| Literature DB >> 28635373 |
Janneke van Beijnum1,2, Tim Wilkinson3, Heather J Whitaker4, Johanna G van der Bom5, Ale Algra1,6, W Peter Vandertop7, René van den Berg8, Patrick A Brouwer9, Gabriël Je Rinkel1, L Jaap Kappelle1, Rustam Al-Shahi Salman3, Catharina Jm Klijn1.
Abstract
Background It is unclear whether the risk of bleeding from brain arteriovenous malformations is higher during pregnancy, delivery, or puerperium. We compared occurrence of brain arteriovenous malformation hemorrhage in women during this period with occurrence of hemorrhage outside this period during their fertile years. Methods We included all women with ruptured brain arteriovenous malformations (16-41 years) from a retrospective database of patients with brain arteriovenous malformations in four Dutch university hospitals (n = 95) and from the population-based Scottish Audit of Intracranial Vascular Malformations (n = 44). We estimated the relative rate of brain arteriovenous malformation rupture (before any treatment) during exposed time (pregnancy, delivery, puerperium) versus non-exposed time during fertile years, using the case-crossover design as primary analysis, and the self-controlled case-series design as secondary analysis. Results In 17 of 95 Dutch women and in 3 of 44 Scottish women, hemorrhages occurred while pregnant; none occurred during delivery or puerperium. In Dutch women, the relative rate of brain arteriovenous malformation rupture during pregnancy, delivery, or puerperium was 6.8 (95% confidence interval 3.6-13) according to the case-crossover method and 7.1 (95% confidence interval 3.4-13) using the self-controlled case-series method. In Scottish women, the relative rate was 1.3 (95% confidence interval 0.39-4.1) using the case-crossover method and 1.7 (95% confidence interval 0.0-4.4) according to the self-controlled case-series method. Because of limited overlap of confidence intervals, we refrained from pooling the cohorts. Conclusions Case-crossover and self-controlled case series analyses reveal an increase in relative rate of brain arteriovenous malformation rupture during pregnancy in the Dutch cohort but not in the Scottish cohort. Since point estimates varied between both cohorts and numbers are relatively small, the clinical implications of our findings are uncertain.Entities:
Keywords: Arteriovenous malformation; intracranial hemorrhage; pregnancy; self-controlled case-series
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28635373 DOI: 10.1177/1747493017694387
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Stroke ISSN: 1747-4930 Impact factor: 5.266