Surgical treatment of intracranial blister aneurysms: A systematic review.

Published
February 16, 2021
Journal
Clinical neurology and neurosurgery
PICOID
aec5faa9
DOI
Citations
4
Keywords
Blister aneurysms, Microsurgical clipping, Surgical treatment, Trapping, Wrapping
Copyright
Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Patients/Population/Participants

514 patients (534 aneurysms)

Intervention

Aneurysm clipping, bypass and trapping, clipping and wrapping, wrapping

Comparison

endovascular strategies

Outcome

complete occlusion rate, complication rate, mortality rate, mean mRS at follow-up

Abstract

P
I
C
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Intracranial blister aneurysms (BAs) are challenging vascular lesions related to high morbidity and mortality rates. Different surgical and endovascular techniques have been proposed to treat BAs; however, there is no consensus on a preferred treatment. To systematically review the pertinent literature on clinical and radiological outcomes of different surgical treatments for BAs management, to meta-analyze their clinical and radiological outcomes, and compare these results with those from recent meta-analyses on endovascular treatments for BAs. The present study was consistently conducted according to the PRISMA guidelines. Five different online medical databases (PubMed, Medline, EMBASE, Scopus, and Web-of-Science) were screened from 2010 through 2020. Papers reporting clinical and radiological outcomes of different surgical treatments for BAs were considered. Event rates were pooled across studies using random-effects meta-analysis. A total of 35 studies reporting on 514 patients (534 aneurysms) were included. Aneurysm clipping in 223 patients (45.4%; 95% CI 21.9-53.8), bypass and trapping in 87 (17.7%; 95% CI 1.89-21.6), clipping and wrapping in 82 (16.7%; 95% CI 3.71-19.0), and wrapping in 33 (6.7%; 95% CI 0.0-4.87) were the mostly common performed treatments. Complete occlusion rate was reported in 90.7% of patients. The complication rate was as high as 61.1%, the mortality rate was 7.4%, and the mean mRS at follow-up was 2.5. Our meta-analysis suggests that surgical treatments for BAs are related to higher occlusion, complications and mortality rate than endovascular strategies. However, there is a high-heterogeneity among the included studies and data are poorly reported; so comparing the two type of treatments is unreliable in order to establish which one is better.

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