A Randomized Trial of Unruptured Brain AVMs

Brain arteriovenous malformations (BAVMs) are an infrequent but important cause of stroke, particularly in a young population. Current invasive treatment strategies are varied and include endovascular procedures, neurosurgery, and radiotherapy. All of these treatments are administered on the assumption that they can be achieved at acceptably minor complication rates, decrease the risk of subsequent hemorrhage, and lead to better long-term outcomes. Recent data from the literature comparing initial presentation and outcome for patients with ruptured and unruptured BAVMs have raised the possibility that such elective invasive treatment for unruptured BAVMs may yield worse outcomes than managing patients symptomatically with therapy. Unfortunately, no controlled clinical trials have yet been undertaken for management of unruptured BAVMs to address these concerns. Therefore, the goal of this randomized controlled trial is to determine if the long-term outcomes of patients who receive medical management for symptoms (e.g., headache, seizures) associated with an unruptured BAVM are superior to those who receive medical management and invasive therapy to eradicate the BAVM. Participants will be randomly assigned to receive either symptomatic medical management alone or such management with invasive therapies (any combination of surgery, endovascular embolization, or radiotherapy). Functional assessment will be carried out at the time of randomization, pre-intervention and 48-hour post-intervention, and for all participants at 1 month, and at 6 month intervals throughout the follow up period which will be a minimum of 5 years.

Inclusion Criteria: 1. Patient must have unruptured BAVM diagnosed by MRI/MRA, CTA and/or angiogram 2. Patient must be 18 years of age or older 3. Patient must have signed Informed Consent, Release of Medical Information, and Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA/U.S. only) Forms Exclusion Criteria: 1. Patient has BAVM presenting with evidence of recent or prior hemorrhage 2. Patient has received prior BAVM therapy (endovascular, surgical, radiotherapy) 3. Patient has BAVM deemed untreatable by local team, or has concomitant vascular or brain disease that interferes with/or contraindicates any interventional therapy type (stenosis/occlusion of neck artery, prior brain surgery/radiation for other reasons) 4. Patient has baseline Rankin ≥2 5. Patient has concomitant disease reducing life expectancy to less than 10 years 6. Patient has thrombocytopenia (< 100,000/μL), 7. Patient has uncorrectable coagulopathy (INR>1.5) 8. Patient is pregnant or lactating 9. Patient has known allergy against iodine contrast agents 10. Patient has multiple-foci BAVMs 11. Patient has any form of arteriovenous or spinal fistulas Previous diagnosis of any of the following - 12. Patient has a diagnosed Vein of Galen type malformation 13. Patient has a diagnosed cavernous malformation 14. Patient has a diagnosed dural arteriovenous fistula 15. Patient has a diagnosed venous malformation 16. Patient has a diagnosed neurocutaneous syndrome such as cerebro-retinal angiomatosis (von Hippel-Lindau), encephalo-trigeminal syndrome (Sturge-Weber), or Wyburn-Mason syndrome 17. Patient has diagnosed BAVMs in context of moya-moya-type changes 18. Patient has diagnosed hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (Rendu-Osler-Weber)

Study Location
Multiple U.S. Locations