RESUMO
AIM: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of treatment of patients presenting with acute aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH) with primary flow-diverting stents (FDS; with or without adjuncts), with comparison to the published literature. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A retrospective single-centre review was undertaken of prospectively obtained data on patients treated for SAH over a 60-month period. Of 354 patients treated for SAH during that time period, 24 patients with a total of 25 aneurysms were identified. Baseline patient demographics were recorded and clinical and imaging outcomes assessed. RESULTS: Eighty-eight per cent (22/25) of the aneurysms were completely occluded (Raymond-Roy 1) at mean 12-month follow-up. The minor complication rate was 12.5% (3/24) without permanent morbidity. Mortality rate was 4% (1/25) after one patient died following aneurysmal rebleed on day 7 post-procedure. Forty-two per cent (10/24) of patients had a high-pressure shunt placed prior to endovascular treatment, no haemorrhagic complications of neurosurgical intervention were observed. CONCLUSION: The necessity of dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) therapy when deploying FDS will rightly continue to limit their use in the acutely ruptured setting to a case-by-case basis whereby other treatment options are deemed unsafe. Methods employed to minimise subsequent haemorrhagic risks from DAPT in these patients may be worthy of further investigation.