Abstract
PurposeTo compare postembolotherapy follow-up graded transthoracic contrast echocardiography (TTCE) and high-resolution computed tomography (CT) of the chest and to evaluate the use of graded TTCE in the early postembolic period. Materials and MethodsThirty-five patients (6 men and 29 women; mean age, 56 years; range, 27–78 years) presenting for postembolotherapy follow-up between 2017 and 2021 with concurrent high-resolution CT and graded TTCE were analyzed retrospectively. Untreated pulmonary arteriovenous malformations (PAVMs) with a feeding artery of ≥2 mm were considered treatable. ResultsNinety-four percent of patients (33 of 35) did not have treatable PAVMs on high-resolution CT. TTCE was negative for shunts (Grade 0) in 34% of patients (n = 12). Of patients with a TTCE positive for shunts (23 of 35, 66%), 83% had a Grade 1 shunt, 13% had a Grade 2 shunt, and 4% had a Grade 3 shunt. No patient with a Grade 0 or 1 shunt had a treatable PAVM on high-resolution CT. Of the 2 patients with PAVMs requiring treatment, one had a Grade 2 shunt and one had a Grade 3 shunt. TTCE grade was significantly associated with the presence of a treatable PAVM on high-resolution CT (P < .01). ConclusionsGraded TTCE predicts the need for repeat embolotherapy and does so reliably in the early postembolotherapy period. This suggests that graded TTCE can be utilized in the postembolotherapy period for surveillance, which has the potential to lead to a decrease in cumulative radiation in this patient population.
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