Abstract

Introduction: The real-world evolution of management and outcomes of patients with unruptured cerebral arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) has not been well-delineated following the ARUBA trial findings of no general advantage of initial interventional (surgical/endovascular/radiotherapy) vs initial conservative medical therapy. Methods: We analyzed from 2009-2018 the National Inpatient Sample of all AVM admissions in the United States. Analyses were performed by year and for the dichotomized periods of pre-ARUBA (2009-2013) vs. post-ARUBA (2014-2018). Joinpoint regression models with permutation model selection delineated yearly trends in intervention rate in uAVMs. Results: Among a total of 72,812 uAVMs, 35,420 were in the post-ARUBA and 37,392 in the pre-ARUBA period. Median age was 53.3 in post-ARUBA vs. 51.8 in the pre-ARUBA period (p=0.001) with no difference in female sex, 51.1% vs. 51.8% (p=0.44). The intervention rate was lower in the post- vs -pre-ARUBA period, 29.6% vs. 34.0% (p=0.006) (figure). Interventional rate decreased monotonically by -4.32% in the post-ARUBA period (figure). Among the post-ARUBA AVM patients, compared with pre-ARUBA, there were no differences in odds of in-hospital ischemic stroke [OR 1.05 (0.92-1.20), p=0.45] or in-hospital mortality [OR 0.88 (0.62-1.24), p=0.47] but the odds did increase for combined discharge to a facility or in-hospital mortality [OR 1.14 (1.02-1.28), p=0.020]. In addition, the frequency of admissions for ruptured AVMs accelerated in the post-ARUBA period (figure). Conclusion: Nationwide practice in management of unruptured AVMs changed substantially with the publication of the ARUBA trial, in a durable and increasing manner. Fewer admissions with interventional treatment of unruptured AVMs occurred and a corresponding increase in admission for ruptured AVMs transpired, as expected with a strategy of watchful waiting and treatment only after an index bleeding event.

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