N-butyl cyanoacrylate embolization of cerebral arteriovenous malformations: Results of a prospective, randomized, multi-center trial

Authors

Thomas A. Tomsick, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Phillip Purdy, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Michael Horowitz, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Thomas Kopitnik, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Duke Samson, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Jacques Dion, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Gregory Joseph, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Robert Dawson, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
David Owens, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Danial Barrow, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
John Barr, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Stephen Powers, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Kevin Cockroft, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Brian Holmes, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Maria Sumas, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Robert Wallace, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Thomas Masaryk, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
John Perl, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Douglas Chyatte, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
John M. Tew, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Harry Van Loveren, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Mario Zuccarello, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Michael Marks, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Alexander Norbash, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Gary Steinberg, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Van Halbach, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Randall Higashida, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Christopher Dowd, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Michael Lawton, University of Cincinnati Medical CenterFollow
Charles Wilson, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Cameron McDougall, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Robert Spetzler, University of Cincinnati Medical CenterFollow

Document Type

Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Liquid N-butyl cyanoacrylate (n-BCA) use for the treatment of arteriovenous malformations (AVM) in the brain has become part of medical practice. However, no study has led to the Food and Drug Administration's approval of n-BCA for intravascular use. The purpose of this study was to verify the effectiveness and safety of an n-BCA/Tantalum Powder/Ethiodized Oil mixture, compared with conventional treatment (Trufill polyvinyl alcohol [PVA]) for preoperative embolization of cerebral AVM. METHODS: Between October 15, 1996, and March 24, 1999, 104 patients at 13 centers were prospectively randomized to undergo embolization using an n-BCA/Tantalum Powder/Ethiodol mixture or Trufill PVA. The pre-embolization therapy goals were determined in terms of the number of pedicles to be embolized and the percent of nidus reduction expected. Embolization results were evaluated by a central laboratory. Subsequent surgical resection data were recorded. Safety evaluation data included recording device complications, procedure complications, and intracranial events/overall neurologic outcomes, which could be either device-related, procedure-related, or both. RESULTS: The reduction of AVM dimensions (79.4% in the n-BCA group and 86.9% in the PVA group) and the mean number of vessels embolized (2.2 in the n-BCA group and 2.1 in the PVA group) was similar in the two groups. Coils were used more commonly with PVA embolization (P < .0001). No differences were detected in surgical resection time, number of patients who required tranfusion, volume and number of transfusion units, or type and volume of fluid replacement. Glasgow Outcome Scale scores were not significantly different between the two groups before treatment, after embolization, or after resection. Two of 42 patients who underwent resection and had been treated with n-BCA experienced post-resection hematoma, compared with eight of 45 patients who underwent resection and had been treated with PVA (P < .05). CONCLUSION: This prospective, randomized trial showed that n-BCA is equivalent to PVA as a preoperative embolic agent for treatment of cerebral AVM as determined by percent of nidus reduction and number of feeding pedicles embolized.

Publication Date

5-28-2002

Publication Title

American Journal of Neuroradiology

ISSN

01956108

Volume

23

Issue

5

First Page

748

Last Page

755

PubMed ID

12006271

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