Journal article
Microsurgical versus endovascular treatment of spinal epidural arteriovenous fistulas with intradural venous drainage: a multicenter study of 81 patients
Journal of neurosurgery. Spine, Vol.33(3), pp.381-391
09/01/2020
DOI: 10.3171/2020.2.SPINE191432
PMID: 32330891
Abstract
OBJECTIVE Spinal arteriovenous shunts are rare vascular lesions and are classified into 4 types (types I-IV). Due to rapid advances in neuroimaging, spinal epidural AVFs (edAVFs), which are similar to type I spinal dural AVFs (dAVFs), have recently been increasingly reported. These 2 entities have several important differences that influence the treatment strategy selected. The purposes of the present study were to compare angiographic and clinical differences between edAVFs and dAVFs and to provide treatment strategies for edAVFs based on a multicenter cohort.
METHODS A total of 280 consecutive patients with thoracic and lumbosacral spinal dural arteriovenous fistulas (dAVFs) and edAVFs with intradural venous drainage were collected from 19 centers. After angiographic and clinical comparisons, the treatment failure rate by procedure, risk factors for treatment failure, and neurological outcomes were statistically analyzed in edAVF cases.
RESULTS Final diagnoses after an angiographic review included 199 dAVFs and 81 edAVFs. At individual centers, 29 patients (36%) with edAVFs were misdiagnosed with dAVFs. Spinal edAVFs were commonly fed by multiple feeding arteries (54%) shunted into a single or multiple intradural vein(s) (91% and 9%) through a dilated epidural venous plexus. Preoperative modified Rankin Scale (mRS) and Aminoff Logue gait and micturition grades were worse in patients with edAVFs than in those with dAVFs. Among the microsurgical (n = 42), endovascular (n = 36), and combined (n = 3) treat- ment groups of edAVFs, the treatment failure rate was significantly higher in the index endovascular treatment group (7.5%, 31%, and 0%, respectively). Endovascular treatment was found to be associated with significantly higher odds of initial treatment failure (OR 5.72, 95% CI 1.45-22.6). In edAVFs, the independent risk factor for treatment failure after microsurgery was the number of intradural draining veins (OR 17.9, 95% C11.56-207), while that for treatment failure after the endovascular treatment was the number of feeders (OR 4.11, 95% CI 1.23-13.8). Postoperatively, mRS score and Aminoff-Logue gait and micturition grades significantly improved in edAVFs with a median follow-up of 31 months.
CONCLUSIONS Spinal epidural AVFs with intradural venous drainage are a distinct entity and may be classified as type V spinal vascular malformations. Based on the largest multicenter cohort, this study showed that primary microsurgery was superior to endovascular treatment for initial treatment success in patients with spinal edAVFs.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Microsurgical versus endovascular treatment of spinal epidural arteriovenous fistulas with intradural venous drainage: a multicenter study of 81 patients
- Creators
- Keisuke Takai - Tokyo Metropolitan Neurological HospitalToshiki Endo - Kohnan HospitalTakao Yasuhara - Okayama UniversityToshitaka Seki - Hokkaido University HospitalKei Watanabe - Niigata University Medical and Dental HospitalYuki Tanaka - Niigata University Medical and Dental HospitalRyu Kurokawa - Dokkyo Medical UniversityHideaki Kanaya - Dokkyo Medical UniversityFumiaki Honda - 5Department of Neurosurgery, Gunma University Hospital, Gunma;Takashi Itabashi - Japanese Red Cross Narita HospitalOsamu Ishikawa - University of Tokyo HospitalHidetoshi Murata - Yokohama City UniversityYusuke Nishimura - Nagoya University HospitalKaoru Eguchi - Nagoya University HospitalToshihiro Takami - Osaka City UniversityYusuke Watanabe - Osaka City UniversityTakeo Nishida - Osaka UniversityMasafumi Hiramatsu - Okayama UniversityTatsuya Ohtonari - 14Department of Spinal Surgery, Brain Attack Center, Ota Memorial Hospital, Hiroshima.Satoshi Yamaguchi - Hiroshima University HospitalTakafumi Mitsuhara - Hiroshima University HospitalSeishi Matsui - Ehime UniversityHisaaki Uchikado - Kurume University HospitalGohsuke Hattori - Kurume University HospitalNobutaka Horie - Nagasaki University HospitalHitoshi Yamahata - Kagoshima University HospitalMakoto Taniguchi - Tokyo Metropolitan Neurological Hospital
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Journal of neurosurgery. Spine, Vol.33(3), pp.381-391
- DOI
- 10.3171/2020.2.SPINE191432
- PMID
- 32330891
- NLM abbreviation
- J Neurosurg Spine
- ISSN
- 1547-5654
- eISSN
- 1547-5646
- Publisher
- American Association of Neurological Surgeons
- Number of pages
- 11
- Grant note
- R010603007 / Tokyo Metropolitan Government
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 09/01/2020
- Academic Unit
- Neurosurgery
- Record Identifier
- 9984304033202771
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