Abstract 179: Brain Avm Embolization With Onyx: Clinical And Anatomical Results In A Prospective, Multicenter, European Study (BRAVO)

Stroke ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 43 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurent Pierot ◽  

Purpose: The treatment of brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) is challenging based on a multidisciplinary approach involving neurosurgery, radiosurgery, and interventional neuroradiology. The embolization of brain AVMS was for a long time performed using particles and glue. Onyx has been recently introduced in the armamentarium for AVM embolization, but large, multicenter evaluation is lacking. BRAVO study was conducted to evaluate the clinical and anatomical results of brain AVM embolization with Onyx. Materials and Methods: BRAVO (Brain ArterioVenous malformations embolization with Onyx) was a multicentric, prospective, consecutive study conducted in 11 neurointerventional centers in Europe. 117 patients harbouring brain AVMs embolized with Onyx were included. Clinical presentation was mostly hemorrhage (30.8%) and epilepsy (27.4%). AVM size was less than 3cm in 52.1% of cases and more than 3cm in 47.9% of cases. A mean number of 2.05 embolization sessions / patient were performed with injection of a mean of 2.4 ml Onyx / session. Results: Complete occlusion was obtained with Onyx embolization alone in a high percentage of cases (23.5% of all cases and 36.7% of AVM smaller than 3cm). Intra and post-operative bleeding related to the treatment was observed in 9.4% leading to death in 3.4% and neurologic worsening in 1.7%. Non-hemorrhagic permanent deficits were observed in 6.0% of cases. Treatment related morbidity (mRS>2) and mortality were respectively 5.1% and 4.3%. Conclusion: Embolization of brain AVMs with Onyx is associated with a high rate of complete occlusion with acceptable morbidity and mortality. Onyx has to be used as the first line embolization agent for the treatment of brain AVMs.

2005 ◽  
Vol 11 (1_suppl) ◽  
pp. 159-164 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Pierot ◽  
A. C. Januel ◽  
D. Herbreteau ◽  
X. Barreau ◽  
J. Drouineau ◽  
...  

The main final goal of the treatment of brain AVMs is to prevent bleeding and to obtain a complete occlusion of the nidus. The strategy of treatment of brain arteriovenous malformations (AVM) has to be defined by a multidisciplinary team and will usually combine several modalities (surgery, radiosurgery, embolization). Embolization is generally the first step of treatment. Occasionally embolization is able to completely occlude a small AVM. Otherwise embolization is the first step before surgery or radiosurgery. Several embolic agents have been proposed for embolization of brain AVMs like particles or cyanoacrylates. The main disadvantage of particles is the high frequency of recanalization. The cyanoacrylates are probably more appropriate, providing a permanent occlusion. However, due to the polymerizing characteristics of the glue, the time of injection is relatively short (few seconds or minutes) and a complete or substantial occlusion of the nidus is difficult to obtain, especially in the case of medium or largesized AVMs. Onyx is a nonadhesive liquid polymer made of a mixture of ethylene-vinyl-alcohol copolymer and dimethylsulfoxide. The theoretical advantage of a nonadhesive liquid is to eliminate the risk of gluing the microcatheter and subsequently to perform a more durable injection with a larger amounts of agent delivered in a single injection. Several French centers have undertaken a prospective, multicentric study to evaluate the clinical value of Onyx in embolization of brain AVMs. As required, 50 patients were included. Preliminary results are presented regarding the first 48 patients, the last 2 patients being included after writing of this paper. The treatment is now completed in 15 patients. As expected, it was possible with Onyx to perform long duration injections (5 to 70 minutes with a mean of 34 minutes). Volumes injected per session were also important (0.25 to 6 ml with a mean of 1.6 ml). According to the clinical experience of the centers, duration and volume injected were most important with Onyx than with cyanoacrylates. Out of the 15 patients for whom embolization is now completed, 14 had a percentage of occlusion of the nidus greater than 60% (with 2 complete occlusion).


2016 ◽  
Vol 41 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 204-210 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hae-Won Koo ◽  
Kyung-Il Jo ◽  
Je-Young Yeon ◽  
Keon Ha Kim ◽  
Pyoung Jeon ◽  
...  

Background: Contrary to deeply located brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs), superficially located AVMs are more likely to have transdural arterial communications (TACs). However, the clinical and radiologic characteristics of patients presenting with AVMs and TACs are poorly understood. The purpose of this study is to determine whether clinicoradiological features of cerebral AVMs differ according to TAC. Methods: Between 2002 and 2012, 438 consecutive patients with a brain AVM were treated in our hospital. Among them were 124 patients with superficially located brain AVMs who met the inclusion and exclusion criteria of our study. We retrospectively reviewed the clinicoradiological features of their TACs to explore the variation in characteristics. Results: Thirty-two of the 124 patients with a superficially located AVM (25.8%) had TAC. Radiologic findings of brain AVM images with TAC showed that TAC occurred significantly more frequently among larger AVMs (with vs. without TAC, 11.2 vs. 4.0 ml) and among diffuse AVMs (56.3 vs. 28.3%, p = 0.004). Clinical findings indicate that TAC was associated with chronic headache (43.8 vs. 12.0%, p < 0.001) and older age (43.1 vs. 36.6 years, p = 0.037). Conclusions: Brain AVM with TAC seems to be accompanied by distinctive clinical features, such as chronic headache and older age. Larger size and diffuseness of the AVM were also associated with TAC. Findings from this study and the prognostic significance of TAC should be further explored in a large prospective study.


2017 ◽  
Vol 127 (2) ◽  
pp. 302-310 ◽  
Author(s):  
Waleed Brinjikji ◽  
Vivek N. Iyer ◽  
Christopher P. Wood ◽  
Giuseppe Lanzino

OBJECTIVEPatients with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) are known to suffer from high rates of cerebral arteriovenous malformations (AVMs). The authors performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of the literature examining prevalence rates, characteristics, and clinical presentation of cerebral AVMs in the HHT population.METHODSTo identify studies on AVM prevalence and characteristics in the HHT population, 4 databases (MEDLINE, EMBASE, Scopus and Web of Science) were searched by a reference librarian with over 30 years experience in systematic reviews and meta-analysis. The search period was January 1, 1990–March 2016. The following search terms were used: hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia, Osler-Weber-Rendu syndrome, AVM, brain AVM, arteriovenous malformation, arteriovenous fistula, prevalence, and epidemiology. The authors identified studies that examined the prevalence rates, characteristics, and clinical presentation of cerebral AVMs in patients with HHT. They assessed overall AVM prevalence rates as well as prevalence rates by age, sex, HHT type, and country/region. They also systematically reviewed the characteristics of AVMs, including rupture status, location, clinical presentation, angioarchitecture, and Spetzler-Martin grade. Data were analyzed using a random-effects meta-analysis model.RESULTSThirty-nine studies were included in this meta-analysis. Thirty studies examined brain AVM prevalence rates in various HHT patient populations, and 18 studies examined AVM clinical and angiographic characteristics (9 studies examined both prevalence rates and AVM characteristics). The prevalence of brain AVMs in HHT patients was 10.4% (95% CI 7.9%–13.0%) with no significant difference between males (8.5%, 95% CI 4.9%–12.0%) and females (11.0%, 95% CI 5.9%–16.1%). Patients with HHT Type 1 (HHT1) had a significantly higher brain AVM prevalence (13.4%, 95% CI 9.5%–17.4%) compared with those with HHT Type 2 (HHT2) (2.4%, 95% CI 1.0%–3.8%) (p < 0.0001). In 55.2% (95% CI 38.3%–72.1%) of cases, the AVMs were symptomatic. Spetzler-Martin grade was 2 or less in 86.9% (95% CI 67.5%–95.2%) of patients.CONCLUSIONSThe prevalence of brain AVMs in the HHT population is about 10%. HHT1 patients are significantly more likely to have brain AVMs than HHT2 patients. Most AVMs in the HHT population are symptomatic. The Spetzler-Martin grade for these lesions is 2 or less in nearly 90% of patients.


Neurosurgery ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 74 (suppl_1) ◽  
pp. S74-S82 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Webster Crowley ◽  
Andrew F. Ducruet ◽  
Cameron G. McDougall ◽  
Felipe C. Albuquerque

Abstract Arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) of the brain represent unique challenges for treating physicians. Although these lesions have traditionally been treated with surgical resection alone, advancements in endovascular and radiosurgical therapies have greatly expanded the treatment options for patients harboring brain AVMs. Perhaps no subspecialty within neurosurgery has seen as many advancements over a relatively short period of time as the endovascular field. A number of these endovascular innovations have been designed primarily for cerebral AVMs, and even those advancements that are not particular to AVMs have resulted in substantial changes to the way cerebral AVMs are treated. These advancements have enabled the embolization of cerebral AVMs to be performed either as a stand-alone treatment, or in conjunction with surgery or radiosurgery. Perhaps nothing has impacted the treatment of brain AVMs as substantially as the development of liquid embolics, most notably Onyx and n-butyl cyanoacrylate. However, of near-equal impact has been the innovations seen in the catheters that help deliver the liquid embolics to the AVMs. These developments include flow-directed catheters, balloon-tipped catheters, detachable-tipped catheters, and distal access catheters. This article aims to review some of the more substantial advancements in the endovascular treatment of brain AVMs and to discuss the literature surrounding the expanding indications for endovascular treatment of these lesions.


Stroke ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 47 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ludmila Pawlikowska ◽  
Jeffrey Nelson ◽  
Diana E Guo ◽  
Charles E McCulloch ◽  
Michael T Lawton ◽  
...  

Introduction: Brain arteriovenous malformations (AVM) are an important cause of intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) in young adults. Most are sporadic, but also occur in inherited diseases such as hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT). ICH presentation of brain AVM in both sporadic and HHT cases is a marker of high ICH risk. In order to investigate whether the same genetic modifiers influence sporadic and HHT brain AVM, we evaluated candidate genetic polymorphisms reported as associated with sporadic brain AVM, with ICH presentation or ICH during clinical course, in HHT patients. Methods: We genotyped 8 polymorphisms ( APOE E2/3/4 [rs7412, rs429358], ANGPTL rs116724, EPHB4 rs314308, IL6 -174G>C [rs1800795], IL1B -31T>C [rs1143627], ITGB8 rs10486391, TNF -238G>A[rs361525]) in 753 Caucasian HHT patients enrolled by the Brian Vascular Malformation Consortium (BVMC). Genotypes were collapsed into risk allele carriers vs. other for analysis, as published for sporadic AVM. APOE E2/3/4 haplotypes were assigned based on genotypes of the 2 APOE polymorphisms. Association of genotype with phenotype was evaluated by multivariable logistic regression adjusted for age, gender and accounting for family clustering. We used a nominal significance threshold of p=0.05, requiring the same direction of effect as in sporadic brain AVM (odds ratio for risk genotype [OR]>1). Results: Among 753 HHT patients, 155 (21%) had brain AVM, of whom 26 (17%) presented with ICH. Two additional brain AVM patients had ICH during follow-up. None of the 7 variants (6 single nucleotide polymorphisms and APOE haplotype) were significantly associated with brain AVM (OR=0.6-1.3), with ICH presentation of brain AVM (OR=0.4-1.9), or with any brain AVM ICH in HHT patients (OR=0.5-2.1). Conclusions: Common genetic variants previously reported to be associated with sporadic brain AVM were not associated with brain AVM nor with ICH in the BVMC HHT cohort, suggesting different genetic modifiers may influence sporadic and HHT brain AVM. However, the number of ICH cases in the cohort is small, so the confidence intervals are wide and we cannot rule out clinically important associations. The BVMC is enrolling additional HHT patients to expand the cohort and increase power for association analyses.


Neurology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 95 (20) ◽  
pp. 917-927 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ching-Jen Chen ◽  
Dale Ding ◽  
Colin P. Derdeyn ◽  
Giuseppe Lanzino ◽  
Robert M. Friedlander ◽  
...  

Brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) are anomalous direct shunts between cerebral arteries and veins that convalesce into a vascular nidus. The treatment strategies for AVMs are challenging and variable. Intracranial hemorrhage and seizures comprise the most common presentations of AVMs. However, incidental AVMs are being diagnosed with increasing frequency due to widespread use of noninvasive neuroimaging. The balance between the estimated cumulative lifetime hemorrhage risk vs the risk of intervention is often the major determinant for treatment. Current management options include surgical resection, embolization, stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS), and observation. Complete nidal obliteration is the goal of AVM intervention. The risks and benefits of interventions vary and can be used in a combinatorial fashion. Resection of the AVM nidus affords high rates of immediate obliteration, but it is invasive and carries a moderate risk of neurologic morbidity. AVM embolization is minimally invasive, but cure can only be achieved in a minority of lesions. SRS is also minimally invasive and has little immediate morbidity, but AVM obliteration occurs in a delayed fashion, so the patient remains at risk of hemorrhage during the latency period. Whether obliteration can be achieved in unruptured AVMs with a lower risk of stroke or death compared with the natural history of AVMs remains controversial. Over the past 5 years, multicenter prospective and retrospective studies describing AVM natural history and treatment outcomes have been published. This review provides a contemporary and comprehensive discussion of the natural history, pathobiology, and interventions for brain AVMs.


2005 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 141-148 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. L. Li ◽  
B. Fang ◽  
X. Y. He ◽  
C. Z. Duan ◽  
Q. J. Wang ◽  
...  

We independently assessed the frequency, severity and determinants of neurological deficits after endovascular embolization with NBCA of brain arteriovenous malformations (BAVMs) to have a better basis for making treatment decisions. All the charts of 469 BAVMs patients who underwent embolization with NBCA were reviewed. We analyzed the complications and their relation to angiographic features. The 469 patients were treated with 1108 endovascular procedures. Each met one to eight times, average 2.3 times. Eleven patients showed treatment-related complications, including four haemorrhagic and seven ischemic complications. Of these 11 cases, two died, two had persistent disabling deficits, and another seven suffered transient neurological deficits. Our finding suggests a low rate of disabling treatment complications for embolization of brain AVMs with NBCA in this center. The management of AVM patients who have high risk of embolization therapy should be treated by special strategy.


Neurosurgery ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 92-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leonardo Renieri ◽  
Arturo Consoli ◽  
Giulia Scarpini ◽  
Giulia Grazzini ◽  
Sergio Nappini ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND: Arteriovenous malformation (AVM) treatment is multidisciplinary, and the patient may undergo embolization, neurosurgery, or radiosurgery combined. Great improvement in endovascular techniques was provided by the introduction of Onyx with different kinds of approach. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy and the safety of Onyx embolization of brain AVMs with the double arterial catheterization technique (DACT). METHODS: This was a retrospective study. From January 2006 until June 2011, 61 AVMs eligible for the DACT were treated. Forty-one of the 61 AVMs were treated with single arterial catheterization technique and 20 of 61 with DACT; patient age and Spetzler-Martin AVM grade were similar in the 2 groups. RESULTS: In the DACT group, we obtained complete occlusion of the nidus in all small AVMs, whereas in the single arterial catheterization technique group, we obtained complete occlusion in only 1 of the 36% of the cases. Among the medium-size AVMs, there were no significant differences in the 2 groups, but we performed fewer procedures per patient when we used the DACT (1.4 vs 2.2). In the DACT group, we observed fewer hemorrhagic complications (3.4% vs 12.5% per procedure) and lower morbidity (5% vs 7% per patient) and mortality (0% vs 2.4%) rates. CONCLUSION: The DACT in multifeeder AVMs may lead to a higher occlusion rate of the nidus for small AVMs and reduce the number of procedures, ensuring a higher standard of safety because of the possibility of managing the progression of Onyx into venous drainage.


2020 ◽  
Vol 101 (3) ◽  
pp. 163-169
Author(s):  
M. N. Mikhaylova ◽  
O. Yu. Kostrova ◽  
L. M. Merkulova ◽  
G. Yu. Struchko ◽  
A. Yu. Semenov

Objective. To estimate the detection rate of brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) in the Chuvash Republic and their characteristics.Material and methods. The results of CT angiographies performed at the Unit of Radiation Diagnosis in 2014–2017 were retrospectively analyzed.Results. Over 4 years, brain AVMs were first detected in 29 patients (5–9 cases per year); of them 59% were men and 41% were women. The peak detectability occurred at the age of 31–40 years. AVMs were more frequently localized in the frontal and temporal regions. The high risk of surgery for AVMs according to the grading scheme by R. Spetzler and N. Martin (1986) occurred in 10% of cases. Besides AVMs, cerebral vascular aneurysms were detected in 14% of patients.Conclusion. Small AVMs with a low risk of surgery are more common; however, there is a higher risk of hemorrhagic complications. The risk of cerebral hemorrhage is higher when AVMs are fed by the internal carotid arteries and drained into the deep veins. The likelihood of strokes in AVMs is 27% higher in patients with the open circle of Willis.


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