Aortic balloon for the intraoperative management of placenta
accreta spectrum: need for standardised methodology and safety data
In 2003, Bell-Thomas et al (BJOG 2003;110:1120-1122) reported on the
emergency use of a transfemoral aortic occlusion catheter to control
massive haemorrhage in a case of caesarean hysterectomy for placenta
percreta. This was only the second case published in the international
literature on the use of an intra-abdominal aortic balloon occlusion
(IABO) in the management of placenta accreta spectrum (PAS) (Paull et
al. Anesth Intensive Care 1995;23:731-734). A non-exhaustive Pub-Med
literature review of articles published in English on this the topic
over the last 20 years, identifies 27 articles, 23 of which come from
the Peoples Republic of China, where IABO seems to be increasingly
popular in the management of PAS.
In brief, IABO involves the insertion of a balloon catheter into the
infrarenal abdominal aorta above the aortic bifurcation under
fluoroscopy guidance. The procedure is performed in a hybrid operating
room or interventional radiology (IR) suite with secondary transfer to
the operating room. In all but one study (Zhu et al Biomed Res
Int.2017:8604849), the balloon was inflated after delivery of the
newborn.
All publications so far have been retrospective and most are
case-control studies, comparing the outcomes of IABO with those of
routine surgical techniques with or without additional procedures such
as intra-uterine tamponade. Recently, authors have also started to
compare IABO with iliac artery balloon occlusion.
Overall, these studies have shown that IABO is associated with reduced
estimated blood loss and transfusion requirement, ICU admission and
hysterectomy and suggested that IABO is more effective than iliac artery
balloon occlusion, presumably as arterial occlusion is more effective.
However, there is wide variation between studies in prenatal imaging and
clinical selection criteria, intraoperative IR methodology and
confirmation of the diagnosis of PAS at birth. For example, the
pre-operative fluoroscopy time ranges between 2 and 25 minutes with
fetal radiation exposure of 4 to 25 mGy; intraoperative balloon
inflation/deflation time varies between 5-10/1 minutes and 45-80/10
minutes. The size of the balloon and the need for transfer between the
IR room and the operative theatre is rarely described. Most studies lack
histopathology confirmation of the diagnosis and/or stratification by
PAS grade.
Heterogeneity in methodology and design leads to a high risk of
confounding, bias or chance. There is also a high risk that the
relationship is not causal. One major concern is the risks-benefit ratio
of the use of IABO for both mothers and fetuses, in particular if they
do not have PAS. The most commonly reported post-operative complication
associated with IABO are arterial thrombosis of the external iliac or
the femoral artery. There are no data on the long-term follow of the
children born after IABO.
In 2018, the expert panel of the RCOG green top guidelines 27a (Jauniaux
et al., BJOG.2019;126:e1-e48) concluded that larger studies are
necessary to determine the safety and efficacy of IR before this
technique can be advised in the routine management of PAS. The 10 new
studies published in 2019-2010 on the use of IABO in the management of
PAS are insufficient to change this statement.
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