Aneurysm treatment with WEB in the cumulative population of two prospective, multicenter series: 3-year follow-up

  • Laurent Pierot
  • Istvan Szikora
  • Xavier Barreau
  • Markus Holtmannspoetter
  • Laurent Spelle
  • Denis Herbreteau
  • Jens Fiehler
  • Vincent Costalat
  • Joachim Klisch
  • Anne-Christine Januel
  • Werner Weber
  • Thomas Liebig
  • Luc Stockx
  • Joachim Berkefeld
  • Jacques Moret
  • Andy Molyneux
  • James Byrne

Abstract

BACKGROUND: WEB treatment is an endovascular approach for wide-neck bifurcation aneurysms that has demonstrated high safety and good efficacy in mid-term follow-up. While evaluating safety in the long term is important to determine if delayed adverse events occur affecting late morbidity and mortality, the most important point to evaluate is the long-term stability of aneurysm occlusion. The current analysis reports the 3-year clinical and anatomical results of WEB treatment in the combined population of two European trials (WEBCAST (WEB Clinical Assessment of Intrasaccular Aneurysm Therapy) and WEBCAST-2).

METHODS: Aneurysm occlusion was evaluated using a 3-grade scale: complete occlusion, neck remnant, and aneurysm remnant.

RESULTS: The safety population comprised 79 patients. The efficacy population comprised 61 aneurysms. Aneurysm locations were middle cerebral artery in 32/61 aneurysms (52.5%), anterior communicating artery in 13/61 (21.3%), basilar artery in 9/61 (14.8%), and internal carotid artery terminus in 7/61 (11.5%). No adverse events related to the device or procedure occurred between 2 and 3 years. At 3 years, complete occlusion was observed in 31/61 (50.8%) aneurysms, neck remnant in 20/61 (32.8%), and aneurysm remnant in 10/61 (16.4%). Between 1 year and 3 years, aneurysm occlusion was improved or stable in 53/61 (86.9%) aneurysms and worsened in 8/61 (13.1%). Worsening was mostly from complete occlusion to neck remnant in 6/61 (9.8%) aneurysms. The retreatment rate at 3 years was 11.4%.

CONCLUSIONS: This analysis confirms the high safety profile of WEB. Moreover, evidence demonstrates the great stability of aneurysm occlusion with adequate occlusion (complete occlusion or neck remnant) in 83.6% of aneurysms.

CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. WEBCAST and WEBCAST-2: Unique identifier: NCT01778322.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN1759-8478
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 04.2021
PubMed 32532858