Natural history, angiographic presentation and outcomes of anterior cranial fossa dural arteriovenous fistulas

  • Sebastian Sanchez
  • , Ashrita Raghuram
  • , Linder Wendt
  • , Minako Hayakawa
  • , Ching-Jen Chen
  • , Jason P Sheehan
  • , Louis J Kim
  • , Isaac Josh Abecassis
  • , Michael R Levitt
  • , R Michael Meyer
  • , Ridhima Guniganti
  • , Akash P Kansagra
  • , Giuseppe Lanzino
  • , Enrico Giordan
  • , Waleed Brinjikji
  • , Diederik O Bulters
  • , Andrew Durnford
  • , W Christopher Fox
  • , Jessica Smith
  • , Adam J Polifka
  • Bradley Gross, Sepideh Amin-Hanjani, Ali Alaraj, Amanda Kwasnicki, Robert M Starke, Stephanie H Chen, J Marc C van Dijk, Adriaan R E Potgieser, Junichiro Satomi, Yoshiteru Tada, Ryan Phelps, Adib Abla, Ethan Winkler, Rose Du, Pui Man Rosalind Lai, Gregory J Zipfel, Colin Derdeyn, Edgar A Samaniego

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    19 Citations (Scopus)
    268 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    BACKGROUND: Anterior cranial fossa dural arteriovenous fistulas (ACF-dAVFs) are aggressive vascular lesions. The pattern of venous drainage is the most important determinant of symptoms. Due to the absence of a venous sinus in the anterior cranial fossa, most ACF-dAVFs have some degree of drainage through small cortical veins. We describe the natural history, angiographic presentation and outcomes of the largest cohort of ACF-dAVFs.

    METHODS: The CONDOR consortium includes data from 12 international centers. Patients included in the study were diagnosed with an arteriovenous fistula between 1990-2017. ACF-dAVFs were selected from a cohort of 1077 arteriovenous fistulas. The presentation, angioarchitecture and treatment outcomes of ACF-dAVF were extracted and analyzed.

    RESULTS: 60 ACF-dAVFs were included in the analysis. Most ACF-dAVFs were symptomatic (38/60, 63%). The most common symptomatic presentation was intracranial hemorrhage (22/38, 57%). Most ACF-dAVFs drained through cortical veins (85%, 51/60), which in most instances drained into the superior sagittal sinus (63%, 32/51). The presence of cortical venous drainage predicted symptomatic presentation (OR 9.4, CI 1.98 to 69.1, p=0.01). Microsurgery was the most effective modality of treatment. 56% (19/34) of symptomatic patients who were treated had complete resolution of symptoms. Improvement of symptoms was not observed in untreated symptomatic ACF-dAVFs.

    CONCLUSION: Most ACF-dAVFs have a symptomatic presentation. Drainage through cortical veins is a key angiographic feature of ACF-dAVFs that accounts for their malignant course. Microsurgery is the most effective treatment. Due to the high risk of bleeding, closure of ACF-dAVFs is indicated regardless of presentation.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)903-908
    Number of pages6
    JournalJournal of Neurointerventional Surgery
    Volume15
    Early online date9-Aug-2022
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 17-Aug-2023

    Keywords

    • Fistula
    • Hemorrhage
    • Intervention
    • TRANSVENOUS EMBOLIZATION
    • ENDOVASCULAR TREATMENT

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