TY - JOUR T1 - Implementation of computer simulation to assess flow diversion treatment outcomes: systematic review and meta-analysis JF - Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery JO - J NeuroIntervent Surg SP - 164 LP - 170 DO - 10.1136/neurintsurg-2020-016724 VL - 13 IS - 2 AU - Mingzi Zhang AU - Simon Tupin AU - Hitomi Anzai AU - Yutaro Kohata AU - Masaaki Shojima AU - Kosuke Suzuki AU - Yoshihiro Okamoto AU - Katsuhiro Tanaka AU - Takanobu Yagi AU - Soichiro Fujimura AU - Makoto Ohta Y1 - 2021/02/01 UR - http://jnis.bmj.com/content/13/2/164.abstract N2 - Introduction Despite a decade of research into virtual stent deployment and the post-stenting aneurysmal hemodynamics, the hemodynamic factors which correlate with successful treatment remain inconclusive. We aimed to examine the differences in various post-treatment hemodynamic parameters between successfully and unsuccessfully treated cases, and to quantify the additional flow diversion achievable through stent compaction or insertion of a second stent.Methods A systematic review and meta-analysis were performed on eligible studies published from 2000 to 2019. We first classified cases according to treatment success (aneurysm occlusion) and then calculated the pooled standardized mean differences (SMD) of each available parameter to examine their association with clinical outcomes. Any additional flow diversion arising from the two common strategies for improving the stent wire density was quantified by pooling the results of such studies.Results We found that differences in the aneurysmal inflow rate (SMD −6.05, 95% CI −10.87 to −1.23, p=0.01) and energy loss (SMD −5.28, 95% CI −7.09 to −3.46, p<0.001) between the successfully and unsuccessfully treated groups were indicative of statistical significance, in contrast to wall shear stress (p=0.37), intra-aneurysmal average velocity (p=0.09), vortex core-line length (p=0.46), and shear rate (p=0.09). Compacting a single stent could achieve additional flow diversion comparable to that by dual-stent implantation.Conclusions Inflow rate and energy loss have shown promise as identifiers to discriminate between successful and unsuccessful treatment, pending future research into their diagnostic performance to establish optimal cut-off values. ER -