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Risk of Early Versus Later Rebleeding From Dural Arteriovenous Fistulas With Cortical Venous Drainage.

Authors :
Durnford, Andrew J
Durnford, Andrew J
Akarca, Danyal
Culliford, David
Millar, John
Guniganti, Ridhima
Giordan, Enrico
Brinjikji, Waleed
Chen, Ching-Jen
Abecassis, Isaac Josh
Levitt, Michael
Polifka, Adam J
Derdeyn, Colin P
Samaniego, Edgar A
Kwasnicki, Amanda
Alaraj, Ali
Potgieser, Adriaan RE
Chen, Stephanie
Tada, Yoshiteru
Phelps, Ryan
Abla, Adib
Satomi, Junichiro
Starke, Robert M
van Dijk, J Marc C
Amin-Hanjani, Sepideh
Hayakawa, Minako
Gross, Bradley
Fox, W Christopher
Kim, Louis
Sheehan, Jason
Lanzino, Giuseppe
Kansagra, Akash P
Du, Rose
Lai, Rosalind
Zipfel, Gregory J
Bulters, Diederik O
CONDOR Investigators
Durnford, Andrew J
Durnford, Andrew J
Akarca, Danyal
Culliford, David
Millar, John
Guniganti, Ridhima
Giordan, Enrico
Brinjikji, Waleed
Chen, Ching-Jen
Abecassis, Isaac Josh
Levitt, Michael
Polifka, Adam J
Derdeyn, Colin P
Samaniego, Edgar A
Kwasnicki, Amanda
Alaraj, Ali
Potgieser, Adriaan RE
Chen, Stephanie
Tada, Yoshiteru
Phelps, Ryan
Abla, Adib
Satomi, Junichiro
Starke, Robert M
van Dijk, J Marc C
Amin-Hanjani, Sepideh
Hayakawa, Minako
Gross, Bradley
Fox, W Christopher
Kim, Louis
Sheehan, Jason
Lanzino, Giuseppe
Kansagra, Akash P
Du, Rose
Lai, Rosalind
Zipfel, Gregory J
Bulters, Diederik O
CONDOR Investigators
Source :
Stroke; vol 53, iss 7, 2340-2345; 0039-2499
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

BackgroundCranial dural arteriovenous fistulas with cortical venous drainage are rare lesions that can present with hemorrhage. A high rate of rebleeding in the early period following hemorrhage has been reported, but published long-term rates are much lower. No study has examined how risk of rebleeding changes over time. Our objective was to quantify the relative incidence of rebleeding in the early and later periods following hemorrhage.MethodsPatients with dural arteriovenous fistula and cortical venous drainage presenting with hemorrhage were identified from the multinational CONDOR (Consortium for Dural Fistula Outcomes Research) database. Natural history follow-up was defined as time from hemorrhage to first treatment, rebleed, or last follow-up. Rebleeding in the first 2 weeks and first year were compared using incidence rate ratio and difference.ResultsOf 1077 patients, 250 met the inclusion criteria and had 95 cumulative person-years natural history follow-up. The overall annualized rebleed rate was 7.3% (95% CI, 3.2-14.5). The incidence rate of rebleeding in the first 2 weeks was 0.0011 per person-day; an early rebleed risk of 1.6% in the first 14 days (95% CI, 0.3-5.1). For the remainder of the first year, the incidence rate was 0.00015 per person-day; a rebleed rate of 5.3% (CI, 1.7-12.4) over 1 year. The incidence rate ratio was 7.3 (95% CI, 1.4-37.7; P, 0.026).ConclusionsThe risk of rebleeding of a dural arteriovenous fistula with cortical venous drainage presenting with hemorrhage is increased in the first 2 weeks justifying early treatment. However, the magnitude of this increase may be considerably lower than previously thought. Treatment within 5 days was associated with a low rate of rebleeding and appears an appropriate timeframe.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Stroke; vol 53, iss 7, 2340-2345; 0039-2499
Notes :
application/pdf, Stroke vol 53, iss 7, 2340-2345 0039-2499
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1341877790
Document Type :
Electronic Resource