Stent-assisted Coil Placement for the Treatment of 211 Acutely Ruptured Wide-necked Intracranial Aneurysms: A Single-Center 11-Year Experience.

Radiology

From the Department of Neurosurgery, Changhai Hospital, Second Military Medical University, 168 Changhai Rd, Shanghai 200433, People's Republic of China (P.Y., K.Z., Y.Z., R.Z., L.Z., W.Z., B.H., Y.X., Q.H., J.L.); and Division of Neuroradiology, Departments of Medical Imaging and Surgery, Toronto Western Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada (T.K.).

Published: August 2015

Purpose: To evaluate the safety and angiographic and clinical outcome of stent-assisted coil placement (SACP) for acutely ruptured wide-necked intracranial aneurysms treated in a single center during an 11-year period.

Materials And Methods: According to an institutional review board-approved protocol, the angiographic and clinical data of 211 patients (52 men, 159 women; median age, 56 years; age range, 31-83 years) with acutely ruptured wide-necked intracranial aneurysms (neck > 4 mm and/or dome-to-neck ratio ≤ 2) treated with SACP from September 2000 to December 2011 were reviewed retrospectively. Baseline characteristics, procedure-related complications, angiographic follow-up results, and clinical outcome were analyzed statistically. A Mann-Whitney U test was performed for non-normally distributed continuous variables. A Pearson χ(2) or Fisher exact test was performed for categorical variables. Univariate analysis and logistic regression analysis were performed to determine the association of procedure-related complications and clinical outcome with potential risk factors.

Results: Procedure-related complications occurred in 30 patients (14.2%). They were more common in the anterior communicating artery (26.7%, 12 of 45) and middle cerebral artery bifurcation (40%, four of 10) aneurysms than in aneurysms at other locations (9.0%, 14 of 156). Clinical outcome (median, 33 months) was good in 175 patients (82.9%) with a modified Rankin Scale score of up to 2. Older age (P = .013, odds ratio = 1.054) and higher Hunt and Hess grade (P < .001, odds ratio = 15.876) were independent risk factors for unfavorable outcome. One hundred fifty-two of 190 patients who survived (80%) underwent angiographic follow-up at least once (median, 12 months). The complete occlusion rate improved from an immediate 45.5% to 75.7% at follow-up (115 of 152 patients).

Conclusion: Angiographic and clinical outcomes in our series were comparable to those reported by using coil placement alone or balloon-assisted coil placement techniques. SACP for the treatment of acutely ruptured middle cerebral artery bifurcation and anterior communicating artery aneurysms was associated with a significantly higher incidence of complications than was the case for treatment of aneurysms at other locations.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/radiol.2015140974DOI Listing

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