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REPAIRS Delphi: A UK and Ireland Consensus Statement on the Management of Infected Arterial Pseudoaneurysms Secondary to Groin Injecting Drug Use

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posted on 2025-05-02, 11:16 authored by Caitlin S MacLeod, John Nagy, Andrew Radley, Faisel Khan, Nikolas Rae, Michael SJ Wilson, Stuart A Suttie, Euan N Munro, Murray M Flett, Keith Hussey, Bernhard Wolf, Russell W Jamieson, David Wallace, Alex T Vesey, James McCaslin, Peng Wong, Adriano Tenna, Stephen Badger, Gareth Harrison, Jon Ghosh, Haytham Al-Khaffaf, Francesco Torella, Richard McBride, Susan Drinkwater, George A Antoniou, Neeraj Bhasin, Aniket Pradhan, George Smith, Patrick Coughlin, Ranjeet Brar, Mohamed Elsherif, Simon Lau, George Peach, Sachin Kulkarni, Marcus Brooks, Lasantha Wijesinghe, Ken McCune, Neil Hopper, Andrew Cowan, Ian Hunter, Devender Mittapalli, Andrew Garnham, Steven Jones, Sriram Rajagopalan, Alok Tiwari, Chris Imray, Amarjit Atwal, Sandeep Bahia, Keith G Jones, Ashok Handa, Ginny Bowbrick, Ian Nordon, Matthew Button, Nung Rudarakanchana, Rovan D’Souza, Nigel Tai, Paul Moxey, Colin Bicknell, Richard Gibbs, Hany Zayed, Athanasios Saratzis, Ramesh Kannan, Andrew Batchelder, Peter Lee Chong, Timothy Rowlands, Diane Hildebrand, Ankur Thapar, Arindam Chaudhuri, Adam Howard, Matthew Metcalfe, Wissam Al-Jundi, Gabriel Sayer, David Lewis, Soroush Sohrabi, Justin Woolgar, Louis Fligelstone, Huw Davies, Susan Hill, Greg Fulton, Daragh Moneley, Ciaran McDonnell, Zenia Martin, Joseph Dowdall, Sean Tierney, Stewart Walsh, Mekki Medani, Gergely Gosi
Objective: Consensus guidelines on the optimal management of infected arterial pseudoaneurysms secondary to groin injecting drug use are lacking. This pathology is a problem in the UK and globally, yet operative management options remain contentious. This study was designed to establish consensus to promote better management of these patients, drawing on the expert experience of those in a location with a high prevalence of illicit drug use. Methods: A three round modified Delphi was undertaken, systematically surveying consultant vascular surgeons in the UK and Ireland using an online platform. Seventy five vascular surgery units were invited to participate, with one consultant providing the unit consensus practice. Round one responses were thematically analysed to generate statements for round two. These statements were evaluated by participants using a five point Likert scale. Consensus was achieved at a threshold of 70% or more agreement or disagreement. Those statements not reaching consensus were assessed and modified for round three. The results of the Delphi process constituted the consensus statement. Results: Round one received 64 (86%) responses, round two 59 (79%) responses, and round three 62 (83%) responses; 73 (97%) of 75 units contributed. Round two comprised 150 statements and round three 24 statements. Ninety one statements achieved consensus agreement and 15 consensus disagreement. The Delphi statements covered sequential management of these patients from diagnosis and imaging, antibiotics and microbiology, surgical approach, wound management, follow up, and additional considerations. Pre-operative imaging achieved consensus agreement (97%), with computed tomography angiography being the modality of choice (97%). Ligation and debridement without arterial reconstruction was the preferred approach at initial surgical intervention (89%). Multidisciplinary management, ensuring holistic care and access to substance use services, also gained consensus agreement. Conclusion: This comprehensive consensus statement provides a strong insight into the standard of care for these patients.

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

68

Issue number

4

Page range

530-540

Publication title

European Journal of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery

ISSN

1078-5884

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Location

England

File version

  • Published version

Language

  • eng

Item sub-type

Journal Article

Media of output

Print-Electronic

Affiliated with

  • School of Medicine Outputs