patients (94.4%). There were no peri-procedural deaths or vascular complications. Conclusions This study documents transcatheter closure approaches for CAF and device selection based on fistula origin. The choices of TCC technique and device selection vary, and are primarily determined by the heterogeneous anatomic characteristics of the fistulae.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)380-389
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of Interventional Cardiology
Volume28
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 1 2015

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging
  • Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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