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Research ArticleInterventional

Implications of the Collar Sign in Incompletely Occluded Aneurysms after Pipeline Embolization Device Implantation: A Follow-Up Study

S. Gomez-Paz, Y. Akamatsu, J.M. Moore, C.S. Ogilvy, A.J. Thomas and C.J. Griessenauer
American Journal of Neuroradiology March 2020, 41 (3) 482-485; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A6415
S. Gomez-Paz
aFrom the Neurosurgical Service (S.G-P., Y.A., J.M.M., C.S.O., A.J.T.), Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
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Y. Akamatsu
aFrom the Neurosurgical Service (S.G-P., Y.A., J.M.M., C.S.O., A.J.T.), Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
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J.M. Moore
aFrom the Neurosurgical Service (S.G-P., Y.A., J.M.M., C.S.O., A.J.T.), Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
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C.S. Ogilvy
aFrom the Neurosurgical Service (S.G-P., Y.A., J.M.M., C.S.O., A.J.T.), Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
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A.J. Thomas
aFrom the Neurosurgical Service (S.G-P., Y.A., J.M.M., C.S.O., A.J.T.), Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
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C.J. Griessenauer
bDepartment of Neurosurgery (C.J.G.), Geisinger, Danville, Pennsylvania
cResearch Institute of Neurointervention (C.J.G.), Paracelsus Medical University, Salzburg, Austria.
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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The angiographic collar sign has been recently described in patients with incompletely occluded aneurysms after Pipeline Embolization Device implantation. The long-term implications of this sign are unknown. We report angiographic outcomes of patients with the collar sign with follow-up of up to 45 months and the implications of this angiographic finding.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: We performed a retrospective review of a prospectively maintained data base of patients who underwent Pipeline Embolization Device implantation for an intracranial aneurysm at our institution between January 2014 and December 2016. We included patients with a collar sign at the initial follow-up angiogram after Pipeline Embolization Device implantation.

RESULTS: A total of 198 patients with 285 aneurysms were screened for the collar sign on initial and subsequent follow-up angiograms. There were 226 aneurysms (79.3%) with complete occlusion at the first follow-up. Of 59 incompletely occluded aneurysms, 19 (32.2%) aneurysms in 17 patients were found to have a collar sign on the first angiographic follow-up (median, 6 months; range, 4.2–7.2). Ten (52.6%) aneurysms underwent retreatment with a second Pipeline Embolization Device, which resulted in aneurysm occlusion in 1 (10%) patient. There were only 3 (15.8%) aneurysms with complete occlusion at the last follow-up, 2 (10.5%) of which had a single Pipeline Embolization Device implantation and another single (5.3%) aneurysm with a second Pipeline Embolization Device implantation.

CONCLUSIONS: A collar sign on the initial angiogram after Pipeline Embolization Device placement is a predictor of poor aneurysm occlusion. Because the occlusion rates remain equally low regardless of retreatment in patients with a collar sign, radiologic follow-up may be more appropriate than retreatment.

ABBREVIATIONS:

PED
Pipeline Embolization Device
ICAB
internal carotid artery bifurcation
PO
paraophthalmic
PCOMM
posterior communicating artery
  • © 2020 by American Journal of Neuroradiology
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American Journal of Neuroradiology: 41 (3)
American Journal of Neuroradiology
Vol. 41, Issue 3
1 Mar 2020
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Implications of the Collar Sign in Incompletely Occluded Aneurysms after Pipeline Embolization Device Implantation: A Follow-Up Study
S. Gomez-Paz, Y. Akamatsu, J.M. Moore, C.S. Ogilvy, A.J. Thomas, C.J. Griessenauer
American Journal of Neuroradiology Mar 2020, 41 (3) 482-485; DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A6415

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Implications of the Collar Sign in Incompletely Occluded Aneurysms after Pipeline Embolization Device Implantation: A Follow-Up Study
S. Gomez-Paz, Y. Akamatsu, J.M. Moore, C.S. Ogilvy, A.J. Thomas, C.J. Griessenauer
American Journal of Neuroradiology Mar 2020, 41 (3) 482-485; DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A6415
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