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"Arteriovenous Fistula - epidemiology"
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Elective intervention for unruptured cranial arteriovenous malformations in relation to ARUBA trial: a National Inpatient Sample study
by
Bhandarkar, Archis
,
Wahood, Waseem
,
Bydon, Mohamad
in
Adult
,
Arteriovenous Fistula - epidemiology
,
Arteriovenous Fistula - surgery
2021
Background
In 2014, A Randomized Trial of Unruptured Brain Arteriovenous Malformations (ARUBA) concluded that medical management alone for cranial arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) had better clinical outcomes than interventional treatment. The impact of the ARUBA study on changes in the rates of intervention and outcomes is unknown. Thus, we investigated whether the conclusions from ARUBA may have influenced treatment modalities and outcomes of unruptured AVMs.
Methods
The National Inpatient Sample (NIS) was queried between 2006 and 2018, for adult patients with an AVM who were admitted on an elective basis. Interventions included open, endovascular, and stereotactic surgeries. Join-point regression was used to assess differences in slopes of treatment rate for each modality before and after the time-point. Logistic regression was used to assess the odds of non-routine discharge and hemorrhage between the two time-points for each treatment modality. Linear regression was used to assess the mean length of stay (LOS) for each treatment modality between the two time-points.
Results
A total of 40,285 elective admissions for AVMs were identified between 2006 and 2018. The rate of intervention was higher pre-ARUBA (n = 15,848; 63.8%) compared to post-ARUBA (n = 6985; 45.2%; difference in slope − 8.24%,
p
< 0.001). The rate of open surgery decreased, while endovascular and stereotactic surgeries remained the same, after the ARUBA trial time-point (difference in slopes − 8.24%,
p
< 0.001; − 1.74%,
p
= 0.055; 0.20%,
p
= 0.22, respectively). For admissions involving interventions, the odds of non-routine discharge were higher post-ARUBA (OR 1.24;
p
= 0.043); the odds of hemorrhage were lower post-ARUBA (OR 0.69;
p
= 0.025). There was no statistical difference in length of stay between the two time-points (
p
= 0.22).
Conclusion
The rate of intervention decreased, the rate of non-routine discharge increased, and rate of hemorrhage decreased post-ARUBA, suggesting that it may have influenced treatment practices for unruptured AVMs.
Journal Article
Endovascular treatment of brain arteriovenous malformations using a liquid embolic agent: results of a prospective, multicentre study (BRAVO)
2013
Objectives
To evaluate the safety and efficacy of a new liquid embolic agent in brain arteriovenous malformation (bAVMs) embolisation.
Methods
A prospective, multicentre series was conducted at 11 interventional centres in Europe to evaluate embolisation of bAVMs with the new liquid embolic agent. Technical conditions, complications, clinical outcome and anatomical results were independently analysed.
Results
From December 2005 to December 2008, 117 patients (72 male; 45 female, aged 18–75 years) were included. Clinical presentation was mostly haemorrhage (34.2 %) and seizures (28.2 %). Most AVMs were located in the brain hemispheres (85.5 %). AVMs were <3 cm in 52.1 % of patients and ≥3 cm in 47.9 %. Morbidity was observed in 6/117 patients (5.1 %), related to haemorrhagic events in 2 cases and non-haemorrhagic complications in 4 cases. Five patients (4.3 %) died in relation to the treatment (bleeding in 4 patients and extensive venous thrombosis in 1). Complete occlusion of the AVM by embolisation alone was obtained in 23.5 % of patients. Complementary treatment was performed in 82.3 % of patients with partial AVM occlusion, mostly radiosurgery.
Conclusions
In this prospective, multicentre, European, observational series, the new liquid embolic agent proved to be suitable for BAVM embolisation, with acceptable morbidity and mortality and good efficacy.
Key Points
•
Numerous interventional techniques have been used to embolise brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs).
•
This prospective multicentre study demonstrates the suitability of a liquid embolic agent.
•
The safety of treatment using Onyx is acceptable.
•
Such embolisation leads to complete AVM occlusion in 23.5 % of patients.
Journal Article
Spinal Neurovascular Malformations in Klippel-Trenaunay Syndrome: A Single Center Study
by
Brinjikji, Waleed
,
Larson, Anthony
,
Tollefson, Megha
in
Adult
,
Angiomatosis
,
Arteriovenous Fistula - complications
2021
Abstract
BACKGROUND
A number of studies have demonstrated spinal anomalies associated with Klippel-Trenaunay syndrome (KTS). To date, there are no large consecutive series examining the prevalence and subtype distribution of spinal neurovascular malformations in patients with KTS.
OBJECTIVE
To report the spectrum and incidence of spinal neurovascular manifestations in the KTS population.
METHODS
This was a cross-sectional study. Consecutive patients with definite KTS as defined by International Society for the Study of Vascular Anomalies criteria who underwent spinal neuroimaging at our institution were included. All studies were evaluated by a staff neuroradiologist and a senior radiology resident for the presence of developmental venous anomalies, cavernous malformations (CMs), and arteriovenous shunts (AVS).
RESULTS
A total of 116 patients with definite KTS who underwent spinal neuroimaging were included. A total of 23 neurovascular anomalies were found in 19 patients (16.4%), including 4 patients with multiple anomalies. These included 5 patients with spinal cord CMs (4.3%), 14 patients with a paraspinal or epidural venous malformation (12.1%), and 4 patients with an AVS (3.4%). Of the AVS, 3 were epidural arteriovenous fistulas, 1 of which likely formed de novo in an epidural venous malformation. One was a conus medullaris arteriovenous malformation.
CONCLUSION
Our study cohort of 116 KTS patients demonstrated a wide spectrum of spinal neurovascular anomalies with a relatively high prevalence. Potential phenotypic descriptions of KTS should include the possibility for spinal neurovascular anomalies.
Journal Article
Risk of First Hemorrhage of Brain Arteriovenous Malformations During Pregnancy: A Systematic Review of the Literature
by
Davidoff, Christopher L
,
Stoodley, Marcus Andrew
,
Lo Presti, Anna
in
Arteriovenous Fistula - diagnosis
,
Arteriovenous Fistula - epidemiology
,
Brain - abnormalities
2019
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Recommendations on the management of brain arteriovenous malformations (bAVM) with respect to pregnancy are based upon conflicting literature.
OBJECTIVE
To systematically review the reported risk and annualized rate of first intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) from bAVM during pregnancy and puerperium.
METHODS
MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Scopus databases were searched for relevant articles in English published before April 2018. Studies providing a quantitative risk of ICH in bAVM during pregnancy were eligible.
RESULTS
From 7 initially eligible studies, 3 studies met the criteria for providing quantitative risk of first ICH bAVM during pregnancy. Data from 47 bAVM ICH during pregnancy across 4 cohorts were extracted for analysis. Due to differences in methodology and definitions of exposure period, it was not appropriate to combine the cases. The annualized risk of first ICH during pregnancy for these 4 cohorts was 3.0% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.7-5.2%); 3.5% (95% CI: 2.4-4.5%); 8.6% (95% CI: 1.8-25%); and 30% (95% CI: 18-49%). Only the last result from the last cohort could be considered significantly increased in comparison with the nonpregnant period (relative rate 6.8, 95% CI: 3.6-13). The limited number of eligible studies and variability in results highlighted the need for enhanced rigor of future research.
CONCLUSION
There is no conclusive evidence of an increased risk of first hemorrhage during pregnancy from bAVM. Because advice to women with bAVM may influence the management of pregnancy or bAVM with significant consequences, we believe that a retrospective multicenter, case crossover study is urgently required.
Journal Article
Arteriovenous shunts of the cervical spine: patient demographics, presentation, patterns of high-risk venous drainage, and updated classification
2025
BackgroundIntracranial dural arteriovenous (AV) fistula classifications focus on presence/absence of retrograde flow in the cortical veins of the brain as this angiographic finding portends a worse prognosis. However, prior categorization systems of AV shunts in the spine do not incorporate these features. We propose an updated classification for spinal shunting lesions that terms any shunting lesion with retrograde flow in any cortical vein of the brain or spinal cord medullary vein as “high risk”. To present this classification, we analyzed our center’s most recent experience with cervical spine shunting lesions.MethodsThe electronic medical record at our institution was reviewed to identify shunting lesions of the cervical spine and patient demographics/presentation. Comprehensive craniospinal digital subtraction angiograms were evaluated to classify shunt location, type (arteriovenous malformation (AVM) vs arteriovenous fistula (AVF)), and presence of high-risk venous drainage.ResultsSome 52 lesions were identified and categorized as pial/dural/epidural/paravertebral AVFs and intramedullary/extraspinal AVMs. Lesions were classified as high risk or not depending on the presence of retrograde flow into at least one vein that directly drains the spinal cord or brain. All patients who presented with either hemorrhage or infarct had underlying high-risk lesions. Additionally, 50% (17/34) of symptomatic patients with high-risk lesions presented with neurological extremity symptoms (OR=10.0, p=0.037) most of which fit a myelopathic pattern.ConclusionWe present an updated classification system for shunting lesions of the spine that focuses on high-risk retrograde flow to the brain or spine in addition to anatomical location in order to better inform patient management.
Journal Article
The Effect of Flow-Related Aneurysms on Hemorrhagic Risk of Intracranial Arteriovenous Malformations
by
Garzon-Muvdi, Tomas
,
Hung, Alice L
,
Colby, Geoffrey P
in
Adolescent
,
Adult
,
Aneurysm, Ruptured - diagnostic imaging
2019
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Previous reports indicated an association between hemorrhagic presentation and flow-related aneurysms in arteriovenous malformation (AVM) patients. However, it remains unclear whether these flow-related aneurysms result in the hemorrhage of AVM.
OBJECTIVE
To characterize this hemorrhage risk using our institutional experience over 25 yr.
METHODS
We retrospectively reviewed records of patients at our institution diagnosed with AVM from 1990 to 2015. Patients without associated aneurysms (AVM only) and those with flow-related aneurysms (AVM-FA) were compared. Those with intranidal or unrelated aneurysms were excluded. Annual risk of AVM-related hemorrhage was calculated using the birth-to-treatment approach and compared using Poisson rate ratio test.
RESULTS
Among 526 patients, there were 457 AVM only patients and 69 with flow-related aneurysms. AVM-FA patients were older (P = .005). AVMs with flow-related aneurysms were more likely located in the cerebellar vermis and hemispheres (P = .023 and .001, respectively). Presence of flow-related aneurysms increased the risk of presentation with subarachnoid hemorrhage (P < .001). Interestingly, no significant differences in presenting hemorrhage due to AVM rupture were found (P > .356). The majority of aneurysms were untreated (69.5%), and only 8 (9.8%) had ruptured presentation. At follow-up (mean = 5.3 yr), patients with flow-related aneurysms were less likely to develop seizures (P = .004). The annual risk of AVM hemorrhage was 1.33% and 1.05% for AVM only patients and AVM-FA patients, respectively (P = .248).
CONCLUSION
Despite increased risk of subarachnoid hemorrhage at presentation, there was no increased likelihood of rupture in AVMs with flow-related aneurysms. More studies are warranted, as clarifying the competing risks of AVM vs aneurysm rupture may be critical in determining optimal treatment strategy.
Journal Article
Multicenter assessment of morbidity associated with cerebral arteriovenous malformation hemorrhages
by
Honarmand, Amir
,
Shaibani, Ali
,
Ansari, Sameer
in
Adult
,
Aged
,
Arteriovenous Fistula - diagnosis
2017
The optimal management strategy for unruptured cerebral arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) is controversial since the ARUBA trial (A Randomized trial of Unruptured Brain AVMs). An accurate understanding of the morbidity associated with AVM hemorrhages may help clinicians to formulate the best treatment strategy for unruptured AVMs.
To determine the morbidity associated with initial cerebral AVM rupture in patients presenting to tertiary medical centers.
Retrospective chart reviews from three tertiary academic medical centers were performed for the period between 2008 and 2014. All patients admitted with intracranial hemorrhage due to untreated AVMs were included in this study. Patient-specific variables, including demographics, imaging characteristics, neurologic examination results, and clinical outcome, were analyzed and recorded.
101 Patients met the inclusion criteria. Admission National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) scores were 0, 1-9, and ≥10 in 26%, 29%, and 45% of patients, respectively. Hematoma locations were subarachnoid, intraventricular, intraparenchymal, and combined in 5%, 11%, 32%, and 52% of patients, respectively. Deep venous drainage was present in 43% of AVMs; AVM-associated aneurysms were present in 44% of patients. Emergent hematoma evacuations were performed in 37% of patients and 8% of patients died while in hospital. At discharge, of those who survived, NIHSS scores of ≥1 and ≥10 were found in 69% and 23%, respectively. At the 90-day follow-up, 34% had a modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score >2. Patients with admission NIHSS score ≥10 had significantly higher rates of midline shift, surgical hematoma evacuation, and follow-up mRS ≥3 (p<0.05).
The morbidity associated with cerebral AVM rupture appeared to be higher in our study than previously reported. Morbidity from AVM rupture should be considered as an important factor, together with variables such as risk of AVM rupture and procedural risk, in determining the optimal treatment strategy for unruptured cerebral AVMs.
Journal Article
Imaging features and prognostic factors in fetal and postnatal torcular dural sinus malformations, part I: review of experience at Boston Children’s Hospital
by
Yang, Edward
,
Olson, Heather E
,
Smith, Edward R
in
Arteriovenous Fistula - diagnostic imaging
,
Arteriovenous Fistula - epidemiology
,
Blood clots
2018
BackgroundEven for the most common dural sinus malformation (DSM), the torcular DSM (tDSM), generalizable statements about etiology and prognosis are difficult because neurosurgeons/neuroradiologists and obstetrical imagers have focused on different patient age groups, have reported different outcomes, and have offered differing pathophysiologic explanations.ObjectiveTo examine the imaging features and outcomes of a local cohort of tDSMs across fetal–neonatal life for commonalities.MethodsReview of imaging and clinical outcome for a local cohort of 12 tDSM patients (9 fetal, 3 postnatal).ResultsAll 12 tDSMs had similar imaging characteristics, including enlargement of the torcular and intraluminal thrombus early on, later evolving to peripheral scar tissue after treatment or spontaneous regression. Spontaneous decrease in size of the tDSM was observed in 6 prenatal and 1 postnatal case, and this decrease appeared to be irreversible once it occurred. One of 9 prenatal tDSMs was demonstrated to have arteriovenous fistulae in utero, while 2 of 3 postnatal diagnoses had arteriovenous fisutlae. All 6 prenatal tDSM diagnoses followed to term and all 3 postnatal diagnoses had a grossly normal neurologic outcome after a median of 12 months of age.ConclusionsPrenatal and postnatal tDSMs have overlapping imaging features suggesting a common etiology, and involution of a tDSM is a key imaging biomarker for a favorable outcome. While there is reason for concern with postnatally diagnosed tDSMs, good outcomes may still be achieved across the fetal–neonatal age spectrum of presentations. These findings are generalized in part II of this article.
Journal Article
Hemorrhage Rates and Risk Factors in the Natural History Course of Brain Arteriovenous Malformations
by
Lawton, Michael T.
,
Rutledge, W. Caleb
,
Kim, Helen
in
Aneurysms
,
Arteriovenous Fistula - epidemiology
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2014
Brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) are abnormal connections of arteries and veins, resulting in arteriovenous shunting of blood. Primary medical therapy is lacking; treatment options include surgery, radiosurgery, and embolization, often in combination. Judicious selection of AVM patients for treatment requires balancing risk of treatment complications against the risk of hemorrhage in the natural history course. This review focuses on the epidemiology, hemorrhage risk, and factors influencing risk of hemorrhage in the untreated natural course associated with sporadic brain AVM.
Journal Article
A Survey of Pulmonary Arteriovenous Malformation Screening, Management, and Follow-Up in Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia Centers of Excellence
by
Pyeritz, Reed E.
,
Trerotola, Scott O.
,
Chick, Jeffrey Forris Beecham
in
Adult
,
Antibiotics
,
Arteriovenous Fistula - diagnosis
2017
Purpose
To determine current practice regarding screening, management, and follow-up of pulmonary arteriovenous malformations (PAVMs), particularly those with feeding arteries <3 mm in diameter, in those patients with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) at HHT Centers of Excellence.
Materials and Methods
A 32-question survey focusing on PAVM screening, management, and follow-up was sent to 147 participants at HHT Centers worldwide.
Results
Thirty-three responses were received (22%); 60% from interventional radiologists and 20% from pulmonologists; 67% from the USA, 21% European, and 6% Asian. In HHT patients with initial negative screening echocardiogram, 60% recommended repeat screening contrast echocardiogram in 5 years, while 15% felt that no additional screening was necessary in these patients. Fifty-nine percentage reported never having seen a patient with initial negative contrast echocardiogram become positive. In patients with grade 1 echocardiograms, 41% recommended contrast-enhanced CT as the next step in management, 22% recommended non-contrast CT, and 22 and 3% recommended repeat echocardiogram in 5 and 10 years, respectively. In patients with grade 1 echocardiograms but no visible PAVMs, opinions regarding the use of bubble filters were evenly divided, while 79% recommended prophylactic antibiotics prior to invasive procedures. Eighty percentages of respondents treat PAVMs with feeding artery less than 3 mm, and 52% treat feeders less than 2 mm. Regarding follow-up, 71% reported seeing PAVM recurrence at the site of a previously completely treated PAVM.
Conclusion
There is inconsistency in practice regarding PAVM screening, management, and follow-up, suggesting a need for further research and guideline development.
Journal Article