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Coil-treated Aneurysms: Decision Making Regarding Additional Treatment Based on Findings of MR Angiography and Intraarterial DSA

Authors :
Frederik Barkhof
Birgitta K. Velthuis
Charles B. L. M. Majoie
Omid S. Eshghi
Joanna D. Schaafsma
Patrick A. Brouwer
Willem-Jan J. van Rooij
Rob T.H. Lo
Gabriel J.E. Rinkel
Joseph C. J. Bot
Marieke E. S. Sprengers
Gerard A. P. de Kort
René van den Berg
Radiology and nuclear medicine
NCA - Brain Imaging
Amsterdam Neuroscience
Radiology and Nuclear Medicine
Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences
Other Research
Source :
Radiology, 265(3), 858-863. Radiological Society of North America Inc., Schaafsma, J D, Velthuis, B K, van den Berg, R, Brouwer, P A, Majoie, C B L M, Barkhof, F, Eshghi, O, de Kort, G A P, Lo, R T H, Sprengers, M E S, van Rooij, W J, Bot, J C J & Rinkel, G J E 2012, ' Coil-treated Aneurysms: Decision Making Regarding Additional Treatment Based on Findings of MR Angiography and Intraarterial DSA ', Radiology, vol. 265, no. 3, pp. 858-863 . https://doi.org/10.1148/radiol.12112608, Radiology, 265(3), 858-863
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Radiological Society of North America (RSNA), 2012.

Abstract

Purpose: To assess whether magnetic resonance (MR) angiography can be used as a noninvasive alternative to intraarterial digital subtraction angiography (DSA) to indicate additional treatment in the follow-up of patients with coil-treated intracranial aneurysms. Materials and Methods: This was an ethics committee-approved multicenter study. Consecutive patients who were scheduled for follow-up intraarterial DSA after coil placement were invited for additional MR angiography after providing written informed consent. Interventional neuroradiologists gave treatment advice (additional treatment, extended follow-up imaging, or discharge from follow-up) for each imaging modality. Agreement between treatment advices based on intraarterial DSA and MR angiographic findings and interobserver agreement were assessed with weighted kappa statistics. Results: Agreement between intraarterial DSA- and MR angiography-based treatment recommendations was substantial (kappa = 0.73; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.66, 0.80). In 34 of the 310 patients (11%), the advice was additional treatment based on findings of both modalities. In six patients (2%), the advice based on intraarterial DSA findings was additional treatment, while that based on MR angiographic findings was extended follow-up imaging; therefore, none of these patients were discharged from follow-up on the basis of MR angiographic findings. In six other patients (2%), the advice based on MR angiographic findings was additional treatment, while that based on intraarterial DSA findings was extended follow-up imaging (four patients), discharge from follow-up (one patient), and noninterpretable DSA (one patient). Extended follow-up imaging was suggested for 37 patients (12%) after intraarterial DSA and for 49 patients (16%) after MR angiography (difference: 4%; 95% CI: -0.6%, 8.4%). Interobserver agreement was substantial for intraarterial DSA (kappa = 0.73; 95% CI: 0.64, 0.82) and moderate for MR angiography (kappa = 0.53; 95% CI: 0.36, 0.70). Conclusion: The overall proportion of patients advised to undergo additional treatment is similar based on intraarterial DSA and MR angiographic findings, with only few individual discrepancies. MR angiography can therefore be used for therapeutic decision making in the follow-up of patients with coil-treated aneurysms. (C) RSNA, 2012

Details

ISSN :
15271315 and 00338419
Volume :
265
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Radiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....08e641ddbc1e66cd42b9aa8d7702f670
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1148/radiol.12112608