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Cerebellar Arteriovenous Malformations: Anatomic Subtypes, Surgical Results, and Increased Predictive Accuracy of the Supplementary Grading System
Journal article

Cerebellar Arteriovenous Malformations: Anatomic Subtypes, Surgical Results, and Increased Predictive Accuracy of the Supplementary Grading System

Ana Rodríguez-Hernández, Helen Kim, Tony Pourmohamad, William L Young and Michael T Lawton
Neurosurgery, Vol.71(6), pp.1111-1124
12/01/2012

Abstract

1103 Clinical Sciences (for) 1109 Neurosciences (for) 32 Biomedical and Clinical Sciences (for-2020) 3202 Clinical Sciences (for-2020) 3209 Neurosciences (for-2020) 5202 Biological psychology (for-2020) 80 and over (mesh) Adolescent (mesh) Adult (mesh) Aged Aged (mesh) Arteriovenous malformation Arteriovenous Malformations (mesh) Brain Disorders (rcdc) Cerebellum Cerebellum (mesh) Cerebral Angiography (mesh) Cerebrovascular (rcdc) Chi-Square Distribution (mesh) Child (mesh) Clinical Research (rcdc) Congenital Structural Anomalies (rcdc) Embolization Female (mesh) Follow-Up Studies (mesh) Humans (mesh) Male (mesh) Microsurgical resection Middle Aged (mesh) Neurology & Neurosurgery (science-metrix) Neurosciences (rcdc) Pediatric (rcdc) Postoperative Complications (mesh) Predictive Value of Tests (mesh) Retrospective Studies (mesh) ROC Curve (mesh) San Francisco Arteriovenous Malformation Study Project Spetzler-Martin grading scale Supplementary grading scale Therapeutic (mesh) Treatment Outcome (mesh) University of California Young Adult (mesh)
BACKGROUND: Anatomic diversity among cerebellar arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) calls for a classification that is intuitive and surgically informative. Selection tools like the Spetzler-Martin grading system are designed to work best with cerebral AVMs but have shortcomings with cerebellar AVMs. OBJECTIVE: To define subtypes of cerebellar AVMs that clarify anatomy and surgical management, to determine results according to subtypes, and to compare predictive accuracies of the Spetzler-Martin and supplementary systems. METHODS: From a consecutive surgical series of 500 patients, 60 had cerebellar AVMs, 39 had brainstem AVMs and were excluded, and 401 had cerebral AVMs. RESULTS: Cerebellar AVM subtypes were as follows: 18 vermian, 13 suboccipital, 12 tentorial, 12 petrosal, and 5 tonsillar. Patients with tonsillar and tentorial AVMs fared best. Cerebellar AVMs presented with hemorrhage more than cerebral AVMs (P < .001). Cerebellar AVMs were more likely to drain deep (P = .04) and less likely to be eloquent (P < .001). The predictive accuracy of the supplementary grade was better than that of the Spetzler-Martin grade with cerebellar AVMs (areas under the receiver-operating characteristic curve, 0.74 and 0.59, respectively). The predictive accuracy of the supplementary system was consistent for cerebral and cerebellar AVMs, whereas that of the Spetzler-Martin system was greater with cerebral AVMs. CONCLUSION: Patients with cerebellar AVMs present with hemorrhage more often than patients with cerebral AVMs, justifying an aggressive treatment posture. The supplementary system is better than the Spetzler-Martin system at predicting outcomes after cerebellar AVM resection. Key components of the Spetzler-Martin system such as venous drainage and eloquence are distorted by cerebellar anatomy in ways that components of the supplementary system are not.

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