Flow diversion in the treatment of aneurysms: a randomized care trial and registry

Author:

Raymond Jean1,Gentric Jean-Christophe12,Darsaut Tim E.3,Iancu Daniela4,Chagnon Miguel5,Weill Alain1,Roy Daniel1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiology, Centre Hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal, Notre-Dame Hospital, Montreal, Quebec, Canada;

2. Groupe d'Étude de la Thrombose en Bretagne Occidentale, Brest, France;

3. Division of Neurosurgery, Department of Surgery, University of Alberta Hospital, Mackenzie Health Sciences Centre, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada;

4. Department of Radiology, Ottawa Hospital, Civic Campus, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; and

5. Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Université de Montréal, Quebec, Canada

Abstract

OBJECTIVEThe Flow Diversion in the Treatment of Intracranial Aneurysm Trial (FIAT) was designed to guide the clinical use of flow diversion, an innovative method to treat intracranial aneurysms, within a care trial and to study safety and efficacy.METHODSFIAT, conducted in 3 Canadian hospitals, proposed randomized allocation to flow diversion or standard management options (observation, coil embolization, parent vessel occlusion, or clip placement), and a registry of non-randomized patients treated with flow diversion. The primary safety outcome was death or dependency (modified Rankin Scale score > 2) at 3 months, to be determined for all patients who received flow diversion at any time. The primary efficacy outcome was angiographic occlusion at 3–12 months combined with an independent clinical outcome.RESULTSOf 112 participating patients recruited between May 2, 2011, and February 25, 2015, 78 were randomized (39 in each arm), and 34 received flow diversion within the registry. The study was halted due to safety concerns. Twelve (16%) of 75 patients (95% CI 8.9%–26.7%) who were allocated to or received flow diversion at any time were dead (n = 8) or dependent (n = 4) at 3 months or more, crossing a predefined safety boundary. Death or dependency occurred in 5 (13.2%) of 38 patients randomly allocated and treated by flow diversion (95% CI 5.0%–28.9%) and in 5 (12.8%) of 39 patients allocated to standard treatment (95% CI 4.8%–28.2%). Efficacy was below expectations of the trial hypothesis: 16 (42.1%) of 38 patients (95% CI 26.7%–59.1%) randomly allocated to flow diversion failed to reach the primary outcome, as compared with 14 (35.9%) of 39 patients allocated to standard treatment (95% CI 21.7%–52.9%).CONCLUSIONSFlow diversion was not as safe and effective as hypothesized. More randomized trials are needed to determine the role of flow diversion in the management of aneurysms.Clinical trial registration no.: NCT01349582 (clinicaltrials.gov)

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Subject

Genetics,Animal Science and Zoology

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