| Literature DB >> 26958407 |
Byung Moon Kim1, Yong Sam Shin2, Min Woo Baik3, Deok Hee Lee4, Pyoung Jeon5, Seung Kug Baik6, Tae Hong Lee7, Dong-Hoon Kang8, Sang-Il Suh9, Jun Soo Byun10, Jin-Young Jung11, Kihun Kwon12, Dong Joon Kim1, Keun Young Park13, Bum-Soo Kim14, Jung Cheol Park15, Seong Rim Kim3, Young Woo Kim3, Hoon Kim3, Kyungil Jo16, Chang Hyo Yoon17, Young Soo Kim17.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to assess the safety and early outcomes of the Pipeline device for large/giant or fusiform aneurysms.Entities:
Keywords: Aneurysm; Flow diverter; Pipeline
Year: 2016 PMID: 26958407 PMCID: PMC4781911 DOI: 10.5469/neuroint.2016.11.1.10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurointervention ISSN: 2093-9043
The Characteristics of Patients and Aneurysms
| Number of patients (aneurysms) | 45 (47) |
|---|---|
| Age | 58 years (35 - 80 years) |
| Male: Female | 10:35 |
| Presentation (n=45) | |
| Incidental | 13 (28.9%) |
| Cranial nerve palsy ± headache | 18 (40.0%) |
| TIA/stroke ± headache | 4 (8.9%) |
| Chronic headache | 6 (13.3%) |
| Recurrent aneurysm | 2 (4.4%)* |
| Stem compression | 1 (2.2%) |
| Seizure | 1 (2.2%) |
| Aneurysm location (n=47) | |
| Internal carotid artery, cavernous segment | 25 (53.2%) |
| Internal carotid artery, intradural segment | 11 (23.4%) |
| Vertebrobasilar artery trunk | 8 (14.9%) |
| Middle cerebral artery | 3 (6.4%) |
| Aneurysm shape (n=47) | |
| Saccular | 37 (78.7%) |
| Fusiform | 10 (21.3%) |
| Sac size, mean ± SD | 20.8 ± 6.1 mm |
| Neck size, mean ± SD | 11.9 ± 4.7 mm |
| Intra-aneurysmal thrombus | 24 (51.1%) |
*One aneurysm was treated with coiling and the other with clipping.
Procedural Events and Treatment-Related Morbidity
| Number of Pipelines used (n=47), mean | 1.2 |
|---|---|
| N=1 | 37 (78.7%) |
| N=2 | 9 (19.1%) |
| N=3 | 1 (2.1%) |
| Adjunctive device (n=47) | 3 (6.4%) |
| Coil | 2 (4.3%) |
| Stent graft | 1 (2.1%) |
| Ballooning required post-Pipeline | 11 (23.4%) |
| Device-related events (n=47) | 18 (38.3%) |
| Incomplete expansion | 13 (27.6%) |
| Shortening-migration | 5 (10.6%) |
| In-stent thrombosis | 2 (4.3%): resolution with Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitor in both cases → no symptoms |
| Sluggish or occlusion of jailed branch | 3 (6.4%): 2 cases were associated with in-stent thrombosis → resolved after IIb/IIIa |
| Treatment-related morbidity | 2 (4.4%), mRS 2 due to ischemic stroke in both cases → mRS 0 at 1 month in both cases |
| Treatment-related mortality | 0 |
Fig. 1A 51-year-old woman with bilateral distal internal carotid artery aneurysms.
A, B. Frontal projection and 3-D reconstruction images show a large aneurysm at the intradural para-ophthalmic segment of the right internal carotid artery. The asterisk indicates a coil-embolized aneurysm at the left distal internal carotid artery. The asterisk indicates the coil embolized aneurysm of left internal carotid artery. C. Angiogram after Pipeline implantation shows markedly decreased flow into the aneurysm sac. D. A flat-panel CT image shows incomplete expansion of the distal portion of the Pipeline resulting in poor wall apposition (arrow). E. After ballooning for wall apposition of the Pipeline, the distal end (arrowhead) of the pipeline was partially herniated into the aneurysm sac, resulting in alleviation of the flow diversion effect. F. A spot image after the second Pipeline implantation in a telescopic manner. Note the waist of the second Pipeline at the distal end (arrowhead) of the first Pipeline, which partially herniated into the sac. G. After using a balloon for the apposition of the second Pipeline, the aneurysm sac was no longer visualized. The arrowhead indicates the distal end partially herniated into the sac. H. A flat-panel CT image showing that a mild degree of the waist of the second pipeline still remained at the end of the first pipeline. Note the twisted struts (arrows) at the waist point. I. The 6-month follow-up angiogram shows a severe degree of in-stent stenosis, even though the patient remained asymptomatic. The left anterior cerebral artery was supplied via the anterior communicating artery from the left internal carotid artery (not shown). J. The 12-month follow-up angiogram shows improvement of the in-stent stenosis.
Fig. 2A 67-year-old woman presenting with third and sixth cranial nerve palsies and a recently aggravated intractable headache.
A. The coronal MIP reconstruction image of the CT angiogram shows a giant aneurysm at the left internal carotid artery, cavernous segment. Note that the left distal internal carotid and middle cerebral arteries were tented (arrow) due to mass effect from the aneurysm. B. A lateral projection angiogram shows a giant aneurysm at the left internal carotid, cavernous segment. C. Final control angiogram after the pipeline implantation shows marked flow diversion with contrast material stagnation in the aneurysm sac. D. A source image of the 3-month follow-up CT angiogram shows that the aneurysm was completely thrombosed. The bulging contour of the left cavernous sinus (arrowheads) remained due to the thrombosed aneurysm. E, F. The source (E) and coronal MIP reconstruction (F) images of the 6-month follow-up CT angiogram show that the thrombosed aneurysm disappeared and that the left internal carotid artery was patent. Note that the left distal internal carotid and middle cerebral arteries were normal-positioned without tenting (arrow).
Follow-up Imaging Outcomes after Pipeline Implantation
| Follow-up vascular imaging evaluated (n=47) | 29 (64.7%) |
| Complete or near-complete occlusion (n=22, 75.9%) | 1-3 months (n=14), 6 months (n=4), 12-24 months (n=4) |
| Decreased sac size (n=7, 24.1%) | 1-3 months (n=7) |
| Follow-up cross-sectional imaging evaluated (n=47) | 35 (74.5%)* |
| Aneurysm disappearance (n=5, 14.3%) | 6 month (n=4), 12-24 months (n=1) |
| Decreased size (n=24, 68.6%) | 1-3 month (n=9), 6 months (n=11), 12-24 months (n=4) |
| No change (n=6, 17.1%) | 1-3 month (n=6) |
*Evaluation of the change in the treated aneurysm size, including the thrombosed portion on follow-up CT or MR.