• Neurosurg Focus · May 2012

    Review

    Stereotactic radiosurgery for cerebral dural arteriovenous fistulas.

    • Bradley A Gross, Alexander E Ropper, A John Popp, and Rose Du.
    • Department of Neurological Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02215, USA.
    • Neurosurg Focus. 2012 May 1;32(5):E18.

    ObjectGiven the feasibility of curative surgical and endovascular therapy for cerebral dural arteriovenous fistulas (DAVFs), there is a relative paucity of radiosurgical series for these lesions as compared with their arteriovenous malformation counterparts.MethodsThe authors reviewed records of 56 patients with 70 cerebral DAVFs treated at their institution over the past 6 years. Ten DAVFs (14%) in 9 patients were treated with stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS), with follow-up obtained for 8 patients with 9 DAVFs. They combined their results with those obtained from a comprehensive review of the literature, focusing on obliteration rates, post-SRS hemorrhage rates, and other complications.ResultsIn the authors' group of 9 DAVFs, angiographic obliteration was seen in 8 cases (89%), and no post-SRS hemorrhage or complications were observed after a mean follow-up of 2.9 years. Combining the results in these cases with data obtained from their review of the literature, they found 558 DAVFs treated with SRS across 14 series. The overall obliteration rate was 71%; transient worsening occurred in 9.1% of patients, permanent worsening in 2.4% (including 1 death, 0.2% of cases), and post-SRS hemorrhage occurred in 1.6% of cases (4.8% of those with cortical venous drainage [CVD]). The obliteration rate for cavernous DAVFs was 84%, whereas the rates for transversesigmoid and for tentorial DAVFs were 58% and 59%, respectively (adjusted p values, p(cav,TS) = 1.98 × 10(-4), p(cav,tent) = 0.032). Obliteration rates were greater for DAVFs without CVD (80%, compared with 60% for those with CVD, p = 7.59 × 10(-4)). Both transient worsening and permanent worsening were less common in patients without CVD than in those with CVD (3.4% vs 7.3% for transient worsening and 0.9% vs 2.4% for permanent worsening).ConclusionsStereotactic radiosurgery with or without adjunctive embolization is an effective therapy for DAVFs that are not amenable to surgical or endovascular monotherapy. It is best suited for lesions without CVD and for cavernous DAVFs.

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