Current Practice: Rationale for Screening Children with Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia for Brain Vascular Malformations.

Lauren A Beslow, Andrew J White, Timo Krings, Adrienne M Hammill, Shih Shan Lang, Atsuko Baba, Marianne S Clancy, Scott E Olitsky, Steven W Hetts
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Abstract

Background: Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia is an autosomal dominant vascular dysplasia characterized by mucocutaneous telangiectasias, recurrent epistaxis, and organ vascular malformations including in the brain, which occur in about 10% of patients. These brain vascular malformations include high-flow AVMs and AVFs as well as low-flow capillary malformations. High-flow lesions can rupture, causing neurologic morbidity and mortality.

State of practice: International guidelines for the diagnosis and management of hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia recommend screening children for brain vascular malformations with contrast enhanced MR imaging at hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia diagnosis. Screening has not been uniformly adopted by some practitioners who contend that screening is not justified. Arguments against screening include application of short-term data from the adult A Randomized Trial of Unruptured Brain Arteriovenous Malformations (ARUBA) trial of unruptured sporadic brain AVMs to children with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia as well as concerns about administration of sedation or IV contrast and causing patients or families increased anxiety.

Analysis: In this article, a multidisciplinary group of experts on hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia reviewed data that support screening guidelines and counter arguments against screening. Children with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia have a preponderance of high-flow lesions including AVFs, which have the highest rupture risk. The rupture risk among children is estimated at about 0.7% per lesion per year and is additive across lesions and during a lifetime. ARUBA, an adult clinical trial of expectant medical management versus treatment of unruptured brain AVMs, favored medical management at 5 years but is not applicable to pediatric patients with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia given the life expectancy of a child. Additionally, interventional, radiosurgical, and surgical techniques have improved with time. Experienced neurovascular experts can prospectively determine the best treatment for each child on the basis of local resources. The "watch and wait" approach to imaging means that children with brain vascular malformations will not be identified until a potentially life-threatening and deficit-producing intracerebral hemorrhage occurs. This expert group does not deem this to be an acceptable trade-off.

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当前实践:对遗传性出血性远端血管扩张症患儿进行脑血管畸形筛查的理由。
背景:遗传性出血性毛细血管扩张症是一种常染色体显性遗传的血管发育不良症,其特征是粘膜毛细血管扩张、反复鼻衄和器官血管畸形,包括脑部血管畸形,约有10%的患者会出现这种情况。这些脑血管畸形包括高流量 AVM 和 AVF 以及低流量毛细血管畸形。高流量病变可能会破裂,导致神经系统发病和死亡:关于遗传性出血性毛细血管扩张症诊断和管理的国际指南建议,在诊断遗传性出血性毛细血管扩张症时,通过造影剂增强磁共振成像筛查儿童脑血管畸形。一些从业人员认为筛查不合理,因此没有统一采用筛查方法。反对筛查的理由包括将成人未破裂散发性脑动静脉畸形随机试验(ARUBA)的短期数据应用于遗传性出血性毛细血管扩张症患儿,以及担心使用镇静剂或静脉注射造影剂会增加患者或家属的焦虑:在本文中,遗传性出血性毛细血管扩张症的多学科专家小组回顾了支持筛查指南的数据,并反驳了反对筛查的论点。遗传性出血性毛细血管扩张症患儿多为高流量病变,其中包括破裂风险最高的动静脉瘘。据估计,儿童中每个病变每年的破裂风险约为 0.7%,并且在不同病变和一生中的破裂风险是相加的。ARUBA是一项针对未破裂脑动静脉畸形的预期医疗管理与治疗的成人临床试验,结果显示,5年后的医疗管理更受青睐,但考虑到儿童的预期寿命,该试验不适用于遗传性出血性毛细血管扩张症的儿童患者。此外,随着时间的推移,介入、放射外科和外科技术也在不断改进。经验丰富的神经血管专家可以根据当地资源情况,前瞻性地为每个患儿确定最佳治疗方案。"观察和等待 "的成像方法意味着脑血管畸形患儿只有在发生可能危及生命和造成脑损伤的脑内出血时才会被发现。本专家组认为这不是一种可以接受的权衡。
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