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Iliofemoral mechanical thrombolysis with AngioJetTM
Chung Sim Lim, Stephen Black
Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust
London, UK
Thrombolysis of iliofemoral DVT
• Iliofemoral deep venous thrombosis (DVT) is a significant risk factor for developing post-thrombotic syndrome (PTS)
• Several clinical studies have reported that early removal of thrombus is likely to reduce the risk of developing / severity of PTS
• Mechanical thrombectomy
• Often use in combination with chemical thrombolysis (pharmacomechanical thrombolysis)
• Potential advantages in comparison with catheter-directed thrombolysis (CDT)
• Reduction in the amount of lytic agent used, hence decrease risk of bleeding
• Reduction of duration of treatment, angio suite use, hospital stay (hence likely to reduce cost and improve patient satisfaction)
• Improvement in efficiency of thrombus removal
• Reduction of venography and check lysis, hence decrease in radiation to patient and clinician
Garcia et al. J Vasc Interv Radiol 2015;26:777-785
Lin et al. Am J Surg 2006;192:782-788
Kim et al. 2006;29:1003-1007
AngioJet rheolytic thrombolysis
AngioJet rheolytic thrombolysis
• The AngioJet catheter uses the Bernoulli principle for thrombus removal
• Velocity increases – pressure decreases
Jet Tube
AngioJet rheolytic thrombolysis
• Mechanical +/- pharmacological thrombolysis
• Arterial, venous and AV fistula thrombolysis
• Several catheters with various specifications and indications • Solent PROXI/OMNI/DISTA• AVX• ZelanteDVT
AngioJet ZelanteDVT catheter
• For iliofemoral DVT – ZelanteDVTcatheter
• Modalities:• Rheolytic thrombectomy
• Rapid lysis
• Power pulse delivery
Specifications ZelanteDVT
Vessel Diameter > 6mm
Working Length 105cm
Shaft Diameter 8F *
OTW 0.035”
Double Marker Band 15 mm
Maximum run time 8 min
Max run time with blood flow: 4 min
Flow Rate 60 ml/min
Power Pulse delivery 0.6ml per stroke
Introducer Sheath 8F*
Number of Main Jets 5
Catalogue Number 114610
GTIN: 08714729904731
Shelf Life 2 Years
AngioJet ZelanteDVT catheter
Power pulse delivery
• Power pulse delivery• Deliver a dose of lytic agent to thrombus
(e.g. 5-20 mg tPA)
• Await 20 minutes for lytic agent to act
• AngioJet thrombectomy
AngioJet ZelanteDVT catheter
Several strategies including• Rheolytic (mechanical) thrombolysis only (without lytic agent) (RT)
• Pharmacomechanical catheter-directed thrombolysis (PCDT)
• A combination of PCDT/RT + CDT
• No one strategy is better than another; case selection is important
• 32 sites in USA and Europe (329 cases)
• Overall freedom from rethrombosis rate:
• 94% (3 months)
• 87% (6 months)
• 83% (12 months)
• Major bleeding event 3.6% (“none related to AngioJet”)
• Conclusion: Safe and effective; potentially reduce the need for concomitant CDT and intensive care
Strategy Percentage of cases (%)
Median procedure time (hours)
RT only 4 1.4
PCDT 35 2
PCDT + CDT 52 22
RT + CDT 9 41
J Vasc Interv Radiol 2015;26:777-785
• Retrospective analysis
• Comparing direct (n=46) versus staged (n=45) iliofemoral stenting following AngioJet rheolytic thrombectomy
Conclusion: Both direct and staged stenting are effective treatment modalities for patients with acute
proximal DVT. Compared with staged stenting, direct stenting provides similar treatment success and
a significant reduction in the length of hospital stay; however, it has lower thrombolysis efficacy, and
the risk of PTS at 1 year is greater with direct stenting.
AngioJet ZelanteDVT catheter
• Some of our common practices
• We use a combination of strategies (CDT / PCDT / PCDT + CDT / mechanical alone)
• Routinely use intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) • Help to target areas of thrombus that need more
thrombolysis
AngioJet ZelanteDVT catheter
• Cautions• Bradycardia and hypotension during thrombolysis
• Likely due to haemolysis• Cardiac monitor (with anaesthetist)• Pause temporarily – self limiting
• Renal impairment / haematuria• Likely due to haemolysis• Well hydration pre-, peri- and post-procedure• Monitor renal function post procedure
• Follow IFU – maximum run-time with blood = 240 seconds
• We DO NOT routinely (and DO NOT recommend) use IVC filter
Case study
• 40 year old woman
• Known Factor V Leiden; no previous DVT; otherwise fit and well
• Presented with few days history of left leg pain and swelling
• Duplex ultrasonography and magnetic resonance venography confirmed left iliofemoral DVT
• Started treatment dose low molecular weight heparin, compression and analgesia
Day 1
Venography via left popliteal vein puncture
Multi-lumen infusion catheter across thrombus
Started CDT – 0.5mg/hour of tPA
Monitored in high dependency unit
Day 2
12 – 24 hours post CDT
Under general anaesthetics
Day 2
Intravascular ultrasound
Inferior vena cava (IVC)
Day 2
Intravascular ultrasound
Common iliac vein
Day 2
Intravascular ultrasound
External iliac vein
Day 2
Intravascular ultrasound
Common and profunda femoral vein
Day 2
AngioJet rheolytic (mechanical) thrombolysis
Day 2
Post AngioJet rheolytic (mechanical) thrombolysis
Day 2
Balloon venoplasty (16 mm diameter Atlas Gold)
Day 2
Iliac vein stent
Veniti 16 mm x 120 mm
Post stent venoplasty
Day 2
• Final venography
Conclusions
• AngioJet rheolytic thrombolysis is safe and effective for treatment of iliofemoral DVT
• AngioJet potentially reduces lytic agent dosage (hence less bleeding risk), venography, and hospital stay (hence possibly radiation dose and cost)
• Various strategies can be used (RT only; PCDT; a combination of RT/PCDT + CDT). Case selection is important
• However, longer term data is still needed; and further studies to optimisethe strategies of AngioJet, as well as comparing various mechanical thrombolysis methods are needed