Bringing high-grade arteriovenous malformations under control: clinical outcomes following multimodality treatment in children.
Department
Neurosurgery
Document Type
Article
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) consist of dysplastic blood vessels with direct arteriovenous shunts that can hemorrhage spontaneously. In children, a higher lifetime hemorrhage risk must be balanced with treatment-related morbidity. The authors describe a collaborative, multimodal strategy resulting in effective and safe treatment of pediatric AVMs.
METHODS: A retrospective analysis of a prospectively maintained database was performed in children with treated and nontreated pediatric AVMs at the University of California, San Francisco, from 1998 to 2017. Inclusion criteria were age ≤ 18 years at time of diagnosis and an AVM confirmed by a catheter angiogram.
RESULTS: The authors evaluated 189 pediatric patients with AVMs over the study period, including 119 ruptured (63%) and 70 unruptured (37%) AVMs. The mean age at diagnosis was 11.6 ± 4.3 years. With respect to Spetzler-Martin (SM) grade, there were 38 (20.1%) grade I, 40 (21.2%) grade II, 62 (32.8%) grade III, 40 (21.2%) grade IV, and 9 (4.8%) grade V lesions. Six patients were managed conservatively, and 183 patients underwent treatment, including 120 resections, 82 stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS), and 37 endovascular embolizations. Forty-four of 49 (89.8%) high-grade AVMs (SM grade IV or V) were treated. Multiple treatment modalities were used in 29.5% of low-grade and 27.3% of high-grade AVMs. Complete angiographic obliteration was obtained in 73.4% of low-grade lesions (SM grade I-III) and in 45.2% of high-grade lesions. A periprocedural stroke occurred in a single patient (0.5%), and there was 1 treatment-related death. The mean clinical follow-up for the cohort was 4.1 ± 4.6 years, and 96.6% and 84.3% of patients neurologically improved or remained unchanged in the ruptured and unruptured AVM groups following treatment, respectively. There were 16 bleeding events following initiation of AVM treatment (annual rate: 0.02 events per person-year).
CONCLUSIONS: Coordinated multidisciplinary evaluation and individualized planning can result in safe and effective treatment of children with AVMs. In particular, it is possible to treat the majority of high-grade AVMs with an acceptable safety profile. Judicious use of multimodality therapy should be limited to appropriately selected patients after thorough team-based discussions to avoid additive morbidity. Future multicenter studies are required to better design predictive models to aid with patient selection for multimodal pediatric care, especially with high-grade AVMs.
Publication Date
4-10-2020
Publication Title
J Neurosurg Pediatr
ISSN
1933-0715
First Page
1
Last Page
10
PubMed ID
32276243
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.3171/2020.1.PEDS19487
Recommended Citation
Winkler, Ethan A; Lu, Alex; Morshed, Ramin A; Yue, John K; Rutledge, W Caleb; Burkhardt, Jan-Karl; Patel, Arati B; Ammanuel, Simon G; Braunstein, Steve; Fox, Christine K; Fullerton, Heather J; Kim, Helen; Cooke, Daniel; Hetts, Steven W; Lawton, Michael T.; Abla, Adib A; and Gupta, Nalin, "Bringing high-grade arteriovenous malformations under control: clinical outcomes following multimodality treatment in children." (2020). Neurosurgery. 531.
https://scholar.barrowneuro.org/neurosurgery/531