Stroth Hans-Christian Arne, Berg Floris, Freytag Hannah Emilia, Reeps Christian, Wolk Steffen, Hoffmann Ralf-Thorsten, Nebelung Heiner, Kühn Jens-Peter, Busch Albert, Kapalla Marvin
Division of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, Department for Visceral-, Thoracic and Vascular Surgery, Medical Faculty Carl Gustav Carus and University Hospital, Technische Universität Dresden, Germany.
Department for Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, Klinikum rechts der Isar, Technical University Munich, Germany.
Vasa. 2025 Jul;54(4):242-252. doi: 10.1024/0301-1526/a001198. Epub 2025 Apr 17.
Patients having emergency surgery due to ischemia caused by a popliteal artery aneurysm (PAA) have worse outcomes in all endpoints (operation time, major adverse limb events (MALE), amputation-free survival) than after elective treatment, mostly due to a limited crural vessel runoff. This study investigates the relationship between PAA diameter, volume, and luminal thrombus load in relation to the preoperative crural runoff. Retrospective single-centre evaluation of surgically treated patients with PAA and semi-automated quantitative CT analysis of PAA morphologies (diameter, volume and intraluminal thrombus volume). Primary endpoints were the correlations these characteristics with the number of patent crural vessels. A total of 89 PAAs (61 patients, median age 75, IQR 12; 94.4% male) were identified, of which 47.2% were symptomatic with 18 acute limb ischemia (ALI). The diameter at surgery was 33.8 ± 12.1mm and the volume 68.5 ± 13.6mm. A median of two lower leg vessels were patent (elective 3 [1, 2, 3] vs. emergency 1 [1, 2], p=0.1) upon preoperative CTA. 77 PAAs underwent elective surgery, five PAAs (5.6%) received endovascular treatment. The surgical complication rate was 23.6% without immediate or early occlusion. The follow-up was 42.5 [39-45] months. The overall mortality rate was 11.2% and the primary patency rate 73.9%. While the total aneurysm volume correlated well with the diameter (r=0.77, p<0.01), the intraluminal thrombus volume (ILT) showed the clearest correlation with the crural runoff (r=-0.34, p=0.01). No correlation between the diameter and crural runoff was observed (r=-0.17, p=0.1). A reduced crural run-off was significantly associated with impaired amputation-free survival (p=0.01). A subgroup analysis (n=21) with sequential CTs showed a tendency towards greater increase of thrombus volume compared to plain diameter during PAA growth. The thrombus volume index (=ILT/total PAA volume) was significantly higher in emergency patients (p=0.01), while diameters tended to be smaller (p=0.57). The increasing intraluminal thrombus volume correlates most distinctly with a reduced crural runoff in PAAs and should therefore be considered prognostically important, especially in the presence of an increased growth rate compared to the diameter.