Abstract

We used MR angiography to determine prevalence of unruptured familial intracranial aneurysms in a prepaid medical care program. We compared surgical outcomes and the cost of treating unruptured versus ruptured aneurysms. We compared the cost of MR angiography with the cost of screening mammography and with the cost of surgically treating a ruptured aneurysm. During a 30-month period, we performed MR angiography to show cerebral aneurysms in 63 surgical candidates who had one or more first-degree relatives with an aneurysm. Unruptured aneurysms seen on MR angiography were evaluated by digital subtraction angiography (DSA) and treated surgically. MR angiography showed nine unruptured aneurysms in six patients. Eight aneurysms were seen on MR angiography and nine were seen on DSA. Seven unruptured aneurysms were treated surgically. The mean treatment cost was 50% lower for an unruptured aneurysm than that for a ruptured aneurysm. No patient surgically treated for an unruptured aneurysm required rehabilitation, unlike 25% of patients with ruptured aneurysms. The annual total cost of MR angiography was equivalent to 2.9% of the annual cost of screening mammography. The annual cost of MR angiography equaled half the cost of treating one patient after aneurysm rupture. MR angiography showed a 9.5% prevalence of unruptured aneurysms among persons who had one or more first-degree relatives with a cerebral aneurysm. DSA confirmed 88% of aneurysms found on MR angiography. Persons with unruptured aneurysms had better treatment outcomes at lower cost than did patients treated for aneurysm rupture. The annual MR angiography cost was low compared with the cost of screening mammography and with the cost of treating one patient with aneurysm rupture.

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