Hemorrhagic Moyamoya Angiopathy in European Patients.

angiography case-control studies hemorrhage hypertension magnetic resonance imaging moyamoya disease

Journal

Stroke
ISSN: 1524-4628
Titre abrégé: Stroke
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0235266

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
18 Sep 2024
Historique:
medline: 18 9 2024
pubmed: 18 9 2024
entrez: 18 9 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

Moyamoya angiopathy (MMA) is an important cause of juvenile stroke but an overall rare disease among European populations compared with East Asian cohorts. Consecutively, hemorrhagic MMA is described well in East Asian cohorts, but knowledge in non-Asian patients is limited. Literature suggests that disease presentation may vary between those cohorts, also including hemorrhage frequencies. Hence, this article aims to analyze hemorrhagic MMA in European patients. We screened for patients of European origin with MMA from a single-center consecutive database of a German hospital specialized on MMA. Those who had a record of intracranial hemorrhage were analyzed individually regarding the type of hemorrhage and use of antiplatelet therapy before and after bleeding onset. To identify associated factors of intracranial hemorrhage, an age- and sex-matched control group was identified from the pool of patients without a history of hemorrhage. Both groups had a comparable follow-up time and were compared in terms of disease presentation, therapeutic interventions, and imaging characteristics, using both univariate tests and multivariate logistic regression analysis. From a pool of 332 patients with MMA we identified 288 of European ancestry. From those, 36 had a record of intracranial hemorrhage (12.5%). Thirty-three patients presenting with 37 events were included for further analysis and case-control-comparison. Most events were intracerebral hemorrhage (n=20; 54%) and subarachnoid hemorrhage (n=11; 30%). 78% developed hemorrhage although no antiplatelet therapy was in use (n=29). Seven patients developed intracranial hemorrhage ipsilateral to prior bypass surgery (21%), while 29 of the control patients had a bypass surgery (88%; Bypass surgery was negatively associated with the development of intracranial hemorrhage in MMA in European patients. There was no difference in terms of a history of hypertension between groups, indicating that blood pressure is not the major contributor for rupture of fragile collateral vessels. The investigated imaging characteristics were not associated to hemorrhage onset and, therefore, are not suitable as a tool of screening for patients at risk.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND UNASSIGNED
Moyamoya angiopathy (MMA) is an important cause of juvenile stroke but an overall rare disease among European populations compared with East Asian cohorts. Consecutively, hemorrhagic MMA is described well in East Asian cohorts, but knowledge in non-Asian patients is limited. Literature suggests that disease presentation may vary between those cohorts, also including hemorrhage frequencies. Hence, this article aims to analyze hemorrhagic MMA in European patients.
METHODS UNASSIGNED
We screened for patients of European origin with MMA from a single-center consecutive database of a German hospital specialized on MMA. Those who had a record of intracranial hemorrhage were analyzed individually regarding the type of hemorrhage and use of antiplatelet therapy before and after bleeding onset. To identify associated factors of intracranial hemorrhage, an age- and sex-matched control group was identified from the pool of patients without a history of hemorrhage. Both groups had a comparable follow-up time and were compared in terms of disease presentation, therapeutic interventions, and imaging characteristics, using both univariate tests and multivariate logistic regression analysis.
RESULTS UNASSIGNED
From a pool of 332 patients with MMA we identified 288 of European ancestry. From those, 36 had a record of intracranial hemorrhage (12.5%). Thirty-three patients presenting with 37 events were included for further analysis and case-control-comparison. Most events were intracerebral hemorrhage (n=20; 54%) and subarachnoid hemorrhage (n=11; 30%). 78% developed hemorrhage although no antiplatelet therapy was in use (n=29). Seven patients developed intracranial hemorrhage ipsilateral to prior bypass surgery (21%), while 29 of the control patients had a bypass surgery (88%;
CONCLUSIONS UNASSIGNED
Bypass surgery was negatively associated with the development of intracranial hemorrhage in MMA in European patients. There was no difference in terms of a history of hypertension between groups, indicating that blood pressure is not the major contributor for rupture of fragile collateral vessels. The investigated imaging characteristics were not associated to hemorrhage onset and, therefore, are not suitable as a tool of screening for patients at risk.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39291379
doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.124.046859
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Auteurs

Mosche Brokbals (M)

Alfried Krupp Hospital, Essen, Germany (M.B., S.P.-P., J.K.F., D.S., R.V., M.K.).
Florence Nightingale Hospital, Düsseldorf, Germany (M.B.).

Sara Pilgram-Pastor (S)

Alfried Krupp Hospital, Essen, Germany (M.B., S.P.-P., J.K.F., D.S., R.V., M.K.).
Universitätsspital Bern, Switzerland (S.P.-P.).

Jan K Focke (JK)

Alfried Krupp Hospital, Essen, Germany (M.B., S.P.-P., J.K.F., D.S., R.V., M.K.).

Daniel Strunk (D)

Alfried Krupp Hospital, Essen, Germany (M.B., S.P.-P., J.K.F., D.S., R.V., M.K.).
Philipps-University Marburg, Germany (D.S.).

Roland Veltkamp (R)

Alfried Krupp Hospital, Essen, Germany (M.B., S.P.-P., J.K.F., D.S., R.V., M.K.).
Department of Brain Sciences, Imperial Collage London, United Kingdom (R.V.).

Markus Kraemer (M)

Alfried Krupp Hospital, Essen, Germany (M.B., S.P.-P., J.K.F., D.S., R.V., M.K.).
Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, Germany (M.K.).
Moyamoya Friends Association, Essen, Germany (M.K.).

Classifications MeSH