Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm (AAA)
OVERVIEW
- Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm (AAA) is a permanent localised or diffuse dilatation of the abdominal aorta to 1.5 times its normal diameter that involving all three layers of the vessel wall
- normal infrarenal aortic diameters in patients >50y are 1.5 cm in women and 1.7 cm in men
- an infrarenal aorta 3 cm in diameter or more is considered aneurysmal
- ectasia is when aortic diameter is <50% increased
Emergency presentations of AAA include:
- incidental finding, often of a newly discovered asymptomatic AAA
- symptomatic or painful aneurysm due to local inflammatory state or acute dissection (true acute expansion of the aneurysm rarely if ever presents acutely otherwise)
- contained retroperitoneal or compensated rupture (“contained leak”)
- uncontained, decompensated rupture with hypovolaemic shock (“free rupture”)
- distal embolization or local thrombosis
- other atypical presentations
Prevalence and natural history
- AAA is relatively common, primarily affects the elderly and is often fatal
- rare <50 years of age
- 10% rate in men aged 65-79 years
- The pathogenesis of AAA is distinct from that of dissection
- 4600 hospital separations for non-ruptured and ruptured AAA each year between 1998 and 2008.
- Approximately 1000 deaths annually are attributed to aortic aneurysms.
- The natural history is ongoing expansion, with increased risk of rupture as the aneurysm enlarges
- Aneurysms <5.5 cm expand at an average rate of 2–3 mm each year, with larger aneurysms expanding more rapidly.
- Aneurysms >5.5 cm diameter in men, and >5.0 cm in women, are at significant risk of rupture and should be considered for repair unless major contraindications exist
12 month AAA rupture risk by diameter | |
AAA diameter (cm) | Rupture risk (%/year) |
3.0–3.9 | 0% |
4.0–4.9 | 1% |
5.0–5.9 | 1–10% |
6.0–6.9 | 10–22% |
>7.0 | 30–50% |
Screening and surveillance
- Currently no formal AAA screening guidelines or programs exist in Australia
- Screening with ultrasound in men over the age of 65 years has been demonstrated to reduce aneurysm related mortality in four large trials, including one performed in Western Australia.
- First degree family members of patients with a diagnosed AAA are at higher lifetime risk of developing a AAA of up to 20%,
Suggested surveillance intervals:
Suggested AAA surveillance intervals | |
AAA diameter (cm) | Surveillance interval (months) |
3.0–3.9 | 24 |
4.0–4.5 | 12 |
4.6–5.0 | 6 |
>5.0 | 3 |
When to refer
- At initial diagnosis, patients may be referred for general advice and counselling, and in many cases specialist vascular surgeons and units will be happy to coordinate regular surveillance imaging and review.
- Otherwise, patients should be referred for review when the aneurysm approaches the size threshold for surgery.
- Patients with a known AAA presenting with abdominal or back pain, syncope or tenderness over the aneurysm, require urgent assessment by a vascular surgeon for potential surgery.
- The benefit of elective aneurysm repair is clear in low and average risk patients with large aneurysms (men >5.5 cm; women >5.0 cm).
- The optimal management of small AAAs (4.0–5.5 cm) has been clarified by a number of large randomised trials which demonstrate no long term survival benefit with open or endovascular repair.
- Even with low perioperative mortality (<1%) there is no survival benefit with elective repair, due to the very low incidence of rupture in small AAAs (<1%).
- While decision making in AAA management can be complex due to patient age, comorbidities and aneurysm anatomy, it remains a balance between risk of rupture, operative mortality and life expectancy.
- Common indications for repair of AAAs are
- Male with AAA >5.5 cm
- Female with AAA >5.0 cm
- Rapid growth >1.0 cm/year
- Symptomatic AAA (abdominal/back pain/tenderness, distal embolisation)
CAUSES
- Strongly associated risk factors:
- Male gender
- Age
- Smoking
- Hypertension
- Genetic/familial disposition(e.g. inherited connective tissue disorders such as Marfans and Ehlers-Danlos)
- Identified and postulated causes include:
- atherosclerotic injury and associated degeneration
- primary connective tissue degeneration
- inflammatory arteritis with associated aneurysmal degeneration
- traumatic injury and pseudoaneurysm
- mycotic injury and pseudoaneurysm
- aortic dissection-related aneurysmal degeneration
Anatomy and types of AAA
- True aneurysms of the Abdominal aorta involve all 3 layers of the vessel wall, and are defined as being >3cm in diameter or having increase >50% from baseline
- False aneurysms (or pseudoaneurysms) are deficient in at least one layer
- Fusiform aneurysms have a “bulbous” shape and are usually true aneurysms
- Saccular aneurysms have a lateral out-pouching like a Berry aneurysm and are often false aneurysms
- Most abdominal aortic aneurysms occur in the infra-renal segment (90-95%)
- AAAs to extension above the renal arteries is rare but extension into the iliac arteries is common
Acute events
- Pain: acute expansion is rarely if ever a cause of pain; pain is typically associated with inflammation or dissection
- rupture
- contained: leak contained within the retroperitoneal space, may be relatively haemodynamically stable
- uncontained: free rupture into intra-peritoneal cavity resulting in shock
- thrombosis or distal embolisation
Complications
- death
- major haemorrhage
- aortic branch involvement resulting in ischaemia (e.g. renal, spinal, pancreatitis)
- distal emoblisation (e.g. trash foot)
- rhabdomyolysis
CLINICAL ASSESSMENT
- asymptomatic AAA may be an incidental finding on clinical examination or imaging
- palpation of an expansile mass
- pass two fingers on either side of the pulsating mass and observe for separation of the fingers with each pulsation
- may be detectable at 4-5cm diameter depending on body habitus
- isolated pain in abdomen, epigstrium or back (contained leaks typically present with back pain)
- ‘classic’ triad of AAA rupture (often not present e.g. guarding, obese, hypotensive or large retroperitoneal haemorrhage)
- Pain, typically severe and predominantly located in the back
- Signs if circulatory compromise, often the patient is frankly shocked
- The presence of a pulsatile mass in the abdomen
- atypical presentations in the elderly
- back pain (may mimic renal colic)
- +/- radiation to the legs (mimicking sciatica)
- chronic severe back pain (contained rupture)
- tender AAA on palpation is an aortic emergency unless proven otherwise
- massive GI haemorrhage raises suspicion for an aorto-enteric fistula (usually in the context of a previous AAA graft that has eroded into the GI tract)
INVESTIGATIONS
- Investigations should be tailored to clinical presentation
- ultrasound
- best investigation in an unstable patient as can be performed rapidly at the beside
- can detect aneurysm and free fluid (cannot confirm fluid is due to rupture) if present
- AAA diameter is measured as the maximum AP diameter in the transverse plane
- imperfect sensitivity (~95%) and about 100% specific
- CT abdomen with contrast
- best imaging modality if diagnosis is uncertain
- shows size and extent of AAA, demonstrates AAA leak and complications
- imaging in unstable patients is controversial – stability is relative – patients with uncertain diagnoses and borderline stability are more likely to benefit from obtaining a definitive diagnosis with ongoing resuscitation in the CT scan room before undergoing emergency surgery
- MRI
- highly specific and sensitive
- only suitable in elective settings
- plain AXR not recommended but may show:
- mural calcification
- lateral may be better as right border of AAA often obscured by vertebral column
MANAGEMENT
- Repair options
- Open repair
- only option for a ruptured AAA
- involves an abdominal or flank incision, vessels above and below the aneurysm are controlled, and the aneurysm sac is opened with placement of a synthetic graft
- similar mortality to endovascular repair in the long term (8 to 10 years) for elective repairs
- ~20% of patients require a subsequent operation
- Endovascular stent grafting
- less invasive and has lower perioperative morbidity and mortality
- involves the intraluminal introduction of a covered stent through the femoral and iliac arteries; can be performed under local anaesthesia
- only possible in ~50% of unruptured AAAs
- require long-term surveillance owing to a small risk of aneurysm sac reperfusion and late rupture (aka “endoleaks”)
- 20-30% require a secondary intervention during the next 6 years
PROGNOSIS
- Asymptomatic AAA
- risk of rupture increases with size, however a AAA of any size can rupture
- > 6 cm diameter AAA has 5 year survival rate of ~20% and ~50% rupture <1 year of diagnosis
- mortality rate is decreased by elective repair (~5%) before rupture occurs
- Ruptured AAA
- 100% fatality unless repaired
- Of those that survive to hospital with a ruptured AAA, mortality for surgical repair is still high, (up to 50%)
- Mortality correlates with age, co-morbidities and hypotension