AI Article Synopsis

  • Endovascular treatment for wide neck aneurysms, which has been challenging, has seen advancements with the Woven Endobridge device since its introduction in 2010, becoming a standard treatment option.
  • A study reviewed data from patients treated with the Woven Endobridge from 2013 to 2018, focusing on long-term occlusion rates and safety, finding that 81% had adequate aneurysm occlusion, though 18% required retreatment.
  • The results indicate that Woven Endobridge treatment is both safe and effective, aligning well with recent findings from the WEBCAST trials.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Endovascular treatment of wide neck aneurysms remains complicated with a determined and continuous technological effort towards treatment options that can offer safer and efficacious outcomes. The Woven Endobridge device was introduced in 2010 and has become a mainstay endovascular treatment for wide neck and large intracranial aneurysms. A recent review of the Woven Endobridge Clinical Assessment of Intrasaccular Aneurysm Therapy (WEBCAST) and WEBCAST2 trials and the five-year follow-up of patients was published. Our aim is to demonstrate real-life experience of aneurysms and patients treated with Woven Endobridge from a large high-volume specialist centre.

Methods: A retrospective review was performed of patients treated with Woven Endobridge from March 2013 to March 2018. Primary efficacy outcomes were defined as per Raymond-Roy Occlusion Criteria (RROC) resulting in long-term complete occlusion (RROC1) and adequate occlusion (RROC1 and RROC2). Primary Safety outcomes were defined as procedure-related morbidity, rate of re-bleeding and rate of re-treatment.

Results: Seventy-nine aneurysms were treated during the five-year period. Adequate aneurysm occlusion (RROC1 and RROC2) achieved was 81%. Retreatment was required in 18% of patients (14/79). Greater retreatment rate was demonstrated in partially thrombosed aneurysms, aneurysms with larger neck and dome diameter and dome heights.

Conclusion: Woven Endobridge treatment of wide-neck intracranial aneurysms offers a safe and efficacious outcome. This large UK single-centre experience demonstrates congruity with recent five-year outcomes of WEBCAST and WEBCAST2 trials.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11569742PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/15910199241236818DOI Listing

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