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Retreatment of Residual and Recurrent Aneurysms After Embolization With the Woven EndoBridge Device: Multicenter Case Series

Authors :
Visish M. Srinivasan
Adam A. Dmytriw
Robert W. Regenhardt
Juan Vicenty-Padilla
Naif M. Alotaibi
Elad Levy
Muhammad Waqas
Jacob Cherian
Jeremiah N. Johnson
Pascal Jabbour
Ahmad Sweid
Bradley Gross
Robert M. Starke
Ajit Puri
Francesco Massari
Christoph J. Griessenauer
Joshua S. Catapano
Caleb Rutledge
Omar Tanweer
Parham Yashar
Gustavo M. Cortez
Mohammad A. Aziz-Sultan
Aman B. Patel
Andrew F. Ducruet
Felipe C. Albuquerque
Ricardo A. Hanel
Michael T. Lawton
Peter Kan
Source :
Neurosurgery
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2022.

Abstract

The Woven EndoBridge (WEB) device (Terumno Corp. [parent company of Microvention]) was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as the first intrasaccular device for intracranial aneurysm treatment in December 2018. Its use has become more common since then, but both trial results and postmarket experiences have raised questions about the efficacy in achieving complete aneurysm obliteration. Retreatment after WEB embolization has not been extensively discussed. OBJECTIVE: To discuss the incidence and retreatment of aneurysms after initial WEB embolization. METHODS: Retrospective review across 13 institutions identified all occurrences of WEB retreatment within neurovascular databases. Details regarding demographics, aneurysm characteristics, treatment considerations, clinical outcomes, and aneurysm occlusion were obtained and analyzed. RESULTS: Thirty aneurysms were retreated in 30 patients in a cohort of 342 WEB-treated aneurysms. The retreatment rate was 8.8%. Endovascular methods were used for 23 cases, and 7 were treated surgically. Two aneurysms presented with rehemorrhage after initial WEB embolization. Endovascular treatments included stent-assisted coiling (12), flow diversion (7), coiling (2), PulseRider (Johnson & Johnson)–assisted coiling (1), and additional WEB placement (1). Surgical treatments included primary clipping (6) and Hunterian ligation (1). There were no major complications within the study group. CONCLUSION: WEB retreatments were successfully performed by a variety of techniques, including stent-assisted coiling, clipping, and flow diversion as the most common. These procedures were performed safely with subsequent obliteration of most aneurysms. The potential need for retreatment of aneurysms should be considered during primary WEB treatments.

Details

ISSN :
15244040 and 0148396X
Volume :
90
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurosurgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ec07f79abde648668d96033a9c7b4df5