CO2 Angiography in the Standard and Complex Endovascular Repair of the Abdominal Aorta-A Narrative Review of the Literature

J Clin Med. 2024 Aug 7;13(16):4634. doi: 10.3390/jcm13164634.

Abstract

Background/Objectives: Carbon dioxide digital-subtraction angiography (CO2-DSA) is an increasingly adopted technique in endovascular aortic repair (EVAR) and fenestrated/branched EVAR (F/B-EVAR); it is used to reduce the amount of iodinate contrast medium (ICM) and prevent postoperative renal function worsening (PO-RFW). Our aim is to report results from the literature on EVAR and F/B-EVAR procedures using CO2-DSA, together with wider applications in aortic endovascular treatment. Methods: We performed a literature review by searching electronic databases for published data on CO2-DSA during EVAR and F/B-EVAR procedures. The endpoints were postoperative renal function worsening (PO-RFW) and efficacy of intraoperative arterial visualization. Further, applications of CO2 for thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR) were described. Results: Seventeen studies reporting results on CO2-DSA in EVAR (644 patients) were retrieved. Overall, 372 (58%) procedures were performed with CO2 alone, and 272 (42%) were performed with CO2+ICM. Eight studies analyzed the effect of CO2-DSA angiography on PO-RFW; four studies showed a significantly lower rate of PO-RFW compared to ICM. Five studies (153 patients) analyzed intraoperative arterial visualization with CO2-DSA; renal and hypogastric arteries were effectively visualized in 69% and 99% of cases, respectively. The use of CO2-DSA in F/B-EVAR has not been widely investigated. The largest series reported that PO-RFW was lower in the CO2 vs. ICM group. Conclusions: Carbon dioxide is widely applied in modern aortic endovascular treatment. CO2-DSA for EVAR and F/B-EVAR is an efficient technique for reducing PO-RFW while allowing acceptable arterial intraoperative visualization.

Keywords: branched endovascular repair; carbon dioxide angiography; contrast-induced renal injury; endovascular aneurysm repair; fenestrated endovascular repair; renal function protection; thoracic endovascular repair.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.