| Literature DB >> 34335461 |
Victoria Hellstern1, Marta Aguilar-Pérez1, Elina Henkes1, Carmen Serna-Candel1, Christina Wendl2, Hansjörg Bäzner3, Oliver Ganslandt4, Hans Henkes1,5.
Abstract
Objective: Flow diverter (FD) stents have become one of the most common tools for treating intracranial aneurysms; however, their role in treating posterior circulation aneurysms is still discussed with controversy. In this study, we evaluated the safety and effectiveness of p64 FD for the treatment of saccular, unruptured aneurysms in the posterior circulation over a long-term follow-up period in a single center.Entities:
Keywords: flow diversion; p64; posterior circulation aneurysms; saccular aneurysm; unruptured aneurysm
Year: 2021 PMID: 34335461 PMCID: PMC8322946 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.711863
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Baseline patient demographics and clinical presentation of the study population.
| Number of patients | 54 |
| Gender (m/f) | 9/45 |
| Number of aneurysms | 54 |
| 15/54 (27.8%) | |
| Coiling | 12 |
| Coiling +Medina | 1 |
| WEB | 1 |
| Microsurgical clipping (failed) | 1 |
| Basilar artery bifurcation | 10 (18.5%) |
| Basilar artery trunk | 6 (11.1%) |
| Posterior cerebral artery | 3 (5.6%) |
| Posterior inferior cerebellar artery | 18 (33.3%) |
| Superior cerebellar artery | 14 (25.9%) |
| Vertebral artery (V4) | 3 (5.6%) |
Angiographic results and occlusion rates.
| 1st FU | 50/53 (94.3%) |
| 2nd FU | 49/53 (92.5%) |
| 3rd FU | 41/53 (77.4%) |
| 1st FU | 28/50 (56%) |
| 2nd FU | 37/49 (75.6%) |
| 3rd FU | 34/41 (82.5%) |
| Parent vessel patency at FU | 100 % |
| Side vessel occlusion at FU | 4/53 (7.5%) |
FU, Follow-up; OKM, O'Kelly Marotta. OKM C+D stand for “entry remnant” and “no filling”, and signify sufficient occlusion.
Aneurysmal location and angiographic occlusion rates at each time point.
| BA- bifurcation | 71.4% (7/50) | 85.7% (6/7) | 100% (5/5) |
| BA-trunk | 83.3% (5/6) | 100% (6/6) | 100% (6/6) |
| PCA | 66.7% (2/3) | 100% (3/3) | 100% (2/2) |
| PICA | 44.4% (8/18) | 62.5% (10/17) | 78.6% (12/15) |
| SCA | 38.5% (5/13) | 61.5% (8/13) | 63.9% (7/13) |
| V4 | 100% (3/3) | 100% (3/3) | 100% (2/2) |
Figure 1(A) Posterior-anterior view after injection of the left VA showing a 2 mm aneurysm of the left SCA; (B) successful implantation of a p64 3/12 mm from the left PCA to the BA; (C) final run after the FD implantation showed already reduction of the perfusion (arrow); (D) 3rd FU after 20 months shows aneurysm unchanged as well as a significant caliber reduction of the right P1- segment. (E) a second FD- p64 3/9 mm- was implanted coaxial with the first FD without any complications. (F) FU after 12 months after the second confirms that the aneurysm has shrunken, but remains still patent. The left SCA shows significant reduction in size (arrowhead) but is also still patent. The right P1 segment (asterisk) is reduced in caliber now.
Figure 245° LAO injection of the left VA showed a recurrence of a formerly ruptured and coiled left PICA aneurysm; arrows indicating the PICA; (B) implantation of a p64 3,5/15 mm; (C) final run after the p64 implantation confirmed that the PICA was patent and the aneurysm neck completely covered (arrows = PICA); (D) FU angiography after three months reveal an asymptomatic occlusion of the left PICA (arrow) as well as complete occlusion of the aneurysm. LAO, left anterior oblique; VA, vertebral artery; PICA, posterior inferior cerebellar artery.
Figure 3(A) Posterior-anterior view after injection of the left VA showing a 2.5 mm aneurysm of the basilar bifurcation, slightly more to the right side; (B) successful implantation of a p64 3/15 mm from the right PCA to the BA; (C) final run after the FD implantation.; (D) first FU after four months shows a small aneurysm remnant as well as a significant caliber reduction of the left P1- segment (arrow). The SCAs on the left side remain the same (asterisk); (E). second FU after nine months shows complete occlusion of the aneurysm as well as the left P1-segment; (F). injection of the left ICA confirms supply of the left PCA via PcomA. pa, posterior-anterior; VA, vertebral artery; PCA, posterior cerebral artery; BA, basilar artery; FD, flow diverter; SCA, superior cerebellar artery; ICA, internal carotid artery; PcomA, posterior communicating artery.
Complications.
| Technical | 2/54 (3.7%) |
| Hemorrhagic | 2/54 (3.7%) |
| Ischemic | 5/54 (9.3%) |
| Transient | 1/54 (1.9%) |
| Permanent | 4/54 (7.4%) |
| Permanent worsening of the mRS | 5/54 (9.3%) |
| Fatal hemorrhage, mrs 6 | 1/54 (1.9%) |
| Shift from mrs 0 = > mRS 1 | 3/54 (5.6%) |
| Shift from mrs 0 = > mRS 2 | 1/54 (1.9%) |
mRS, modified Ranking Scale.
Clinically relevant complications overview.
| 1 | BA tip | 4.2 × 3.4 | 1 × p64 4/21 1 × p64 4.5/21 (both failed) | - | 100 mg ASA p.o. 2 × 90 mg ticagrelor p.o. | ADP 12 | postprocedural SAH on CCT, transient drowsiness and headache, resolved spontaneously | Transient | 3 | 3 |
| 2 | BA tip | 2.9 × 2.2 | 1 × p64 3/15 | left PCA to BA | 100 mg ASA p.o. 75 mg Plavix p.o. | ADP 47 | Fatal cerebellar IPH on the day of discharge | Permanent | 1 | 6 |
| 3 | BA trunk | 4.6 × 2.3 | 1 × p64 4.5/15 | BA trunk | 100 mg ASA p.o. 10 mg prasugrel p.o. | ADP 19 | Bi-lateral pontine perforator infarction with left-sided hemiparesis, dysphagia and dysarthria, at last FU remaining mild dysarthria | Permanent | 0 | 1 |
| 4 | SCA | 1.8 × 1.0 | 1 × p64 3/15 | left PCA to BA | 100 mg ASA p.o., 75 mg Plavix p.o. | ADP 7 | INO 15 months after treatment, 3 month after stop of DAPT | Permanent | 0 | 1 |
| 5 | PICA | 2.3 × 2.1 | 1 × p64 3.5/15 | right V4 segment | 100 mg ASA p.o. 75 mg Plavix p.o. | ADP 71 | Scattered diffusion restriction in both cerebellar hemispheres with vertigo, vomiting and dizziness | Transient | 0 | 0 |
| 6 | SCA | 1.8 × 2.2 | 1 × p64 3.5/15 | left PCA to BA | 100 mg ASA p.o. 75 mg Plavix p.o. | ADP 25 | Bilateral pontine perforator infarction with right-sided hemiparesis | Permanent | 0 | 2 |
| 7 | BA tip | 1.5 × 1.2 | 1 × p64 3/12 | right PCA to BA | 100 mg ASA p.o. 2 × 90 mg ticagrelor p.o. | ADP 13 | Left pontine perforator infarction with discrete finger movement impairment | Permanent | 0 | 1 |
BA, basilar artery; SAH, subarachnoid hemorrhage; CCT, cranial computed tomography; mRS, modified Ranking Scale; IPH, intra-parenchymal hemorrhage; INO, internuclear ophthalmoplegia; SCA, superior cerebellar artery; PICA, posterior inferior cerebellar artery; ASA, acetylisalicylic acid; p.o., per os.