Pediatric Investigation (Jun 2024)

Outcomes after surgical and nonsurgical treatment of pediatric cerebral cavernous malformation

  • Haohao Zhang,
  • Qishuai Yu,
  • Zhiqi Mao,
  • Liang Zhang,
  • Xinguang Yu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ped4.12435
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 2
pp. 126 – 134

Abstract

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ABSTRACT Importance Pediatric cerebral cavernous malformation (CCM) is a rarely encountered vascular entity. Comparative study on surgical excision and nonsurgical management outcomes of CCM in pediatrics is limited. Objective To determine the demographic characteristics, hemorrhage rate, and long‐term outcomes of pediatric patients with CCM. Methods A retrospective study of pediatric patients with CCM in Chinese PLA General Hospital was conducted between January 2004 and January 2019. We compared the clinical characteristics, radiological features, and outcomes of the surgical and nonsurgical groups. Results Seventy‐nine children were included, with 69.6% being boys, and the average age was 11.8 ± 5.5 years. The annual retrospective hemorrhagic rate was 5.7% per patient per year. Fifty‐six children (70.9%) underwent surgical excision, and they were more likely to present with seizure symptoms (P = 0.011), have a higher proportion of larger lesion size (P = 0.008), less likely to have durations ≤10 days (P = 0.048), and less likely to have supratentorial deep CCM (P = 0.014) compared to children who received nonsurgical management. Total resection was achieved in most surgical cases (55, 98.2%). During the 143.9 ± 50.8 months of follow‐up, 44 patients (78.6%) achieved improvement, 12 patients (17.8%) remained the same, and two (3.6%) experienced worsening. In the nonsurgical management group, 14 children (60.9%) experienced symptom improvement, eight (34.8%) remained the same, and one (4.3%) worsened, with a re‐hemorrhagic risk of 8.7%. Interpretation Surgical removal of pediatric CCM can eliminate the risk of hemorrhage and lead to satisfactory outcomes. For children undergoing nonsurgical management, long‐term close monitoring is essential due to the life‐long risk of hemorrhage.

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