Dalyai Richard, Starke Robert M, Chalouhi Nohra, Theofanis Thana, Busack Christopher, Jabbour Pascal, Gonzalez L Fernando, Rosenwasser Robert, Tjoumakaris Stavropoula
Department of Neurosurgery, Thomas Jefferson University and Jefferson Hospital for Neuroscience, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Neurosurg Focus. 2014 Sep;37(3):E3. doi: 10.3171/20145.FOCUS14121.
Cigarette smoking has been well established as a risk factor in vascular pathology, such as cerebral aneurysms. However, tobacco's implications for patients with cerebral arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) are controversial. The object of this study was to identify predictors of AVM obliteration and risk factors for complications.
The authors conducted a retrospective analysis of a prospectively maintained database for all patients with AVMs treated using surgical excision, staged endovascular embolization (with N-butyl-cyanoacrylate or Onyx), stereotactic radiosurgery (Gamma Knife or Linear Accelerator), or a combination thereof between 1994 and 2010. Medical risk factors, such as smoking, abuse of alcohol or intravenous recreational drugs, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and coronary artery disease, were documented. A multivariate logistic regression analysis was conducted to detect predictors of periprocedural complications, obliteration, and posttreatment hemorrhage.
Of 774 patients treated at a single tertiary care cerebrovascular center, 35% initially presented with symptomatic hemorrhage and 57.6% achieved complete obliteration according to digital subtraction angiography (DSA) or MRI. In a multivariate analysis a negative smoking history (OR 1.9, p = 0.006) was a strong independent predictor of AVM obliteration. Of the patients with obliterated AVMs, 31.9% were smokers, whereas 45% were not (p = 0.05). Multivariate analysis of obliteration, after controlling for AVM size and location (eloquent vs noneloquent tissue), revealed that nonsmokers were more likely (0.082) to have obliterated AVMs through radiosurgery. Smoking was not predictive of treatment complications or posttreatment hemorrhage. Abuse of alcohol or intravenous recreational drugs, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes mellitus, and coronary artery disease had no discernible effect on AVM obliteration, periprocedural complications, or posttreatment hemorrhage.
Cerebral AVM patients with a history of smoking are significantly less likely than those without a smoking history to have complete AVM obliteration on follow-up DSA or MRI. Therefore, patients with AVMs should be strongly advised to quit smoking.
吸烟已被确认为血管病理学中的一个危险因素,如脑动脉瘤。然而,烟草对脑动静脉畸形(AVM)患者的影响存在争议。本研究的目的是确定AVM闭塞的预测因素和并发症的危险因素。
作者对1994年至2010年间所有接受手术切除、分期血管内栓塞(使用N-丁基-氰基丙烯酸酯或Onyx)、立体定向放射外科(伽玛刀或直线加速器)或联合治疗的AVM患者的前瞻性维护数据库进行了回顾性分析。记录了吸烟、酗酒或静脉注射娱乐性药物、高胆固醇血症、糖尿病、高血压和冠状动脉疾病等医学危险因素。进行多因素逻辑回归分析以检测围手术期并发症、闭塞和治疗后出血的预测因素。
在一家三级脑血管中心接受治疗的774例患者中,35%最初表现为症状性出血,57.6%根据数字减影血管造影(DSA)或MRI实现了完全闭塞。在多因素分析中,吸烟史阴性(OR 1.9,p = 0.006)是AVM闭塞的强有力独立预测因素。在AVM闭塞的患者中,31.9%为吸烟者,而45%为非吸烟者(p = 0.05)。在控制AVM大小和位置(功能区与非功能区组织)后对闭塞进行的多因素分析显示,非吸烟者通过放射外科使AVM闭塞的可能性更大(0.082)。吸烟不能预测治疗并发症或治疗后出血。酗酒或静脉注射娱乐性药物、高胆固醇血症、糖尿病和冠状动脉疾病对AVM闭塞、围手术期并发症或治疗后出血没有明显影响。
有吸烟史的脑AVM患者在随访DSA或MRI时实现AVM完全闭塞的可能性明显低于无吸烟史的患者。因此,应强烈建议AVM患者戒烟。