Transcirculation approach for stent-assisted coiling of intracranial aneurysms: a multicenter study

Author:

Mascitelli Justin RORCID,Levitt Michael RORCID,Griessenauer Christoph J,Kim Louis J,Gross Bradley,Abla Adib,Winkler Ethan,Jankowitz Brian,Grandhi Ramesh,Goren Oded,Schirmer Clemens MORCID

Abstract

BackgroundThe transcirculation approach (TCA) for stent-assisted coiling (SAC) of intracranial aneurysms may be useful for certain wide-neck bifurcation aneurysms as well as those with acute-angle efferent branches.ObjectiveTo describe a multicenter experience using the TCA for SAC.MethodsA multicenter, retrospective study (2016–2020) of aneurysm treatment using SAC via the TCA. Angiographic outcome was scored using the Raymond Scale (adequate occlusion 1 and 2), and clinical outcome was scored using a modified Rankin Scale (good outcome 0–2)ResultsTwenty-nine patients with 29 aneurysms were included (62.1% female; average age 61; 89.7% unruptured; 13.8% previously treated; average dome size 6.4 mm; average neck 4.4 mm). Aneurysm locations included internal carotid artery–fetal posterior cerebral artery (n=4), internal carotid artery terminus (n=4), anterior communicating artery (n=8), vertebral artery–posterior inferior cerebellar artery (n=2), and basilar tip (n=11). The TCA used communicating arteries (93.1%; average 1.6 mm), intermediate catheters (51.7%), jailing technique (62.1%), and staged procedures (10.3%). The most common stent was the Neuroform Atlas (Stryker; 69%). Immediate adequate occlusion was obtained in 75.9%, and five patients with inadequate occlusion progressed to adequate occlusion at follow-up. One (3.4%) procedural complication occurred: a watershed stroke in the setting of baseline four-vessel extracranial disease. Two patients had a poor outcome unrelated to the TCA. The majority of patients (86.4%) had a good clinical outcome. One case of in-stent stenosis due to non-compliance with medication was seen, which resolved with medication resumption.ConclusionsThe TCA for SAC can be performed for a variety of aneurysms with a low complication rate and good clinical outcomes.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Clinical Neurology,General Medicine,Surgery

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