TY - JOUR
T1 - Global Outcomes for Microsurgical Clipping of Unruptured Intracranial Aneurysms
T2 - A Benchmark Analysis of 2245 Cases
AU - Drexler, Richard
AU - Sauvigny, Thomas
AU - Pantel, Tobias F.
AU - Ricklefs, Franz L.
AU - Catapano, Joshua S.
AU - Wanebo, John E.
AU - Lawton, Michael T.
AU - Sanchin, Aminaa
AU - Hecht, Nils
AU - Vajkoczy, Peter
AU - Raygor, Kunal
AU - Tonetti, Daniel
AU - Abla, Adib
AU - El Naamani, Kareem
AU - Tjoumakaris, Stavropoula I.
AU - Jabbour, Pascal
AU - Jankowitz, Brian T.
AU - Salem, Mohamed M.
AU - Burkhardt, Jan Karl
AU - Wagner, Arthur
AU - Wostrack, Maria
AU - Gempt, Jens
AU - Meyer, Bernhard
AU - Gaub, Michael
AU - Mascitelli, Justin R.
AU - Dodier, Philippe
AU - Bavinzski, Gerhard
AU - Roessler, Karl
AU - Stroh, Nico
AU - Gmeiner, Matthias
AU - Gruber, Andreas
AU - Figueiredo, Eberval G.
AU - Da Silva Coelho, Antonio Carlos Samaia
AU - Bervitskiy, Anatoliy V.
AU - Anisimov, Egor D.
AU - Rzaev, Jamil A.
AU - Krenzlin, Harald
AU - Keric, Naureen
AU - Ringel, Florian
AU - Park, Dougho
AU - Kim, Mun Chul
AU - Marcati, Eleonora
AU - Cenzato, Marco
AU - Westphal, Manfred
AU - Dührsen, Lasse
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons.
PY - 2024/2/1
Y1 - 2024/2/1
N2 - BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Benchmarks represent the best possible outcome and help to improve outcomes for surgical procedures. However, global thresholds mirroring an optimal and reachable outcome for microsurgical clipping of unruptured intracranial aneurysms (UIA) are not available. This study aimed to define standardized outcome benchmarks in patients who underwent clipping of UIA. METHODS: A total of 2245 microsurgically treated UIA from 15 centers were analyzed. Patients were categorized into low- ('benchmark') and high-risk ('nonbenchmark') patients based on known factors affecting outcome. The benchmark was defined as the 75th percentile of all centers' median scores for a given outcome. Benchmark outcomes included intraoperative (eg, duration of surgery, blood transfusion), postoperative (eg, reoperation, neurological status), and aneurysm-related factors (eg, aneurysm occlusion). Benchmark cutoffs for aneurysms of the anterior communicating/anterior cerebral artery, middle cerebral artery, and posterior communicating artery were determined separately. RESULTS: Of the 2245 cases, 852 (37.9%) patients formed the benchmark cohort. Most operations were performed for middle cerebral artery aneurysms (53.6%), followed by anterior communicating and anterior cerebral artery aneurysms (25.2%). Based on the results of the benchmark cohort, the following benchmark cutoffs were established: favorable neurological outcome (modified Rankin scale ≤2) ≥95.9%, postoperative complication rate ≤20.7%, length of postoperative stay ≤7.7 days, asymptomatic stroke ≤3.6%, surgical site infection ≤2.7%, cerebral vasospasm ≤2.5%, new motor deficit ≤5.9%, aneurysm closure rate ≥97.1%, and at 1-year follow-up: aneurysm closure rate ≥98.0%. At 24 months, benchmark patients had a better score on the modified Rankin scale than nonbenchmark patients. CONCLUSION: This study presents internationally applicable benchmarks for clinically relevant outcomes after microsurgical clipping of UIA. These benchmark cutoffs can serve as reference values for other centers, patient registries, and for comparing the benefit of other interventions or novel surgical techniques.
AB - BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Benchmarks represent the best possible outcome and help to improve outcomes for surgical procedures. However, global thresholds mirroring an optimal and reachable outcome for microsurgical clipping of unruptured intracranial aneurysms (UIA) are not available. This study aimed to define standardized outcome benchmarks in patients who underwent clipping of UIA. METHODS: A total of 2245 microsurgically treated UIA from 15 centers were analyzed. Patients were categorized into low- ('benchmark') and high-risk ('nonbenchmark') patients based on known factors affecting outcome. The benchmark was defined as the 75th percentile of all centers' median scores for a given outcome. Benchmark outcomes included intraoperative (eg, duration of surgery, blood transfusion), postoperative (eg, reoperation, neurological status), and aneurysm-related factors (eg, aneurysm occlusion). Benchmark cutoffs for aneurysms of the anterior communicating/anterior cerebral artery, middle cerebral artery, and posterior communicating artery were determined separately. RESULTS: Of the 2245 cases, 852 (37.9%) patients formed the benchmark cohort. Most operations were performed for middle cerebral artery aneurysms (53.6%), followed by anterior communicating and anterior cerebral artery aneurysms (25.2%). Based on the results of the benchmark cohort, the following benchmark cutoffs were established: favorable neurological outcome (modified Rankin scale ≤2) ≥95.9%, postoperative complication rate ≤20.7%, length of postoperative stay ≤7.7 days, asymptomatic stroke ≤3.6%, surgical site infection ≤2.7%, cerebral vasospasm ≤2.5%, new motor deficit ≤5.9%, aneurysm closure rate ≥97.1%, and at 1-year follow-up: aneurysm closure rate ≥98.0%. At 24 months, benchmark patients had a better score on the modified Rankin scale than nonbenchmark patients. CONCLUSION: This study presents internationally applicable benchmarks for clinically relevant outcomes after microsurgical clipping of UIA. These benchmark cutoffs can serve as reference values for other centers, patient registries, and for comparing the benefit of other interventions or novel surgical techniques.
KW - Aneurysm
KW - Clipping
KW - Microsurgery
KW - Microsurgical
KW - Outcome
KW - UIA
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85182735968&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1227/neu.0000000000002689
DO - 10.1227/neu.0000000000002689
M3 - Article
C2 - 37732745
AN - SCOPUS:85182735968
SN - 0148-396X
VL - 94
JO - Neurosurgery
JF - Neurosurgery
IS - 2
ER -