Advertisement

The use of HeRo catheter in catheter-dependent dialysis patients with superior vena cava occlusion

The use of HeRo catheter in catheter-dependent dialysis patients with superior vena cava occlusion

forthcoming

Article Type: ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Article Subject: Dialysis

DOI:10.5301/jva.5000493

Authors

Davis, Kathryn L. Gurley, John C. Davenport, Daniel L. Xenos, Eleftherios S.

Abstract

Hemodialysis (HD) patients with superior vena cava (SVC) occlusion have limited access options. Femoral access is commonly employed but is associated with high complication rates. Hemodialysis Reliable Outflow (HeRO) catheters can be used in tunneled catheter-dependent (TCD) patients who have exhausted other access options. The HeRO graft bypasses occlusion and traverses stenosis with outflow directly into the central venous circulation. At our institution we have used the inside-out central venous access technique (IOCVA) to traverse an occluded vena cava for HeRO graft placement. We review our experience with this technique.

A retrospective chart review was conducted of patients with HeRO graft placement at our institution. All were dependent on a tunneled femoral dialysis catheter due to central venous occlusion (CVO). The IOCVA technique was used in each case. This technique was used as last resort for patients who had no other dialysis access option. Demographics, patency rates, complications, and mortality were recorded.

A total of 11 HeRO grafts were placed in 11 patients from January 2012 to June 2013, with 100% technical success rate. Three grafts were ligated due to steal syndrome. Two grafts were lost due to thrombosis. Five of 11 patients experienced a 30-day complication. Three patients died within the follow-up period; however, none were directly related to the graft placement. Follow up range was 65-573 days; 5 of 11 grafts were used for dialysis at the end of the follow-up period. The 12-month patency rate was 30%.

HeRO grafts are one option for dialysis patients with CVO. There is, however, a high incidence of steal syndrome and other complications. These grafts should be offered as a final potential alternative to catheter dependence.

Article History

Disclosures

Financial support: None.
Conflicts of Interest: None.

This article is available as full text PDF.

  • If you are a Subscriber, please log in now.

  • Article price: Eur 36,00
  • You will be granted access to the article for 72 hours and you will be able to download any format (PDF or ePUB). The article will be available in your login area under "My PayPerView". You will need to register a new account (unless you already own an account with this journal), and you will be guided through our online shop. Online purchases are paid by Credit Card through PayPal.
  • If you are not a Subscriber you may:
  • Subscribe to this journal
  • Unlimited access to all our archives, 24 hour a day, every day of the week.

Authors

  • Davis, Kathryn L. [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • Gurley, John C. [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • Davenport, Daniel L. [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • Xenos, Eleftherios S. [PubMed] [Google Scholar] , * Corresponding Author (esxeno2@email.uky.edu)

Affiliations

  • Department of Surgery, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky - USA

Article usage statistics

The blue line displays unique views in the time frame indicated.
The yellow line displays unique downloads.
Views and downloads are counted only once per session.

No supplementary material is available for this article.