Browsing by Author "Garcia, Rita"
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- Fenestrated Physician-Modified Endografts (PMEGs) - a Viable Option for Urgent CasesPublication . Bento, Rita; Alves, Gonçalo; Rodrigues, Gonçalo; Garcia, Rita; Ribeiro, Tiago; Cardoso, Joana; Soares Ferreira, Rita; Ferreira, Maria EmiliaINTRODUCTION: Fenestrated and branched stent graft technology has come a long way over the past few years, enabling the treatment of complex juxtarenal aneurysms, thoracoabdominal aneurysms, and arch pathologies. Many innovations have been developed, namely device and delivery optimization and technical tricks. These concepts have proven to work well when there is sufficient time to plan and manufacture a custom-made device for the patient. However, this is different in urgent or emergent cases. Using parallel graft techniques or off-theshelf stent grafts may be efficient in urgent situations, but it is also associated with selection limitations. Recent publications have demonstrated similar mid-term technical and clinical results between physician-modified endografts (PMEGs) and customized devices. The authors aim to describe their institutional series of PMEGs. METHODS: The clinical files of all patients undergoing PMEGs were consulted, and demographic data as surgery outcomes were collected. Technical success: creating the intended number of fenestrations, target vessel catheterization, and patency. Procedural success: technical success with adequate aneurysm exclusion and without endoleak in the final angiography. 30-day complications and mortality were also evaluated. Technical and procedural success were assessed, as well as morbidity and mortality. RESULTS: Between December 2020 and December 2022, 3 patients underwent PMEGs. The indications were a juxtarenal aortic aneurysm, a type V thoracoabdominal aneurysm and a persistent type 1a endoleak. All patients were symptomatic, with one stable rupture. All cases were performed with technical and procedural success and no morbidity and mortality at 30 days. CONCLUSION: Stent graft modification is a valuable and valid tool in emergencies and should be a vascular surgeon's trump card when dealing with complex aortic pathologies. Nevertheless, due to the absence of longterm evidence, it should be reserved for acute patients unfit for open repair and in aneurysms with unfavorable anatomy for an off-the-shelf device.
- Giant Renal Tumor with Inferior Vena Cava Thrombus – a Case ReportPublication . F. Ribeiro, Tiago; Soares Ferreira, Rita; Garcia, Rita; Bento, Rita; Fidalgo, Helena; Ferrito, Fernando; Aragão de Moraisa, José; Ferreira, Maria EmiliaINTRODUCTION: Vascular migration and venous tumor thrombus are infrequent but unique aspects of renal cell carcinoma, and these features have signifcant therapeutic and prognostic implications. We report a case of renal neoplasm with a vena cava tumor thrombus treated with surgical resection and adjuvant chemotherapy. CASE REPORT: A 53-year-old, otherwise healthy woman presented to the emergency department due to macroscopic hematuria and abdominal pain. A large abdominal mass was noted. A computed tomography angiography was performed, and a right renal tumor (105x207mm) with level II inferior vena cava tumor thrombus and local adenopathy was noted. After a multidisciplinary discussion, she was proposed for surgical resection. Through a bilateral subcostal incision (Chevron), a standard right radical nephrectomy and perivascular lymph node excision were performed. The IVC was exposed, and a thrombectomy was performed through a longitudinal cavotomy. Pathology revealed clear renal cell carcinoma and lymph node metastasis. The postoperative period was uneventful. However, the patient developed multiple liver and lung metastases at early follow-up and was treated with chemotherapy. DISCUSSION: Tumor thrombus can extend up to the right atrium and occurs in nearly 10–25% of renal cell carcinoma patients. The natural history of this condition is poor, with a median survival of 5 months and signifcant survival improvements following radical nephrectomy and IVC tumor thrombus removal are observed, with 40- 60% 5-year survival. Surgical treatment should, therefore, be considered in this group of patients. Such operations can be challenging, particularly when thrombus extent is signifcant, and the combination of efforts between oncologists, urologists, and vascular surgeons can improve patient safety and perioperative outcomes with signifcant improvements in overall prognosis.