Indirect revascularization for pediatric moyamoya disease

Author:

Ogawa Shotaro1,Ogiwara Hideki1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, National Center for Child Health and Development, Tokyo, Japan

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Indirect revascularization is a common and effective treatment for pediatric moyamoya disease. However, in several cases postoperative angiogenesis is not sufficient. It is not fully understood which factors are involved in the development of postoperative collateral circulation. In this study, the authors aimed to elucidate the factors related to postoperative angiogenesis in indirect revascularization. METHODS Among the patients who underwent indirect revascularization for moyamoya disease from January 2015 to December 2022, those whose angiogenesis was evaluated using angiography were included. Age, onset symptoms, comorbidities, preoperative imaging findings, surgical details, perioperative complications, postoperative imaging findings, and modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score at the last outpatient visit were retrospectively examined. RESULTS Ninety cases (53 patients; 37 bilateral, 16 unilateral) were included. Sixty-eight cases (75.6%) were symptomatic. The mean age at surgery was 7.9 years, and the mean postoperative follow-up duration was 48.5 months. Frontotemporal encephalo-duro-arterio-synangiosis (EDAS) was performed in all cases, and simultaneous frontal encephalo-galeo-synangiosis (EGS) was performed in 34 cases. Postoperative angiography revealed insufficient angiogenesis in 14 of 90 cases (15.6%) after frontotemporal EDAS and in 8 of 34 cases (23.5%) after frontal EGS. A high degree of ivy sign depicted on preoperative MRI was found to be significantly correlated with good angiogenesis after both surgical procedures (p = 0.00030 for EDAS and p = 0.0039 for frontal EGS). In addition, an advanced preoperative Suzuki stage was significantly correlated with good postoperative angiogenesis after EDAS (p = 0.00040). Good angiogenesis was significantly correlated with postoperative improvement of the ivy sign in both procedures (p = 0.0005 in EDAS and p = 0.030 in frontal EGS) as well as correlated with a better mRS score at long-term follow-up after EDAS (p = 0.018). CONCLUSIONS Preoperative ivy sign and Suzuki classification are related to the degree of angiogenesis achieved after indirect revascularization for pediatric moyamoya disease.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

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