Safety and efficacy of preoperative embolization in the treatment of brain arteriovenous malformations with perinidal aneurysms and single draining vein: a multicenter study with propensity score-weighting.

Authors

Basel Musmar
Nimer Adeeb
Hammam Abdalrazeq
Hamza Adel Salim
Joanna Roy
Stavropoula I Tjoumakaris
Sandeep Kandregula
Christopher S Ogilvy
Douglas Kondziolka
Jason P Sheehan
Adam A Dmytriw
Assala Aslan
Pious Patel
Matthews Lan
Michael P Baldassari
Sravanthi Koduri MD, Lehigh Valley Health NetworkFollow
Elias Atallah
Hussein Zeineddine
Mary-Katharine Pontarelli
Hussam Abou-Al-Shaar
Kareem El Naamani
Ahmed Abdelsalam
Natasha Ironside
Deepak Kumbhare
Sanjeev Gummadi
Mustafa Baskaya
Cagdas Ataoglu
Finn Mccarthy
Anthony Sanchez-Forteza
Muhammed Amir Essibayi
Abdullah Keles
Sandeep Muram
Daniel Sconzo
Howard Riina
Arwin Rezai
Omar Alwakaa
Salem M Tos
Georgios Mantziaris
Min S Park
Sahin Hanalioglu
Ufuk Erginoglu
Johannes Pöppe
Rajeev D Sen
Christoph J Griessenauer
Maria Isabel Ocampo-Navia
Diego A Devia
Wilfran Perez-Mendez
Juan C Puentes
Rahim Abo Kasem
Alejandro M Spiotta
Ajit S Puri
Jasmeet Singh
Anna Luisa Kuhn
Jan Karl Burkhardt
Robert M Starke
Laligam N Sekhar
Michael Levitt
David Altschul
Neil Haranhalli
Malia McAvoy
Marah Eltiti
Abdallah Abushehab
Paul Foreman
Hakeem J Shakir
Osama O Zaidat
Mohammad AlMajali
Marcella Ruppert-Gomez
Alfred Pokmeng See
Adib A Abla
Christopher J Stapleton
Aashay Patel
Andrew Nguyen
Matthew J Koch
Visish M Srinivasan
Peng Roc Chen
Spiros Blackburn
Rabab Alshahrani
M Reid Gooch
Robert H Rosenwasser
Ketan R Bulsara
Peter Kan
Louis J Kim
Omar Choudhri
Bryan Pukenas
Davide Simonato
Yan-Lin Li
Ali Alaraj
Maurizio Fuschi
Aman B Patel
Amey Savardekar
Christina Notarianni
Hugo H Cuellar
Michael T Lawton
Bharat Guthikonda
Jacques Morcos
Pascal Jabbour

Publication/Presentation Date

8-22-2025

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) with perinidal aneurysms and single draining vein are associated with an elevated risk of rupture and increased procedural complexity. The role of preoperative embolization in this high-risk anatomical subset remains unclear. This study aimed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of microsurgery with preoperative embolization, compared with microsurgery alone in patients with such AVMs.

METHODS: We conducted a multicenter retrospective analysis of an AVM registry from the MISTA (Multicenter International Study for Treatment of Brain AVMs) consortium and included AVMs with perinidal aneurysms and a single draining vein. Baseline characteristics, angiographic outcomes, functional outcomes, and complication rates were compared. Propensity score weighting (PSW) using the covariate balancing method was applied to adjust for baseline differences.

RESULTS: Out of a total of 1919 patients, 65 met the inclusion criteria; 45 patients underwent preoperative embolization followed by microsurgery, and 20 underwent microsurgery alone. After adjustment, complete obliteration rates were similar between groups (OR 0.87, 95% CI 0.04 to 16.33, P=0.92), as were rates of functional independence at discharge and follow-up. Overall complication, symptomatic complication, and mortality rates did not differ significantly between groups. However, permanent complications were significantly lower in patients with preoperative embolization (OR 0.06, 95% CI 0.004 to 0.84, P=0.03).

DISCUSSION: In patients with AVMs featuring perinidal aneurysms and single draining vein, preoperative embolization followed by microsurgery was associated with fewer permanent complications and no increase in adverse outcomes compared with microsurgery alone. However, given the small number of events, this finding should be interpreted cautiously.

ISSN

1759-8486

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences

PubMedID

40846482

Department(s)

Department of Surgery

Document Type

Article

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