Surgical Revision and Early Cannulation of the Arteriovenous Fistula in Hemodialysis Patients: An Effective Technique

Hemodial Int. 2001 Jan;5(1):28-31. doi: 10.1111/hdi.2001.5.1.28.

Abstract

Arteriovenous fistula (AVF) dysfunction is a common problem in hemodialysis patients. After surgical revision for malfunction, we used AVFs early to avoid complications associated with central venous catheters. In this study, we report experience with surgical revisions of native AVFs with suspected arterial dysfunction as the cause of inadequate arterial inflow for dialysis. Exclusion criteria were presence of a central venous catheter as a hemodialysis access, and clinical or radiologic evidence of stenosis or thrombosis of the distal venous segment of the AVF. We prospectively studied 50 patients (mean age 60.2 ± 10.5 years, 25 men and 25 women) with 59 revisions. The patients were followed until change in the modality of dialysis, transplant, or death. The types of AVFs revised were left wrist radiocephalic in 27 patients (54%), left forearm radiocephalic in 10 (20%), right wrist radiocephalic in 6 (12%), left antecubital brachiocephalic in 3 (6%), right antecubital brachiocephalic in 2 (4%), and right forearm radiocephalic in 2 (4%). The causes of inadequate arterial flow were juxta-anastomotic thrombosis in 20 patients (40%), inadequate arterial anastomotic flow in 16 (32%), inadequate anastomosis in 7 (14%), and juxta-anastomotic venous stenosis in 7 (14%). The primary surgical revision techniques were proximal neo-anastomosis using the semiarterialized vein in 43 patients (86%), thrombectomy and re-anastomosis in 5 (10%), and resection and repair in 2 (4%). Technical success, defined as successful cannulation of the revised AVF for hemodialysis and avoidance of central venous catheter, was achieved in 44 of 50 patients (88%). Technical failure occurred 6 cases, the causes being inadequate arterial flow in 3 patients, failure to cannulate the veins in 2 patients, and steal syndrome in 1 patient. After primary revisions failed, 9 re-revisions were done in 6 patients. The 1-year, 2-year, and 3-year primary and overall patency rates were 76.2%, 67.6%, 65.0%, and 85.7%, 75.7%, 65.0%, respectively. In conclusion, surgical salvage of the AVF with inadequate arterial flow is an effective approach that can be performed as an outpatient procedure and allows early cannulation of the semi-arterialized veins, thus avoiding the use of central venous catheters.

Keywords: Arteriovenous fistula; blood access; central vein catheters; surgical salvage.