Preoperative embolization of brain arteriovenous malformation and efficacy in intraoperative blood loss reduction: a quantitative study

Author:

Brunozzi Denise,Stone McGuire Laura,Hossa Jessica,Atwal Gursant,Charbel Fady T,Alaraj AliORCID

Abstract

BackgroundEmbolization of brain arteriovenous malformations (bAVMs) is often used as adjuvant therapy to microsurgical resection to reduce the high-risk features of bAVMs such as large size and high flow. However, the effect of preoperative embolization on surgical performance and patient outcome has shown mixed results. Heterogeneity in treatment goals, selection criteria, and unpredictable changes in bAVM hemodynamics after partial embolization may account for these uncertain findings. In this study we use an objective quantitative technique to assess the impact of preoperative embolization on intraoperative blood loss (IBL).MethodsPatients with bAVM treated with microsurgical resection only or in combination with preoperative embolization from 2012 to 2022 were retrospectively reviewed. Patients were included if quantitative magnetic resonance angiography was performed prior to any treatment. Correlation of baseline bAVM flow, volume, and IBL was evaluated between the two groups. Additionally, bAVM flow prior to and after embolization was compared.ResultsForty-three patients were included, 31 of whom required preoperative embolization (20 had more than one session). Mean bAVM initial flow (362.3 mL/min vs 89.6 mL/min, p=0.001) and volume (9.6 mL vs 2.8 mL, p=0.001) were significantly higher in the preoperative embolization group; flow decreased significantly after embolization (408.0 mL/min vs 139.5 mL/min, p<0.001). IBL was comparable between the two groups (258.6 mL vs 141.3 mL, p=0.17). Linear regression continued to show a significant difference in initial bAVM flow (p=0.03) but no significant difference in IBL (p=0.53).ConclusionPatients with larger bAVMs who underwent preoperative embolization had comparable IBL to those with smaller bAVMs undergoing only surgical treatment. Preoperative embolization of high-flow bAVMs facilitates surgical resection, reducing the risk of IBL.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Neurology (clinical),General Medicine,Surgery

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