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Predictors of aneurysm occlusion following treatment with the WEB device: systematic review and case series
Authors:Al Saiegh  Fadi  Velagapudi  Lohit  Khanna  Omaditya  Sweid  Ahmad  Mouchtouris  Nikolaos  Baldassari  Michael P.  Theofanis  Thana  Tahir  Rizwan  Schunemann  Victoria  Andrews  Carrie  Philipp  Lucas  Chalouhi  Nohra  Tjoumakaris  Stavropoula I.  Hasan  David  Gooch  M. Reid  Herial   Nabeel A.  Rosenwasser  Robert H.  Jabbour  Pascal
Affiliation:1.Department of Neurological Surgery, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA, USA
;2.Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA
;3.Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Iowa Hospitals, Iowa City, IA, USA
;
Abstract:

The Woven EndoBridge (WEB) device is becoming increasingly popular for treatment of wide-neck aneurysms. As experience with this device grows, it is important to identify factors associated with occlusion following WEB treatment to guide decision making and screen patients at high risk for recurrence. The aim of this study was to identify factors associated with adequate aneurysm occlusion following WEB device treatment in the neurosurgical literature and in our case series. A systematic review of the present literature was conducted to identify studies related to the prediction of WEB device occlusion. In addition, a retrospective review of our institutional data for patients treated with the WEB device was performed. Demographics, aneurysm characteristics, procedural variables, and 6-month follow-up angiographic outcomes were recorded. Seven articles totaling 450 patients with 456 aneurysms fit our criteria. Factors in the literature associated with inadequate occlusion included larger size, increased neck width, partial intrasaccular thrombosis, irregular shape, and tobacco use. Our retrospective review identified 43 patients with 45 aneurysms. A total of 91.1% of our patients achieved adequate occlusion at a mean follow-up time of 7.32 months. Increasing degree of contrast stasis after WEB placement on the post-deployment angiogram was significantly associated with adequate occlusion on follow-up angiogram (p?=?0.005) and with Raymond-Roy classification (p?=?0.048), but not with retreatment (p?=?0.617). In our systematic review and case series totaling 450 patients with 456 aneurysms, contrast stasis on post-deployment angiogram was identified as a predictor of adequate aneurysm occlusion, while morphological characteristics such as larger size and wide neck negatively impact occlusion.

Keywords:
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