MIAMI BEACH – Local or regional anesthesia is a better option than is general anesthesia for patients undergoing endovascular repair of an abdominal aortic aneurysm, based on findings from a registry with nearly 1,200 patients.
Both local anesthesia and regional anesthesia each surpassed general anesthesia in two periprocedural measures: significantly reducing procedure time, and significantly reducing postoperative hospitalization, Dr. Rutger A. Stokmans said at ISET 2012, an international symposium on endovascular therapy.

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Dr. Rutger A. Stokmans
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In addition, both local and regional anesthesia led to trends in reduced rates of major adverse events during the 30 days following surgery, although these differences did not reach statistical significance. All three anesthesia types linked with similar rates of both technical and clinical success of the aneurysm repairs. Regional anesthesia also led to a significantly lower rate of ICU admission, compared with both general and local anesthesia; local anesthesia showed no significant difference for this measure, compared with general anesthesia.
Based on these findings, local or regional anesthesia should be preferred when performing endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR), whereas general anesthesia should usually be avoided, said Dr. Stokmans, a vascular surgeon at Catharina Hospital in Eindhoven, the Netherlands.
These findings support the most recent anesthesia recommendations of the European Society for Vascular Surgery, which in 2011 guidelines for managing abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA) cited local anesthesia as preferred for EVAR, with regional or general anesthesia reserved for patients with contraindications for local anesthesia, he said (Euro. J. Vasc. Endovasc. Surg .2011;41[suppl. 1]:S1-S58). The most recent guidelines for AAA management from the Society for Vascular Surgery suggested using local or regional anesthesia over general anesthesia, he added (J. Vasc. Surg. 2009[suppl.]:50:S2-S49).
But despite these recommendations, the most commonly used anesthesia type worldwide for EVAR repair of AAA has been general anesthesia, followed by regional anesthesia, with local treatment used least often, according to the registry data reported by Dr. Stokmans. Among the 1,199 patients enrolled in ENGAGE (Endurant Stent Graft Natural Selection Global Postmarketing Registry) during March 2009 to December 2010 in 30 countries on five continents, 749 (62%) underwent their EVAR with general anesthesia, 325 (27%) with regional, and 125 (10%) with local anesthesia. (Percentages do not add up to 100% because of rounding.)
The registry data also showed striking regional variations in anesthesia use, with general anesthesia used on about 90% of patients in Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, and on about 70% of patients in Scandinavian countries and the United Kingdom. But in Central Europe, regional anesthesia – used on nearly 70% of EVAR patients – dominated. The only region favoring local anesthesia was South America (Argentina, Columbia, and Uruguay), where about 50% of patients received local, but more than 40% received general anesthesia, he said. The registry contained no U.S. patients, although the Endurant AAA stent graft system is marketed in the United States.
The average age of the EVAR patients in the registry was about 73 years. Those patients who underwent general anesthesia were significantly older, by an average of about 18 months, compared with those who received local or regional anesthesia.