Moyamoya Disease(MMD), also known as spontaneous basilar artery occlusion, is characterized by the gradual thickening of arterial intima at the distal carotid artery and the proximal portion of anterior/middle cerebral artery, the gradual stenosis or occlusion of arterial lumen, and the compensatory expansion of basilar cerebral perforating arteries. Cerebral infarction and cerebral hemorrhage are common clinical symptoms of MMD with high morbidity of disability. For ischemic moyamoya disease, intracranial/extracranial revascularization is the preferred treatment. However, for patients with hemorrhagic moyamoya disease, there is controversy about whether to have surgical treatment, the timing and the method of surgical treatment, and the effect of surgical treatment to prevent rebleeding due to the lack of large sample, multi-center, prospective randomized studies. At present, the studies on the effect of revascularization and conservative treatment on hemorrhagic moyamoya disease are retrospective case analyses without randomized control. The sample size of these studies are small, and the conclusions obtained are inconsistent. Due to the differences in the epidemiology and episode type of moyamoya disease in different countries, there is no prospective, randomized controlled study of blood type moyamoya disease in China to confirm the efficacy of revascularization and lack of uniform norms and standards.
Objective: The aim of this study is to perform a prospective, randomized study on hemorrhagic moyamoya disease to confirm the effect of revascularization in China, and to establish specifications and standards to guide the treatment options for hemorrhagic moyamoya disease as well. Design: This study is a single-center study and plan to include 108 patients. According to a random number table, hemorrhagic moyamoya patients will be assigned to three groups: conservative treatment group, direct revascularization group and indirect revascularization group. A prospective, randomized study will be carried out to evaluate the effect of revascularization and conservative treatment on the reduction of rebleeding risk and improvement of ischemia in adult patients with hemorrhagic moyamoya disease. Observation Measures: 1.Rebleeding; 2.Cerebral infarction resulting in severe disability (mRS score≥3); 3.Severe disability or death caused by other reasons; 4. Patients in conservative treatment group need revascularization due to progressive ischemic stroke or progressive Transient ischemic attack(TIA).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
108
1. The conservative treatment of hemorrhagic moyamoya disease mainly includes the control of hypertension, prevention and treatment of secondary epilepsy, the control of intracranial hypertension, and the corresponding symptomatic and neurotrophic treatment. 2. In addition to the pharmacotherapy used in conservative treatment, encephalo-duro-arterio-synangiosis(EDAS) will be performed according to the procedures described by Matsushima. 3. In addition to the pharmacotherapy used in conservative treatment, the superficial temporal artery(STA) and middle cerebral artery(MCA) by pass surgery is performed. The operation is the modified EDAS which basically similar to EDAS, but the surgical incision is as low as possible. And the STA may not be preserved.
The 307th Hospital of Military Chinese People's Liberation Army
Beijing, Beijing Municipality, China
RECRUITINGRebleeding
All enrolled patients were followed up regularly by telephone, outpatient and inpatient visits. The observed end-point events of rebleeding
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 1 year
Severe Disability
Cerebral infarction resulting in severe disability (mRS score≥3)
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 1 year
Severe Disability or Death
Severe disability or death caused by other reasons
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 1 year
Vascular Reconstruction due to Progressive Ischemic Stroke or Progressive TIA
Patients in conservative treatment group needs vascular reconstruction due to progressive ischemic stroke or progressive TIA.
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 1 year
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