Multicenter Study of Pipeline Flex for Intracranial Aneurysms

Leonardo B.C. Brasiliense(Rush University Medical Center), Pedro Aguilar‐Salinas(Rush University Medical Center), Demetrius K. Lopes(Rush University Medical Center), Danilo M. Nogueira(Rush University Medical Center), Keith DeSousa(Rush University Medical Center), Peter K. Nelson(Rush University Medical Center), Christopher J. Moran(Rush University Medical Center), Marcus D. Mazur(Rush University Medical Center), Philipp Taussky(Rush University Medical Center), Min S. Park(Rush University Medical Center), Guilherme Dabus(Rush University Medical Center), Italo Linfante(Rush University Medical Center), Imran Chaudry(Rush University Medical Center), Ray D Turner(Rush University Medical Center), Alex Spiotta(Rush University Medical Center), Aquilla S Turk(Rush University Medical Center), Adnan H. Siddiqui(Rush University Medical Center), Elad I. Levy(Rush University Medical Center), L. Nelson Hopkins(Rush University Medical Center), Adam S Arthur(Rush University Medical Center), Christopher Nickele(Rush University Medical Center), Douglas Gonsales(Rush University Medical Center), Eric Sauvageau(Rush University Medical Center), Ricardó A. Hanel(Rush University Medical Center)
Neurosurgery
August 10, 2018
Cited by 29

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The Pipeline Flex (PED Flex; Medtronic, Dublin, Ireland) was designed to facilitate deployment and navigation compared to its previous iteration to reduce the rate of technical events and complications. OBJECTIVE: To assess the neurological morbidity and mortality rates of the PED Flex at 30 d. METHODS: Information from 9 neurovascular centers was retrospectively obtained between July 2014 and March 2016. Data included patient/aneurysm characteristics, periprocedural events, clinical, and angiographic outcomes. Multivariate logistic regression was performed to determine predictors of unfavorable clinical outcome (modified Rankin Scale [mRS] > 2). RESULTS: A total of 205 patients harboring 223 aneurysms were analyzed. The 30-d neurological morbidity and mortality rates were 1.9% (4/205) and 0.5% (1/205), respectively. The rate of intraprocedural events without neurological morbidity was 6.8% (14/205), consisting of intraprocedural ischemic events in 9 patients (4.5%) and hemorrhage in 5 (2.4%). Other technical events included difficulty capturing the delivery wire in 1 case (0.5%) and device migration after deployment in another case (0.5%). Favorable clinical outcome (mRS 0-2) was achieved in 186 patients (94.4%) at discharge and in 140 patients (94.5%) at 30 d. We did not find predictors of clinical outcomes on multivariate analysis. CONCLUSION: The 30-d rates of neurological morbidity and mortality in this multicenter cohort using the PED Flex for the treatment of intracranial aneurysms were low, 1.9% (4/205) and 0.5% (1/205), respectively. In addition, technical events related to device deployment were also low, most likely due to the latest modifications in the delivery system.


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