Abstract

Posterior communicating artery (PcomA) aneurysms are more likely to recanalize than anterior communicating artery (AcomA) aneurysms. However, it is still unclear whether the recanalization rate of these aneurysms is a result of involvement from the fetal posterior cerebral artery (fPCA) in PcomA aneurysms and variation of the unilateral A1 segment in AcomA aneurysms. The purpose of this study is to retrospectively evaluate the different recanalization rates between PcomA aneurysms with fPCA and AcomA aneurysms with a variation of the unilateral A1 segment. We retrospectively collected information regarding 214 patients, each with communicating segment aneurysms between January 2013 and January 2020. Follow-up documentation on clinical and imaging data was comparatively analyzed between variant types, and recanalization rates of the variant and normal types were analyzed by stratification. Of the 84 variant-type aneurysms (PcomA with fPCA and AcomA with a variation of the unilateral A1 segment, 41/43), complete recanalization occurred in 23 patients (27.4%), and it was significantly more likely to occur in PcomA aneurysms with fPCA (39.1%) than in AcomA aneurysms with a variation of the unilateral A1 segment (16.3%). Stent-assisted coil embolization (SACE) has been shown to reduce recanalization (OR =0.092, 95% CI: 0.011 to 0.790, P=0.03). Additionally, variant types and the normal type (non-fetal, 106, and bilateral A1 symmetry, 24) have different odds ratios (OR) of recanalization (P=0.04), and the OR of the variant subtypes was significant, unlike the normal type (P=0.49). This study suggests that PcomA aneurysms with fPCA are more likely to recanalize than AcomA aneurysms with a variation of the unilateral A1 segment.

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