Multicenter US clinical experience with the Scepter Mini balloon catheter

Author:

Salem Mohamed M.1ORCID,Kelmer Paz1,Sioutas Georgios S.1ORCID,Ostmeier Sophie2,Hoang Alex3,Cortez Gustavo4ORCID,El Naamani Kareem5ORCID,Abbas Rawad5,Hanel Ricardo4,Tanweer Omar3,Srinivasan Visish M.1,Jabbour Pascal5,Kan Peter6,Jankowitz Brian T.1,Heit Jeremy J.2ORCID,Burkhardt Jan-Karl1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Penn Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, USA

2. Department of Radiology and Neurosurgery, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

3. Department of Neurosurgery, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA

4. Department of Cerebrovascular and Endovascular Surgery, Baptist Neurological Institute and Lyerly Neurosurgery, Jacksonville, FL, USA

5. Department of Neurosurgery, Thomas Jefferson University Hospitals, Philadelphia, PA, USA

6. Department of Neurosurgery, University of Texas Medical Branch Galveston, Galveston, TX, USA

Abstract

Introduction Distal navigability and imprecise delivery of embolic agents are two limitations encountered during liquid embolization of cerebrospinal lesions. The dual-lumen Scepter Mini balloon (SMB) microcatheter was introduced to overcome these conventional microcatheters’ limitations with few small single-center reports suggesting favorable results. Methods A series of consecutive patients undergoing SMB-assisted endovascular embolization were extracted from prospectively maintained registries in seven North-American centers (November 2019 to September 2022). Results Fifty-four patients undergoing 55 embolization procedures utilizing SMB were included (median age 58.5; 48.1% females). Cranial dural arteriovenous fistula embolization was the most common indication (54.5%) followed by cranial arteriovenous malformation (27.3%). Staged/pre-operative embolization was done in 36.4% of cases; and 83.6% of procedures using Onyx-18. Most procedures utilized a transarterial approach (89.1%), and SMB-induced arterial-flow arrest concurrently with transvenous embolization was used in 10.9% of procedures. Femoral access/triaxial setups were utilized in the majority of procedures (65.5% and 60%, respectively). The median vessel diameter where the balloon was inflated of 1.8 mm, with a median of 1.5 cc of injected embolic material per procedure. Technical failures occurred in 5.5% of cases requiring aborting/replacement with other devices without clinical sequelae in any of the patients, with SMB-related procedural complications of 3.6% without clinical sequelae. Radiographic imaging follow-up was available in 76.9% of the patients (median follow-up 3.8 months), with complete occlusion (100%) or >50% occlusion in 92.5% of the cases, and unplanned retreatments in 1.8%. Conclusion The SMB microcatheter is a useful new adjunctive device for balloon-assisted embolization of cerebrospinal lesions with a high technical success rate, favorable outcomes, and a reasonable safety profile.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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