A novel method to determine the natural course of unruptured brain arteriovenous malformations without the need for follow-up information

Author:

Karlsson Bengt1,Johansson Arne V.2,Yang Huai-Che3,Jokura Hidefumi4,Yamamoto Masaaki5,Martínez-Álvarez Roberto6,Kawagishi Jun4,Guo Wan-Yuo7,Beute Guus8,Pan David H. C.3,Chung Wen-Yuh3,Söderman Michael9,Aiyama Hitoshi5,Yeo Tseng Tsai1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Neurosurgery, Department of Surgery, National University Hospital, Singapore;

2. Department of Mechanics, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden;

3. Departments of Neurosurgery and

4. Jiro Suzuki Memorial Gamma House, Furukawa Seiryo Hospital, Osaki, Japan;

5. Katsuta Hospital Mito GammaHouse, Ibaraki, Japan;

6. Ruber International Hospital, Madrid, Spain;

7. Radiology, Veterans General Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan;

8. ETZ Elizabeth, Tilburg, The Netherlands; and

9. Karolinska Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden

Abstract

OBJECTIVEThere is a strong clinical need to accurately determine the average annual hemorrhage risk in unruptured brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs). This need motivated the present initiative to use data from a uniquely large patient population and design a novel methodology to achieve a risk determination with unprecedented accuracy. The authors also aimed to determine the impact of sex, pregnancy, AVM volume, and location on the risk for AVM rupture.METHODSThe present study does not consider any specific management of the AVMs, but only uses the age distribution for the first hemorrhage, the shape of which becomes universal for a sufficiently large set of patients. For this purpose, the authors collected observations, including age at first hemorrhage and AVM size and location, in 3425 patients. The average annual risk for hemorrhage could then be determined from the simple relation that the number of patients with their first hemorrhage at a specific age equals the risk for hemorrhage times the number of patients at risk at that age. For a subset of the patients, the information regarding occurrence of AVM hemorrhage after treatment of the first hemorrhage was used for further analysis of the influence on risk from AVM location and pregnancy.RESULTSThe age distribution for the first AVM hemorrhage was used to determine the average annual risk for hemorrhage in unruptured AVMs at adult ages (25–60 years). It was concluded to be 3.1% ± 0.2% and unrelated to AVM volume but influenced by its location, with the highest risk for centrally located AVMs. The hemorrhage risk was found to be significantly higher for females in their fertile years.CONCLUSIONSThe present methodology allowed the authors to determine the average annual risk for the first AVM hemorrhage at 3.1% ± 0.2% without the need for individual patient follow-up. This methodology has potential also for other similar types of investigations. The conclusion that centrally located AVMs carry a higher risk was confirmed by follow-up information. Follow-up information was also used to conclude that pregnancy causes a substantially greater AVM hemorrhage risk. The age distribution for AVM hemorrhage is incompatible with AVMs present at birth having the same hemorrhage risk as AVMs in adults. Plausibly, they instead develop in the early years of life, possibly with a lower hemorrhage risk during that time period.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Subject

Genetics,Animal Science and Zoology

Reference64 articles.

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3. Development of a de novo cerebral arteriovenous malformation in a child with sickle cell disease and moyamoya arteriopathy. Case report;O’Shaughnessy;J Neurosurg,2005

4. De novo arteriovenous malformation after aneurysm clipping;Shidoh;NMC Case Rep J,2017

5. De novo cerebral arteriovenous malformation: case report;Bulsara;Neurosurgery,2002

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