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Clinical features, course, and outcomes of a UK cohort of pediatric moyamoya

Clinical features, course, and outcomes of a UK cohort of pediatric moyamoya
Clinical features, course, and outcomes of a UK cohort of pediatric moyamoya
OBJECTIVE:
To describe characteristics and course of a large UK cohort of children with moyamoya from multiple centers and examine prognostic predictors.
METHODS:
Retrospective review of case notes/radiology, with use of logistic regression to explore predictors of outcome.
RESULTS:
Eighty-eight children (median presentation age 5.1 years) were included. Thirty-six presented with arterial ischemic stroke (AIS) and 29 with TIA. Eighty had bilateral and 8 unilateral carotid circulation disease; 29 patients had posterior circulation involvement. Acute infarction was present in 36/176 hemispheres and chronic infarction in 86/176 hemispheres at the index presentation. Sixty-two of 82 with symptomatic presentation had at least one clinical recurrence. Fifty-five patients were treated surgically, with 37 experiencing fewer recurrences after surgery. Outcome was categorized as good using the Recovery and Recurrence Questionnaire in 39/85 patients. On multivariable analysis, presentation with TIA (odds ratio [OR] 0.09, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.02-0.35), headache (OR 0.10, 95% CI 0.02-0.58), or no symptoms (OR 0.08, 95% CI 0.01-0.68) was less likely to predict poor outcome than AIS presentation. Posterior circulation involvement predicted poor outcome (OR 4.22, 95% CI 1.23-15.53). Surgical revascularization was not a significant predictor of outcome.
CONCLUSIONS:
Moyamoya is associated with multiple recurrences, progressive arteriopathy, and poor outcome in half of patients, especially with AIS presentation and posterior circulation involvement. Recurrent AIS is rare after surgery. Surgery was not a determinant of overall outcome, likely reflecting surgical case selection and presentation clinical status.
0028-3878
763-771
Tho-Calvi, Sara C.
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Thompson, Dominic
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Saunders, Dawn
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Agrawal, Shakti
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Basu, Anna
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Chitre, Manali
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Chow, Gabriel
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Gibbon, Frances
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Hart, Anthony
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Kamath Tallur, Krishnaraya
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Kirkham, Fenella
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Kneen, Rachel
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McCullagh, Helen
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Mewasingh, Leena
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Vassallo, Grace
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Vijayakumar, Kayal
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Wraige, Elizabeth
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Yeo, Tong Hong
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Ganesan, Vijeya
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Tho-Calvi, Sara C.
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Thompson, Dominic
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Saunders, Dawn
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Agrawal, Shakti
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Basu, Anna
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Chitre, Manali
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Chow, Gabriel
54191f58-cc39-493a-8eb5-98e0eedb213f
Gibbon, Frances
fc244c93-bc6e-4136-8911-5c5311d97752
Hart, Anthony
56db1e01-fa34-4971-b55d-cf09c101c17b
Kamath Tallur, Krishnaraya
4e4a3501-b8e3-41bc-a714-f5eab126b916
Kirkham, Fenella
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Kneen, Rachel
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McCullagh, Helen
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Mewasingh, Leena
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Vassallo, Grace
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Vijayakumar, Kayal
0055a09f-f61b-40d1-b3de-0c57a63e48d4
Wraige, Elizabeth
549f4e01-c3b1-40e0-bbef-dfdcd77b1858
Yeo, Tong Hong
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Ganesan, Vijeya
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Tho-Calvi, Sara C., Thompson, Dominic, Saunders, Dawn, Agrawal, Shakti, Basu, Anna, Chitre, Manali, Chow, Gabriel, Gibbon, Frances, Hart, Anthony, Kamath Tallur, Krishnaraya, Kirkham, Fenella, Kneen, Rachel, McCullagh, Helen, Mewasingh, Leena, Vassallo, Grace, Vijayakumar, Kayal, Wraige, Elizabeth, Yeo, Tong Hong and Ganesan, Vijeya (2018) Clinical features, course, and outcomes of a UK cohort of pediatric moyamoya. Neurology, 90 (9), 763-771. (doi:10.1212/WNL.0000000000005026).

Record type: Article

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:
To describe characteristics and course of a large UK cohort of children with moyamoya from multiple centers and examine prognostic predictors.
METHODS:
Retrospective review of case notes/radiology, with use of logistic regression to explore predictors of outcome.
RESULTS:
Eighty-eight children (median presentation age 5.1 years) were included. Thirty-six presented with arterial ischemic stroke (AIS) and 29 with TIA. Eighty had bilateral and 8 unilateral carotid circulation disease; 29 patients had posterior circulation involvement. Acute infarction was present in 36/176 hemispheres and chronic infarction in 86/176 hemispheres at the index presentation. Sixty-two of 82 with symptomatic presentation had at least one clinical recurrence. Fifty-five patients were treated surgically, with 37 experiencing fewer recurrences after surgery. Outcome was categorized as good using the Recovery and Recurrence Questionnaire in 39/85 patients. On multivariable analysis, presentation with TIA (odds ratio [OR] 0.09, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.02-0.35), headache (OR 0.10, 95% CI 0.02-0.58), or no symptoms (OR 0.08, 95% CI 0.01-0.68) was less likely to predict poor outcome than AIS presentation. Posterior circulation involvement predicted poor outcome (OR 4.22, 95% CI 1.23-15.53). Surgical revascularization was not a significant predictor of outcome.
CONCLUSIONS:
Moyamoya is associated with multiple recurrences, progressive arteriopathy, and poor outcome in half of patients, especially with AIS presentation and posterior circulation involvement. Recurrent AIS is rare after surgery. Surgery was not a determinant of overall outcome, likely reflecting surgical case selection and presentation clinical status.

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Accepted/In Press date: 17 November 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 26 February 2018
Published date: 27 February 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 418478
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/418478
ISSN: 0028-3878
PURE UUID: 64073479-5d3a-47f2-be38-064c91f4290b
ORCID for Fenella Kirkham: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2443-7958

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Date deposited: 09 Mar 2018 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 06:17

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Contributors

Author: Sara C. Tho-Calvi
Author: Dominic Thompson
Author: Dawn Saunders
Author: Shakti Agrawal
Author: Anna Basu
Author: Manali Chitre
Author: Gabriel Chow
Author: Frances Gibbon
Author: Anthony Hart
Author: Krishnaraya Kamath Tallur
Author: Fenella Kirkham ORCID iD
Author: Rachel Kneen
Author: Helen McCullagh
Author: Leena Mewasingh
Author: Grace Vassallo
Author: Kayal Vijayakumar
Author: Elizabeth Wraige
Author: Tong Hong Yeo
Author: Vijeya Ganesan

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