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SYSTEMATIC REVIEW article

Front. Neurol., 10 October 2023
Sec. Stroke
This article is part of the Research Topic Chronic Subdural Hematoma (CSDH) - A Well-known Unknown View all 13 articles

Middle meningeal artery embolization for chronic subdural hematoma: a systematic review

Yoshihiro OmuraYoshihiro OmuraTaichi Ishiguro
Taichi Ishiguro*
  • Department of Neurosurgery, Tokyo Women's Medical University Yachiyo Medical Center, Yachiyo, Chiba, Japan

Background: Chronic subdural hematoma (cSDH) is one of the most common diseases in neurosurgery. Middle meningeal artery embolization (MMAE) is reportedly an option to prevent recurrence or avoid surgery in patients with cSDH. This study was performed to review the evidence on MMAE for cSDH and evaluate its safety, efficacy, indications, and feasibility.

Methods: We systematically reviewed the literature according to the PRISMA guidelines using an electronic database. The search yielded 43 articles involving 2,783 patients who underwent MMAE.

Results: The hematoma resolution, recurrence, and retreatment rates in the MMAE-alone treatment group (n = 815) were 86.7%, 6.3%, and 9.6%, respectively, whereas those in the prophylactic MMAE with combined surgery group (n = 370) were 95.6%, 4.4%, and 3.4%, respectively. The overall MMAE-related complication rate was 2.3%.

Conclusion: This study shows that MMAE alone is, although not immediate, as effective as evacuation surgery alone in reducing hematoma. The study also shows that combined treatment has a lower recurrence rate than evacuation surgery alone. Because MMAE is a safe procedure, it should be considered for patients with cSDH, especially those with a high risk of recurrence.

Introduction

Chronic subdural hematoma (cSDH) is a common disease with an incidence of up to 58.1 per 100,000 person-years in patients aged > 65 years (1). cSDH is commonly treated by surgical evacuation through burr hole(s) to relieve the symptom caused by the mass effect of the hematoma. However, the recurrence rate ranges from 10% to 20% (2, 3). The use of antiplatelet drugs or anticoagulants, multiple recurrences, and advanced age are known risk factors for cSDH recurrence (4, 5).

The pathophysiology of cSDH involves the formation of neomembranes with fragile neovascularization, perfused mainly by distal branches of the middle meningeal artery (MMA) that have formed by inflammatory remodeling of the dura matter (6, 7). Therefore, endovascular MMA embolization (MMAE) has recently emerged as an alternative or adjunct modality to conventional surgical treatment to prevent the recurrence of cSDH.

This study was performed to review all published cases of MMAE for cSDH and assess the safety, efficacy, and indications of the procedure.

Methods

Study design

This systematic review follows the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines (8).

Literature search

An electronic literature search of the PubMed database was performed on 28 May 2023 using the following key terms: chronic subdural hematoma, meningeal artery, and embolization. All articles published from January 1976 to May 2023 were identified. Two reviewers (Y.O. and T.I.) independently screened the articles based on their title and abstract. One reviewer (Y.O.) then reviewed the full text of all relevant articles in detail to further assess the eligibility of the studies.

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

The following inclusion and exclusion criteria were used for the systematic review.

Inclusion criteria

• Original research involving more than five cases of MMAE published in any peer-reviewed journal.

• English language.

• Sufficient post-embolization outcome data (at least one post-MMAE clinical and/or radiological follow-up and reporting of the rescue surgical treatment rate).

• Adult patients (>18 years old) treated for the first time by MMAE for cSDH.

Exclusion criteria

• Review articles, meta-analyses, comments, letters, and editorials.

• cSDH due to a vascular malformation (e.g., dural arteriovenous fistula, arteriovenous malformation) or intracranial tumor, or the presence of intracranial hypotension.

• Studies from the same author with duplicate patients.

Data extraction and analysis

Data extraction was performed by one reviewer (Y.O.) using a predefined data extraction form. The following data were collected and analyzed: study design, sample population and size, patients’ baseline characteristics, antithrombotic therapy use, management strategy (including surgical and endovascular treatment), endovascular treatment success, outcome, follow-up duration, complications, cSDH recurrence rate, and the need for subsequent surgery.

Several definitions of resolution after MMAE were used among the studies, including complete resolution, near complete resolution (reduction of ≥90%), suboptimal resolution (reduction of ≥50%), and partial reduction, the latter two of which were ambiguous. Among these definitions, there were further differences in measurement methods, with some researchers using the hematoma volume for measurement and others using the hematoma thickness. In this study, we focused on the necessity of rescue surgery and defined resolution as radiological improvement.

Some reports included in this review defined recurrent cSDH as only symptomatic re-accumulation after surgical intervention, while others defined recurrent cSDH as also asymptomatic re-accumulation after surgical intervention. Both were included in recurrent cSDH in this review.

In MMAE for cSDH treatment, there are differences in the purpose of treatment and the characteristics of patients between MMAE as a sole treatment and MMAE as prophylaxis, in which surgery is performed before and after MMAE. In this study, we compared the data between reports in which all patients were treated with MMAE alone and reports in which all patients were treated with MMAE combined with surgery.

MMAE treatment success was defined as the successful embolization of the target vessel. All patients who failed to achieve embolization, including MMAE abort, were considered treatment failures. Complications of treatment were counted after excluding those considered to be complications related to surgery (evacuation), those with unknown details, and those with an unknown relationship to MMAE.

Results

Study characteristics

Our search strategy yielded 245 articles. Of these, 202 articles were excluded based on the exclusion criteria of the present review. A flow diagram of this study shown in Figure 1.

FIGURE 1
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Figure 1. PRISMA flow chart of our systematic review. CSF, cerebrospinal fluid.

Forty-three articles were included in the final analysis, including 2 prospective uncontrolled studies, 1 prospective randomized study, and 40 retrospective studies involving 7 to 530 patients per series.

Patient demographics and clinical and radiographic characteristics

A total of 2,783 patients underwent MMAE in the selected studies (Table 1). Their mean age was 71.2 years, and 71.1% were male. The available data showed that 90.6% of patients had symptomatic cSDH and that 19.9% had bilateral cSDH. Concurrent antiplatelet or anticoagulant use at the time of cSDH treatment was reported in 50.3% of patients.

TABLE 1
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Table 1. Studies and patient characteristics in this review.

Characteristics and outcomes of MMAE for cSDH

In total, 3,027 MMAE procedures were performed on 2,783 patients. The MMAE treatment success rate was 98.8%. In principle, treatment for bilateral cSDH was considered two embolization procedures, but some studies counted it as one treatment. This is clearly indicated in Table 2.

TABLE 2
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Table 2. Details and outcomes of MMAE.

MMAE was performed as the sole treatment in 69.1% of patients and prophylactically after or before surgical evacuation in 30.7%. The details in six (0.2%) patients were not reported.

Among all cases, 23.7% were recurrent cSDH after previous surgical evacuation, and 52.7% were treated as upfront MMAE.

The embolic agents included particles, liquid agents, and coils and were used alone or in combination. Details are shown in Table 1. The mean follow-up duration ranged from 20 days to 5 years.

Following MMAE, the rates of cSDH resolution, recurrence, and surgical rescue at the last follow-up were 83.8%, 6.2%, and 6.4%, respectively.

In most studies, no serious complications occurred after MMAE. The rate of severe complications associated with MMAE was 1.0% (28 of 2,783 patients), including 10 cases of cerebral infarction, 5 cases of visual loss, 4 cases of facial palsy, 2 cases of cerebral hemorrhage, 3 cases of MMA arteriovenous fistula, 1 case of MMA rupture, 1 case of aortic dissection, 1 case of femoral artery occlusion, and 1 case of catheter entrapment. The rate of overall complications associated with MMAE was 2.3% (58 of 2,783 patients), including seizures, headache, renal dysfunction, transient neurological symptoms (diplopia and aphasia), and puncture site hematoma. Two overall treatment-related mortalities due to cerebral hemorrhage and femoral artery occlusion were observed.

Rescue surgery rate in MMAE-alone treatment group and prophylactic MMAE group

The hematoma resolution, recurrence, and retreatment rates in the MMAE-alone treatment group (n = 815) were 86.7%, 6.3%, and 9.6%, respectively, whereas those in the prophylactic MMAE with combined surgery group (n = 370) were 95.6%, 4.4%, and 3.4%, respectively. The percentage of symptomatic patients in the MMAE-alone group and prophylactic MMAE group was 94.0% and 97.7%, respectively. These results are shown in Table 3.

TABLE 3
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Table 3. Comparison between reports of MMAE-alone treatment and reports of prophylactic MMAE treatment.

Discussion

The standard treatment for cSDH is still surgical treatment, however cSDH has a high recurrence rate (10%–20%) after a single surgical evacuation (2, 3).

The medical treatment options for cSDH have been extensively investigated, these studies had no remarkable effectiveness in preventing recurrence of cSDH (2, 3, 5052) and an optimal treatment strategy for preventing cSDH recurrence has not yet been established.

The pathophysiology of cSDH involves formation of inflammatory membranes and self-sustaining neoangiogenesis and fibrinolysis, leading to a high prevalence of rebleeding from fragile capillaries (6, 7). These vessels are derived from the dura matter and perfused mainly by the distal branches of the MMA; therefore, MMAE could be an interesting paradigm for the treatment of cSDH.

During the past few years, the number of reports on the efficacy of MMAE has rapidly increased. In the present systematic review, the cSDH resolution, recurrence, and rescue surgical treatment rates at the last follow-up after MMAE in all patients were 83.8%, 6.2%, and 6.4%, respectively.

MMAE can be divided into two main categories according to the purpose of treatment: curative MMAE with the expectation of hematoma reduction to avoid surgical intervention (or in place of surgical hematoma removal) and prophylactic MMAE as a preventive treatment for recurrence in combination with hematoma evacuation.

MMAE as a sole treatment for cSDH

The three initially reported indications for MMAE alone were failure of conservative treatment or asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic patients (to avoid surgery), advanced age and use of antiplatelet or anticoagulant drugs (as an alternative treatment considering the invasiveness of surgery), and prevention of recurrence in patients with recurrent disease after surgical treatment (53).

In an evaluation of the efficacy of MMAE alone, Housley et al. (37) compared the outcomes of 48 propensity-matched patients with cSDH who underwent either surgery alone or MMAE alone as initial treatment. There was a significant hematoma reduction in the surgery group immediately after surgery; after 12 weeks of treatment, however, there was no significant difference in hematoma reduction between the two groups. Furthermore, the recurrence rate was significantly lower in the MMAE group (22.9% vs. 4.2%) (37). Kim (5) compared the outcomes of 23 patients who received conventional treatment and 20 patients who received MMAE among 43 patients who developed recurrent cSDH after surgical treatment. The MMAE group showed better prevention of recurrence and earlier brain re-expansion despite the fact that patients of advanced age were significantly more likely to use antithrombotic drugs in the MMAE group (5). These studies show that the effect of MMAE alone for reducing a hematoma is equivalent to evacuation surgery alone in long-term follow-up, and the effect of preventing recurrence may surpass the effect of evacuation surgery alone.

Some studies showed a good hematoma reduction effect of MMAE alone, even for massive cSDH. Gomez-Paz et al. (28) reported that patients with massive cSDH with a midline shift of ≥5 mm were treated with upfront MMAE and showed good improvement in symptoms and imaging findings under careful follow-up.

In the present review, surgical evacuation was needed in 9.6% of patients in the MMAE-alone group, suggesting that some patients developed hematoma enlargement or neurological deterioration even after MMAE. Therefore, careful follow-up is important, especially in the early postoperative period after patients undergo MMAE alone.

Some reports also suggested that MMAE alone is superior to surgery alone in terms of cost-effectiveness because of the reduced need for additional therapeutic intervention in the treatment of cSDH (54, 55).

MMAE combined with evacuation for cSDH

In this study, prophylactic MMAE showed a favorable hematoma reduction rate, recurrence rate, and reoperation rate. The major advantage of MMAE is its effect in preventing recurrence. In this review, the reoperation rate was 1.4% to 4.9% in the MMAE with surgical treatment group and 11.6% to 18.8% in the conventional surgical treatment group (9, 15, 32, 33).

Okuma et al. (4) reported the following predictive factors for refractory cSDH after burr-hole surgery: use of antiplatelet drugs or anticoagulants, blood coagulation disorder, hepatic dysfunction, hemodialysis, terminal malignancy, advanced age (>80 years), cerebral atrophy, large preoperative hematoma volume (>150 mL), niveau formation, post cerebrospinal fluid shunt placement, no placement of a drain during surgery, postoperative residual air (>20%), and multiple recurrences. The authors also stated that such predictive factors have the potential to be good indications for prophylactic MMAE.

The selection of appropriate cases with respect to the indication for prophylactic MMAE is important from the standpoint of medical economics. Further investigation of the indications for prophylactic MMAE is warranted.

Complications of MMAE

The rate of MMAE-related complications in this review was 2.3%. Although serious complications such as cerebral infarction, visual loss, and facial palsy rarely occurred, their development suggests the possibility of stray embolic material entering high-risk anastomosis sites. Because of the potential for anastomosis in MMAs that involve the retinal artery and vasa nervorum of the facial nerve, embolization can lead to serious and permanent complications such as blindness and facial nerve palsy (29). During the embolization procedure, the microcatheter should be positioned distal to the branch, and attention should be paid to the findings of reflux during embolic agent injection (44). In addition, in patients with a high risk of migration of embolic material to a compromised anastomosis, it is important to perform a provocation test using lidocaine and abort the embolization based on the result of this test, if necessary (16). Although MMAE is a safe and easy procedure, close attention is needed when working with high-risk anastomoses to prevent complications during MMAE.

Factors that predict a good outcome after MMAE

With the increase in reports of MMAE for treatment of cSDH, there has also been an increase in reports regarding factors that affect the efficacy of MMAE. Salem et al. (46) evaluated various factors in 530 patients treated with MMAE; they found that an MMA main trunk diameter of <1.5 mm and anticoagulant medication use were factors associated with higher retreatment rates and that the use of liquid embolic material was a factor associated with lower retreatment rates. Some reports have suggested that the use of liquid embolic material is as effective and safe as the use of particles (29, 44, 49).

In addition, distal (midline) penetration of the embolizing material has been cited as a factor that shortens the time to hematoma clearance (31, 41). Among all anticoagulants, only factor Xa inhibitors were reported to be associated with retreatment (38).

Limitations

This review had three main limitations. First, most of the reports were retrospective, and they contained various indications for MMAE and definitions of resolution. Thus, the statistical examination was limited, leaving potential for important selection bias. Second, the content of the articles was mixed, with some studies limited to MMAE (whether upfront MMAE, prophylactic MMAE, or MMAE for recurrence after surgery), others comparing MMAE with surgery, and still others focusing on the clinical course or radiographic findings. Third, some studies lacked information on the timing of MMAE and surgical treatment and did not clearly indicate whether complications in cases of combined surgery and MMAE were caused by surgery or MMAE. These factors made statistical evaluation difficult in this review. Further prospective randomized trials are required to establish the clear indications for MMAE as an initial treatment or combined treatment with evacuation surgeries.

Conclusion

This study shows that MMAE alone is, although not immediate, as effective as evacuation surgery alone in reducing hematoma. The study also shows that combined treatment has a lower recurrence rate than evacuation surgery alone. Because MMAE is a safe procedure, it should be considered for patients with cSDH, especially those with a high risk of recurrence.

Data availability statement

The original contributions presented in the study are included in the article/supplementary material, further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding author.

Author contributions

YO: Conceptualization, Data curation, Formal analysis, Investigation, Writing – original draft. TI: Supervision, Writing – review & editing.

Funding

The author(s) declare that no financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

Acknowledgments

The authors gratefully acknowledge the work of past and present members of the Department of Neurosurgery of Tokyo Women’s Medical University Yachiyo Medical Center.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Publisher’s note

All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

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Keywords: embolization, chronic subdural hematoma, middle meningeal artery, recurrence, endovascular

Citation: Omura Y and Ishiguro T (2023) Middle meningeal artery embolization for chronic subdural hematoma: a systematic review. Front. Neurol. 14:1259647. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2023.1259647

Received: 16 July 2023; Accepted: 25 September 2023;
Published: 10 October 2023.

Edited by:

Hiroki Sato, Saitama Medical University International Medical Center, Japan

Reviewed by:

Amir El Rahal, University of Freiburg Medical Center, Germany
Zefu Li, Binzhou Medical University Hospital, China

Copyright © 2023 Omura and Ishiguro. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Taichi Ishiguro, ishiguro.taichi@twmu.ac.jp

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