Vascular Neurosurgery Update The cerebrovascular program at the - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Vascular Neurosurgery Update The cerebrovascular program at the - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Vascular Neurosurgery Update The cerebrovascular program at the Oregon Neuroscience Institute Erik Hauck, MD, PhD; Medical Director; Chairman Objectives Vascular Neurosurgery - summary Breakthrough in aneurysm treatment Advances in


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Vascular Neurosurgery Update

The cerebrovascular program at the Oregon Neuroscience Institute

Erik Hauck, MD, PhD; Medical Director; Chairman

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Objectives

  • Vascular Neurosurgery - summary
  • Breakthrough in aneurysm treatment
  • Advances in the treatment of AVMs
  • New technology for stroke interventions
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Vascular Neurosurgery Summary

Carotid disease Ischemic stroke Aneurysm AVM

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Year #2 Summary: 532 procedures

  • Craniotomies

62 Aneurysm 6 (tumor) 7 AVM 1 EC IC bypass 2 Gamma knife 13 (AVM) 2

  • Catheter procedures 297 Aneurysm 46

AVM 5 Stroke 26 Dx angio 168

  • Carotid procedures 52 CEA

10 CAS 42

  • CSF shunting

52

  • Spine

123 AVM 1 (tumor) 1

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Aneurysms and subarachnoid hemorrhage

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Size

Small & Giant

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‘Saccular’

(based on a ‘normal’ parent vessel)

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‘Fusiform’

(no ‘normal’ parent vessel)

Drake CG, PeerlessSJ. Giant fusiform intracranial aneurysms: review of 120 patients treated surgically from 1965 to 1992. J

  • Neurosurg. 1997 Aug;87(2):141-62.
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Location

Brisman JL, Song JK, Newell DW. Cerebral aneurysms. NEJM 2006; 355:928-939

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Risk of Rupture (ISUIA)

  • ISUIA. Lancet. 2003 Jul 12;362(9378):103-10.

Size Anterior Circulation Posterior Circulation 0 - 6 0 – 1.5% 2.5 – 3.4% 7 – 12 2.6% 14.5% 13 - 24 14.5% 18.4% 25+ 40% 50% 5 year cumulative risk

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Treatment Option

  • Endovascular

(coil)

  • Surgery

(clip)

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Evolution of aneurysm treatment Phase I (microsurgery)

1937 Dandy: Clip 1966 Pool: Microscope 1991 Guglielmi: Coil 1997 Higashida: Stent 2011 Hauck: Tri-axial system 2011 Hauck: Flow diversion, 1st in Oregon

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Advantages of surgical clipping

  • Immediate cure
  • Recurrence is extremely unlikely
  • No need for follow-up angiography
  • Reduction of mass effect
  • Primary reconstruction of wide-necked or

bifurcation aneurysms with clips

  • Trapping, distal or proximal occlusion with

bypass is an option

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The drawbacks of surgical clipping

  • Open operation on the head and brain
  • Risk of general anesthesia
  • Surgical risk (wound complication, brain or

cranial nerve injury)

  • Increased risk with larger aneurysms
  • Increased risk with older patients
  • Increased risk in case of rupture
  • Increased risk with posterior location
  • Longer hospital stay and recovery period
  • Slow evolution of surgical technique
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Dandy’s sketch

  • f the first

Aneurysm Clip 1937

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R Pteryonal Approach

Hauck EF et al., J Neurosurg. 2010 Jun;112(6):1216-21.

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Small Aneurysm, Clip

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Carotid ligation

26 yo M, L eye blind, 3.1 cm AN

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Traditional Bypass

  • Interposition

Hauck EF, Samson DS. Surg Neurol. 2009 May;71(5):600-3.

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Open surgical treatment

Hauck et al., J Neurosurg. 2008 Dec;109(6):1012-8.

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Change in my practice

  • Year #1

– 50 aneurysm total – 23 surgical clipping 46% – 27 endovascular (coil or stent/coil) 54%

  • Year #2

– 52 aneurysms total – 6 surgical clipping 12% – 46 endovascular (coil/ stent/flow diversion) 88% p= 0.0001 Fisher’s exact test

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Current percentage of aneurysms treated endovascularly here in Eugene now

88%

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Why is my practice changing?

  • World wide break through in endovascular

technology

  • Local improvement of endovascular

technology and cathlab team

  • Ability to treat MCA aneurysms with coiling
  • Patient choices
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Flow diversion – world wide break through in aneurysm treatment

Lylyk P, Miranda C, Ceratto R, Ferriano A, Scrivano E, Ramirez-Luna H, Berez AL, Tran Q, Nelson PK, Fiorella D: Curative Endovascular Reconstruction of Cerebral Aneurysms with the Pipeline Embolization Device: The Buenos Aires Experience. Neurosurgery 64: 643, April 2009. 53 Patients, nearly 100% cure over 12 months. Reviewer comment (Hauck et al.): … the pipeline embolization device promises to become the endovascular equivalent of a surgical clip…

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Pipeline Embolization Device

  • Braided mash cylinder
  • 48 microfilaments
  • platinum and cobalt chromium strands
  • mounted on a flexible microwire
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Deployment of the Pipeline Embolization Device

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First patient treated in Oregon (7.28.2011)

52 yo F with CCF from ruptured cavernous aneurysm

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First patient treated in Oregon (7.28.2011)

52 yo F with CCF from ruptured cavernous aneurysm

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Pipeline/coil

87 yo F, acute left III nerve palsy

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Right cavernous aneurysm

76 yo F with right hemispheric TIA

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pipeline x 2

pre-op post-op 6 months

Right cavernous aneurysm

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Why is my practice changing?

  • World wide break through in endovascular

technology

  • flow diversion with pipeline
  • Eugene first site in Oregon
  • Eugene third site at the West Coast

(after LA and Seattle)

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Our cathlab

  • 2 Million $ GE biplane
  • 2 Million $ equipment
  • world class cathlab team
  • priceless
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Direct coiling

Hauck EF et al., Surg Neurol. 2009 Jan; 71(1):19-24.

Still a good

  • ption –

simple and straight forward

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Improved access with DAC

DAC Catheters are designed to provide distal neurovascular access, providing additional microcatheter stability closer to the treatment site

Microcatheter DAC Catheter Guide Catheter Microcatheter DAC Catheter Guide Catheter

Hauck EF et al., J NeuroIntervent Surg 3:172-176, June 2011

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The ‘distal platform’ concept

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Multiple aneurysms 48 F, ruptured a-com

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Why is my practice changing?

  • local improvement of endovascular

technology and cathlab team

  • average aneurysm < 1 hr room time
  • patients typically no longer go to the ICU

after coiling of unruptured aneurysms

  • any size aneurysm can be treated safely,

even 1 mm aneurysms

  • ability to treat MCA aneurysms with coiling
  • Patient choices
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Evolution of aneurysm treatment Phase II (endovascular)

1937 Dandy: Clip 1966 Pool: Microscope 1991 Guglielmi: Coil 1997 Higashida: Stent 2011 Hauck: Tri-axial system 2011 Hauck: Flow diversion, 1st in Oregon

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Advantages of endovascular tx

  • Similar cure rate as with clipping
  • Reduction of mass effect with flow diversion
  • No surgery is involved
  • No surgical risks (pain, wound, nerve/brain

injury)

  • No general anesthesia
  • No need to recover from surgery
  • Nearly outpatient procedure
  • Reduced morbidity/mortality after rupture
  • Rapid evolution of technology
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Drawbacks of coiling

  • Follow-up angio is required
  • Possibly retreatment is required
  • Occasionally, there is residual aneurysm
  • No long term data for flow diversion
  • Flow diversion works over time, not instantly
  • Need for anti-platelet therapy with stents
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Clip vs coil ≈ Manual skill vs technology

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Treatment of cerebral AVMs

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What is an AVM?

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Natural history

  • Congenital, life time risk of bleeding
  • Prevalence 0.1%
  • Risk of bleeding 2 – 4 % per year
  • Initial risk of rebleeding 6% over first 6 months
  • 25% significant morbidity/mortality with event
  • Symptoms include hemorrhage & seizures
  • Dx by CT, MRI, angio
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Spetzler / Martin Grading

Size 0 – 3 cm 1 3 – 6 cm 2 > 6 cm 3

  • Ven. drain

superficial deep 1 Eloquence no yes 1

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AVM - background

  • Endovascular treatment for intracranial

aneurysms is frequently preferred because of similar success with lower morbidity

  • Is this true for AVMs?
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Clinical Case

  • 45 yo M, sudden onset of H/A
  • N/V
  • Left upper quadrant anopsia
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CT head

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Right occipital III AVM

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  • Surgical resection is standard of care
  • Endovascular curative embolization is possible
  • Gamma Knife Surgery cures over time
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Onyx – 2 catheter technique

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Outcome

  • Patient recovered his full vision the day of the

procedure

  • No ventric
  • D/c home post bleed day 6
  • Patient is back to work without restrictions

post bleed day 14

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Thought

  • Will curative embolization

replace AVM surgery?

  • The novel 2 catheter

technique increases the success

  • f curative embolization
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Stroke and carotid disease

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Detailed Complication CASE Presentation

  • 35 yo F, hx of right sided neck pain for a 4 days
  • Mom had observed drooping of the right eyelid
  • At 10:50 am, acute left hemiplegia
  • Pt is confused, NIHSS 20, protects her airway
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CT head 11:30 (40 min after onset) Should we give IV TPA?

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IV TPA was given, but the patient is not improving (large clot burden, ICA occlusion)

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… to the cathlab

Acute ICA dissection with complete carotid

  • cclusion
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Successful carotid recanalization with stents at 12:50

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MCA perforation

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F/u angiography shows no bleed

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After thorough disscussion with the team and the family, we decided to proceed with salvage stenting of the MCA

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Immediate result

The patient is significantly improved because of successful carotid and perforator revascularization, but her arm remains paralyzed and her MCA

  • ccluded
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Post op day #1

The patient is further improved with beginning MCA revascularization, she is able to wiggle her fingers in her left hand.

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Post op day #92

The patient is substantially recovered with good arm strength, her MCA is recanalized. I am confident she is going to make a full recovery within the next few months

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Pearl

  • Stroke happens in young people
  • IV TPA is standard of care
  • Intracranial stents can be amazing for stroke
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THANKS!!!