4.5 Article

Time Line of Occlusion for Intracranial Aneurysms Treated with the Pipeline Embolization Device

Journal

WORLD NEUROSURGERY
Volume 166, Issue -, Pages E750-E757

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.wneu.2022.07.084

Keywords

Aneurysm; Flow diversion; PED; Pipeline embolization device

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This study utilized real-world variability in timing of angiographic follow-up to characterize the time line of aneurysm occlusion following treatment with the Pipeline embolization device (PED). The findings showed that larger aneurysms had a longer median time to occlusion and lower rate of occlusion, but the number of PEDs deployed or the use of adjunctive coiling did not affect the time line or likelihood of aneurysm occlusion. The median time to observed occlusion of aneurysms treated with a PED was 7.5 months.
BACKGROUND: Rates of aneurysm occlusion following treatment with flow-diverting stents have been quantified at predefined time points in clinical trials, but data characterizing the continuous temporal progression of aneurysm occlusion are lacking. This study used real-world variability in timing of angiographic follow-up to characterize the time line of aneurysm occlusion following treatment with the Pipeline embolization device (PED). METHODS: An aneurysms treated with a PED at our institution between 2011 and 2020 were screened. Nonsaccular or ruptured aneurysms were excluded. Aneurysm occlusion status and time since treatment were recorded for each follow-up angiogram. Aneurysm occlusion was characterized using Kaplan-Meier and Cox proportional hazards analysis after censoring at last follow-up or subsequent treatment. RESULTS: There were 290 aneurysms in 222 patients analyzed. The median time of observed aneurysm occlusion was 7.5 months, and overall rate of aneurysm occlusion was 77.9%. Larger aneurysms demonstrated a longer median time to occlusion and lower rate of aneurysm occlusion (P = 0.029). There were no observed differences in the time line of occlusion for aneurysms treated with a single PED or multiple PEDs (P = 0.889) or without or with adjunctive coiling (P = 0.771). CONCLUSIONS: Aneurysms treated with a PED had a median time to observed occlusion of 7.5 months. Occlusion of larger aneurysms occurred more slowly than occlusion of smaller aneurysms following flow diversion. The number of PEDs deployed or the use of adjunctive coiling did not affect the time line or likelihood of aneurysm occlusion. These findings may guide optimal timing of followup after treatment with a PED.

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