BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Rates of development of de novo intracranial aneurysms and of growth of untreated additional aneurysms are largely unknown. We performed MRA in a large patient cohort with coiled aneurysms at 5-year follow-up. METHODS: In 276 patients with coiled intracranial aneurysms and 5±0.5 years of follow-up MRA (totaling 1332 follow-up patient-years), additional aneurysms were classified as unchanged, grown, de novo, or incomparable with previous imaging. We calculated 5-year cumulative incidence of de novo aneurysm formation and growth of untreated aneurysms. We searched PubMed and EMBASE databases for studies assessing aneurysm development, and growth. RESULTS: In 50 of 276 patients (18%), 75 additional aneurysms were present at follow-up MRA. Of these 75, 2 were de novo (both 3 mm), 58 were unchanged, 5 had grown from 1 to 3 mm (7.9% of 63 known additional aneurysms; 95% CI, 1.3%-14.6%), and 10 were incomparable. Five-year cumulative incidence for a de novo aneurysm developing was 0.75%. Four additional aneurysms in 3 patients were treated. Ten previous studies reported annual incidences of growth of additional aneurysms ranging from 1.51% to 22.7%, and 5 studies reported annual incidences of de novo aneurysm formation ranging from 0.3 to 1.8%. CONCLUSIONS: MRA screening of patients with coiled aneurysms within the first 5 years after treatment has a low rate of de novo aneurysm development and growth of additional aneurysms, and an even lower treatment rate.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Rates of development of de novo intracranial aneurysms and of growth of untreated additional aneurysms are largely unknown. We performed MRA in a large patient cohort with coiled aneurysms at 5-year follow-up. METHODS: In 276 patients with coiled intracranial aneurysms and 5±0.5 years of follow-up MRA (totaling 1332 follow-up patient-years), additional aneurysms were classified as unchanged, grown, de novo, or incomparable with previous imaging. We calculated 5-year cumulative incidence of de novo aneurysm formation and growth of untreated aneurysms. We searched PubMed and EMBASE databases for studies assessing aneurysm development, and growth. RESULTS: In 50 of 276 patients (18%), 75 additional aneurysms were present at follow-up MRA. Of these 75, 2 were de novo (both 3 mm), 58 were unchanged, 5 had grown from 1 to 3 mm (7.9% of 63 known additional aneurysms; 95% CI, 1.3%-14.6%), and 10 were incomparable. Five-year cumulative incidence for a de novo aneurysm developing was 0.75%. Four additional aneurysms in 3 patients were treated. Ten previous studies reported annual incidences of growth of additional aneurysms ranging from 1.51% to 22.7%, and 5 studies reported annual incidences of de novo aneurysm formation ranging from 0.3 to 1.8%. CONCLUSIONS: MRA screening of patients with coiled aneurysms within the first 5 years after treatment has a low rate of de novo aneurysm development and growth of additional aneurysms, and an even lower treatment rate.
Authors: Maciej J Frączek; Miłosz J Błoński; Kornelia M Kliś; Roger M Krzyżewski; Jarosław Polak; Krzysztof Stachura; Borys M Kwinta Journal: Acta Neurol Belg Date: 2022-06-27 Impact factor: 2.396
Authors: Nima Etminan; Bruce A Buchholz; Rita Dreier; Peter Bruckner; James C Torner; Hans-Jakob Steiger; Daniel Hänggi; R Loch Macdonald Journal: Transl Stroke Res Date: 2013-10-30 Impact factor: 6.829
Authors: Nima Etminan; Rita Dreier; Bruce A Buchholz; Peter Bruckner; Hans-Jakob Steiger; Daniel Hänggi; R Loch Macdonald Journal: Stroke Date: 2013-01-17 Impact factor: 7.914
Authors: J J Schneiders; H A Marquering; R van den Berg; E VanBavel; B Velthuis; G J E Rinkel; C B Majoie Journal: AJNR Am J Neuroradiol Date: 2014-02-20 Impact factor: 3.825
Authors: M-A Labeyrie; S Lenck; D Bresson; J-P Desilles; A Bisdorff; J-P Saint-Maurice; E Houdart Journal: AJNR Am J Neuroradiol Date: 2014-07-31 Impact factor: 3.825
Authors: Keng Siang Lee; John J Y Zhang; Andrew Folusho Alalade; Roanna Vine; Giuseppe Lanzino; Nicholas Park; Gareth Roberts; Nihal T Gurusinghe Journal: Neurosurg Rev Date: 2020-10-22 Impact factor: 3.042