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Hemorrhage rates from brain arteriovenous malformation in patients with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia
Journal article

Hemorrhage rates from brain arteriovenous malformation in patients with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia

Helen Kim, Jeffrey Nelson, Timo Krings, Karel G terBrugge, Charles E McCulloch, Michael T Lawton, William L Young, Marie E Faughnan and Brain Vascular Malformation Consortium HHT Investigator Group
Stroke, Vol.46(5), pp.1362-1364
05/01/2015

Abstract

Adolescent Adult Aged Aneurysm arteriovenous malformations Brain Disorders Brain Vascular Malformation Consortium HHT Investigator Group Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology cerebral hemorrhage Child Clinical Sciences Cohort Studies Congenital Structural Anomalies Female Hereditary Hemorrhagic Humans Infant Intracranial Arteriovenous Malformations Intracranial Hemorrhages Male Middle Aged natural history Neurology & Neurosurgery Neurosciences Newborn Pediatric Preschool Prevention Rare Diseases Recurrence Retrospective Studies Ruptured Socioeconomic Factors Stroke Survival Analysis Telangiectasia Young Adult
Background and purposeHereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) is a systemic disease characterized by mucocutaneous telangiectasias, epistaxis, and arteriovenous malformations (AVMs). Intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) rates in this population are not well described. We report ICH rates and characteristics in HHT patients with brain AVMs (HHT-BAVMs).MethodsWe studied the first 153 HHT-BAVM patients with follow-up data enrolled in the Brain Vascular Malformation Consortium HHT Project. We estimated ICH rates after BAVM diagnosis.ResultsThe majority of patients were women (58%) and white (98%). The mean age at BAVM diagnosis was 31±19 years (range, 0-70), with 61% of cases diagnosed on asymptomatic screening. Overall, 14% presented with ICH; among symptomatic cases, 37% presented ruptured. During 493 patient-years of follow-up, 5 ICH events occurred yielding a rate of 1.02% per year (95% confidence interval, 0.42-2.44%). ICH-free survival differed significantly by ICH presentation (P=0.003); ruptured cases had a higher ICH rate (10.07%; 95% confidence interval, 3.25-31.21%) than unruptured cases (0.43%; 95% confidence interval, 0.11-1.73%).ConclusionsPatients with HHT-BAVM who present with hemorrhage are at a higher risk for rehemorrhage compared with patients with BAVM detected presymptomatically.

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