| Literature DB >> 33501562 |
Basil E Grüter1,2, Wenhua Sun3,4, Jorn Fierstra3,4, Luca Regli3,4, Menno R Germans3,4.
Abstract
When evaluating brain arteriovenous malformations (bAVMs) for microsurgical resection, the natural history of bAVM rupture must be balanced against the perioperative risks. It is therefore adamant to have a reliable surgical grading system, balancing these important factors. This study systematically reviews the literature in order to identify and assess the quality of grading systems with regard to microsurgical bAVM treatment. A systematic literature review was performed to provide an overview of all available bAVM grading systems relevant for microsurgical treatment evaluation and to assess the most comprehensive grading system specifically for each subgroup of bAVM (i.e., unruptured, ruptured, and posterior fossa). Screening of 865 papers revealed thirteen grading systems for bAVM microsurgical risk stratification. Among them, two systems were specifically developed for ruptured bAVM and one specifically for posterior fossa bAVM. With one system being fundamentally different for supratentorial bAVM, the remaining nine systems used the same parameters: "size," "eloquence," "venous drainage," "arterial feeders," "age," "nidus compactness," and "hemorrhagic presentation". This study provides a comprehensive overview of all available bAVM grading systems relevant for surgical risk stratification. Furthermore, in the absence of a universal system appropriate to score all bAVMs, a workflow for selection of the best applicable scoring system in accordance with bAVM subgroups is presented.Entities:
Keywords: AVM; Grading; Microsurgical; Resection
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33501562 PMCID: PMC8490254 DOI: 10.1007/s10143-020-01464-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurosurg Rev ISSN: 0344-5607 Impact factor: 3.042
Fig. 1Flow chart of study selection. Of 856 studies identified by the search algorithm, thirteen studies eventually presented a score for risk prediction in bAVM surgery and were thus included for review in the present study
Summary of grading systems predicting surgical risk or outcome in bAVM patients. Of the thirteen scores, two were developed specifically for ruptured bAVMs and one score for cerebellar bAVMs. Nine scores for unruptured supratentorial AVMs were essentially made from a pool of seven different factors. X in brackets (x) indicates that presence of the factor is mandatory for the score to be applied but the factor does not count in the score. AUC is given as indicated in the original publication. AUC area under curve, GCS Glasgow Coma Scale, GOS Glasgow outcome scale, ICH intracranial hemorrhage, mRS modified Rankin Scale, n/a not applicable
| Author | Year | Score | Population | Detailed factors of grading system | Range | Type of outcome | AUC | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Size | Location/eloquence | Venous drainage | Arterial feeders | Age | Nidus compactness | Hemorrhagic presentation | Other specifics | n/a | ||||||
| Luessenhop [ | 1977 | 49 supratentorial bAVM | x | I-IV | Morbidity/mortality* | n/a | ||||||||
| Shi [ | 1986 | 100 bAVM | x | x | x | x | 1–4 | Surgical result† | n/a | |||||
| Spetzler [ | 1986 | Spetzler-Martin | 100 completely resected AVMs | x | x | x | I-V | Surgical result‡ | n/a | |||||
| Pertuiset [ | 1991 | Operability Score | 57 completely resected bAVM | x | x | x | x | • Straightening of feeding artery • Sectorization • Vascular autoregulation • Circulatory velocity • Brain tissue cellular steal • Previous rupture • Malformations of vital organs • Associated disease | 3–69 | Surgical result§ | n/a | |||
| Tamaki [ | 1991 | Angiographic grading system | 151 bAVM | x | x | x | 0–4 | Clinical grading|| and post-op Karnofsky | n/a | |||||
| Höllerhage [ | 1992 | 93 bAVM | x | • Clinical presentation upon admission | 1–7 | Outcome scale# | n/a | |||||||
| Spears [ | 2006 | Toronto model | 233 bAVM | x | x | x | 0–9 | mRS, GOS | 0.79 | |||||
| Lawton [ | 2010 | Supplementary grading scale | 300 bAVM | x | x | x | 1–5 | mRS | 0.78 | |||||
| Spetzler [ | 2011 | Spetzler-Ponce | 1476 patients from 7 surgical series | x | x | x | A-C | Various** | 0.71 | |||||
| Appelboom [ | 2011 | ICH score | 84 patients with ruptured bAVM | x | (x) | • GCS • ICH volume • Intraventricular blood • Infratentorial origin of ICH | 0–6 | mRS | 0.89 | |||||
| Neidert [ | 2016 | AVICH score | 67 patients with ruptured bAVM | x | x | x | x | x | (x) | • GCS • ICH volume • Intraventricular blood | 2–13 | mRS | 0.84 | |
| Jiao [ | 2018 | HDVL grading system | 201 surgically treated bAVMs | x | x | x | • Lesion to eloquence distance | 1–6 | mRS | 0.82 | ||||
| Nisson [ | 2019 | 120 cerebellar bAVM | x | x | • Neurological status prior to surgery • Emergency surgery | 1–3 | mRS | 0.74 | ||||||
*Luessenhop refers to morbidity/mortality in general, without further specification or application of an outcome score
†Shi subdivides operative results in “excellent” (normal neurological function), “good” (maintenance of preoperative neurological function), and “poor (new neurological deficits or increase or preoperative deficits)
‡In the Spetzler-Martin paper, bAVM grades were correlated with deficits (no/minor/major) and death in the corresponding group. As major deficits, they listed hemiparesis, increase in aphasia, homonymous hemianopsia, and severe neurological deficits.
§Pertuiset specified results from surgery into “no deficit,” “minor deficit,” “permanent deficit,” and “death”
||Clinical grading by Tamaki was defined as “excellent” (no deficits), “good” (mild deficits), “fair” (moderate deficits), “poor” (severe deficits) and death
#The outcome scale of Höllerhage differentiates grade I (no deficit, no seizure), grade II (discrete deficits such as slight sensory deficits or discrete palsies without seizures), grade III (distinct palsies or seizures or psychic deficits but still independent life), grade IV (severe deficits, dependent on care), grade V (death)
**The seven surgical series analyzed by Spetzler and Ponce used different scales for measurements of outcomes, among them: “minor deficit – major deficit – death”; “excellent – good – fair – poor”; “unchanged or improved vs permanent neurological deficits”; “any worsening of patients” and modified Rankin Scale
Fig. 2Flow chart giving an overview of possible grading system in accordance with type of bAVM. Spetzler-Ponce and supplemented Spetzler-Ponce scores have a high predictive value and were approved in external validation. Likewise, the AVICH score proved to be a reliable predictor of surgical risk in an international multicenter validation study. The HDVL grading system still lacks external validation, but the approach to include fiber tracking may be trendsetting for risk stratification in certain bAVMs near eloquent areas. Lastly, the Nisson score was developed specifically for AVMs of the posterior fossa
Fig. 3Illustrative cases of different types of AVMs and corresponding grading system. a TOF-angiography of a 60-year-old patient showing a non-ruptured central AVM, measuring 21 mm, with superficial venous drainage and compact nidus. The Spetzler-Ponce system scores this lesion as A (1 point of for size and 1 for eloquence), the supplementary grading scale adds 3 points (for age > 40). b Ruptured AVM in the left frontal lobe of a 24-year-old patient with GCS 7 at presentation. This lesion is scored 10 according to the AVICH score (1 point each for deep drainage, eloquence, GCS, intracerebral hemorrhage volume (44 cc), and presence of intraventricular hemorrhage, 2 points were given for age of the patient, and 3 points for size (62 mm) of the AVM. The nidus appeared compact). c Ruptured cerebellar AVM in a 23-year-old patient with GCS 13 on admission who was neurologically intact upon emergency presentation. She underwent emergency surgery (decompression within 24 h), followed by AVM resection 3 weeks later. Nisson score reveals a grade I lesion in this patient, with only 1 point for emergency surgery. d MR tractography of a 49-year-old patient with an unruptured AVM in the right frontal lobe, adjacent to the cortico-spinal tract. His HDVL grade scores 3 (no preoperative hemorrhage and LED 6.7 mm)