Evaluation of Tumor-Involved Vasculature (Including Balloon Test Occlusion)

2 Evaluation of Tumor-Involved Vasculature (Including Balloon Test Occlusion)


Joao Alves Rosa, Becky Hunt, and Shelley Renowden


Summary


The most common tumors to involve the skull base are meningiomas and the most common vascular tumors are paragangliomas (glomus tympanic and glomus jugulare lesions) and juvenile nasopharyngeal angiofibromas. Adequacy and safety of tumor resection will depend upon the extent of disease, arterial supply, and the ability to perform safe preoperative embolization. Radical resection may rarely also require sacrifice of the internal carotid or vertebral artery. Reduction in morbidity associated with sacrifice of the internal carotid artery is achieved by balloon test occlusion.


Keywords: Skull base, tumor, vascular, angiography, balloon test occlusion


2.1 Key Learning Points


Digital subtraction angiography remains the gold standard for vascular assessment of skull base tumors and their suitability for embolization.


Six vessel angiography and assessment of collateral blood flow are often required.


Diagnostic digital subtraction angiography can help identify dangerous anastomoses and venous drainage patterns.


Internal carotid artery sacrifice without prior balloon occlusion testing carries significant morbidity/mortality.


2.2 Introduction


The skull base is anatomically complex, involving osseous, soft tissue, neural, and vascular components which give rise to a diverse range of benign and malignant tumors. Tumors arising from the extracranial head and neck may also involve the skull base by direct extension. Paragangliomas (glomus tumors) (Fig. 2.1, Fig. 2.2, and Fig. 2.3), after skull base meningiomas, are the most frequent vascular tumors arising directly from the skull base, and juvenile nasal angiofibromas (JNAs) are the most frequent vascular tumors to involve the skull base, extending from their site of origin in the pterygopalatine fossa/sphenopalatine foramen (Fig. 2.4). Other vascular skull base tumors include hemangiomas, hemangiopericytomas, esthesioneuroblastomas, endolymphatic sac tumors, and vascular metastases.




Fig. 2.1 A 35-year-old man with an extensive right-sided glomus jugulare tumor (also bilateral carotid body tumors—not demonstrated). Gadolinium-enhanced T1 W axial (a, b) and coronal (c) magnetic resonance (MR) images with fat saturation demonstrate an enhancing mass centered at the right jugular foramen, with intradural extension. Additional sequences (not shown) demonstrated the typical “salt and pepper” appearance of a vascular skull base tumor in keeping with a glomus jugulare tumor. The glomus jugulare tumor extended below the skull base in the carotid space and involved the hypoglossal canal, horizontal petrous carotid canal, internal auditory canal, and petrous apex.




Fig. 2.2 Same patient as Fig. 2.1. Frontal (a) and lateral (b) projections of a right external carotid artery (ECA) angiogram confirm the presence of an intensely vascular tumor centered on the jugular foramen, supplied predominantly by an enlarged ascending pharyngeal artery (APA). Further supply is demonstrated from the stylomastoid artery arising from an enlarged occipital artery (OA) and anterior tympanic and accessory meningeal branches arising from the internal maxillary artery (IMax), with arteriovenous shunting. (The stylomastoid, anterior tympanic, and accessory meningeal supply were optimally demonstrated at the time of embolization although the selective runs are not provided here.) A right internal carotid artery (ICA) angiogram (c) shows additional dural clival supply (black arrows).




Fig. 2.3 Same patient as Fig. 2.1 and Fig. 2.2. Frontal projections of left (a) and right (b) vertebral artery (VA) angiograms show supply from the right hypoglossal branch of the neuromeningeal trunk of the ascending pharyngeal artery (black arrow) via an anastomosis from both VA C3 radicular branches (white arrow) and the odontoid arcade. Lateral projection of a right VA angiogram (c) demonstrates pial supply from the right posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA). Occlusion of the right jugular bulb is shown on a venous phase image of a right VA angiogram (d).




Fig. 2.4 A 10-year-old boy presenting with a 6-month history of epistaxis has a diagnosis of a left-sided juvenile nasopharyngeal angiofibroma: Magnetic resonance (MR) images: axial T1 W with fat saturation (a), coronal Short Tau Inversion Recovery (STIR) (b), and sagittal gadolinium-enhanced T1 W with fat saturation (c) demonstrate a vascular enhancing nasopharyngeal mass widening the sphenopalatine foramen ([a], white asterisk), extending into the nasal cavity and sphenoid sinus. There was primarily a unilateral supply from the inferolateral trunk (white arrow) and mandibulovidian branch (black arrow) of the left internal carotid artery (ICA) (d) and distal branches of the left internal maxillary artery, primarily the sphenopalatine artery, as seen on external carotid angiograms (e, f). Angiography demonstrates minimally dilated feeding arteries and an intense vascular blush persisting into the late venous phase (g). There was a very small contribution from the right sphenopalatine artery (not shown).


2.3 Arterial and Venous Anatomy


Although variations are expected, the commonest skull base tumor types have well-described typical arterial supply patterns.


Glomus jugulare tumors (Fig. 2.1, Fig. 2.2, and Fig. 2.3) arise from paraganglia located along either Jacobson’s or Arnold’s nerve, around the jugular bulb and the vascular supply is well reported.1 ,​ 2 The inferior tympanic branch of the ascending pharyngeal artery supplies the inferomedial portion of the tumor at jugular foramen. The posterolateral component derives a supply from the stylomastoid artery, a branch of either the occipital or posterior auricular arteries. Anteriorly, the tumor is supplied by the anterior tympanic branch of the internal maxillary artery and the superior compartments from the middle and accessory meningeal arteries. Cerebellar arteries contribute to the intradural extension of the tumor.


Juvenile nasopharyngeal angiofibromas (Fig. 2.4) are benign but locally aggressive tumors commonly arising from the nasopharynx in the sphenopalatine foramen/pterygopalatine fossa. They expand anteriorly into the nasal cavity, ethmoid and maxillary sinuses, and laterally into the infratemporal fossa. Further expansion along skull base foramina or by direct bone erosion of the greater sphenoid wing or lateral wall of the sphenoid sinus results in intracranial extension.


The primary arterial supply is from the distal internal maxillary artery,3 ,​ 4 mainly the sphenopalatine artery, descending palatine arteries, and ascending pharyngeal artery but with accessory supply from the anterior and posterior deep temporal arteries and accessory meningeal artery. As the tumor grows, it recruits additional supply from the ascending palatine branch of the facial artery, ethmoidal branches from the ophthalmic artery, and branches of the internal carotid artery (ICA) (mandibulovidian, pterygovaginal artery, inferolateral trunk, and meningohypophyseal trunk). Arterial supply may be bilateral even if the tumor is lateralized.


The arterial anatomy of skull base meningiomas is given in Table 2.1. Hemangiopericytomas may be confused with meningiomas but are even more vascular, have corkscrew-like vessels, and receive their dominant supply from the internal carotid or vertebrobasilar circulation. Endolymphatic sac tumors are supplied by the ascending pharyngeal and stylomastoid arteries.


Table 2.1 Arterial supply to skull base meningiomas


























Anatomical region Location Common vascular supply
Anterior skull base meningioma Olfactory groove and planum sphenoidale

Ethmoidal branches of the ophthalmic artery; recurrent meningeal branch of lacrimal artery

Middle fossa meningioma Cavernous sinus and clinoid region

Inferolateral and meningohypophyseal trunk


Cavernous branch of middle meningeal artery; accessory meningeal artery of foramen rotundum; recurrent meningeal branch of ophthalmic artery

Sphenoid wing

Sphenoidal branch of middle meningeal artery (lateral tumors)


Internal carotid artery (medial tumors)

Posterior fossa meningioma Petroclival region and cerebellar pontine angle

Internal carotid artery via meningohypophyseal trunk


Middle meningeal and accessory meningeal arteries


Ascending pharyngeal artery


Occipital and posterior auricular arteries


Assessment of venous structures is particularly useful in skull base meningiomas, although sites of arteriovenous shunting are also often present in JNAs.5 ,​ 6


In meningiomas (Fig. 2.6), an early arterial phase blush persisting into the late venous phase is characteristic and the presence of arteriovenous shunting has been associated with more aggressive tumors.7 It has been demonstrated that skull base meningiomas change the pattern of venous circulation by exerting mass effect and obstructing the surrounding venous structures, causing drainage to be diverted toward collateral venous routes.8 ,​ 9


This is particularly relevant in petroclival meningiomas (PCMs) as particular patterns of drainage of the superficial middle cerebral vein (SMCV), such as drainage into the pterygoid plexus through a sphenobasal vein or into the transverse sinus (TS) through a sphenopetrosal sinus, are more prevalent in this population and have been associated with intraoperative and postoperative venous complications.10 ,​ 11


Invasion of the dural sinuses by the tumor can cause a similar pattern of dural sinus occlusion and alternative pattern of venous drainage on the cerebral angiogram. Magnetic resonance (MR) is invaluable in distinguishing simple mass effect on the venous structures from invasion of the dural sinus.


Therefore, detailed assessment of the drainage pattern will impact on outcomes and chosen surgical approach. For example, if an anterior petrosal approach is considered, the presence of a sphenobasal vein should prompt consideration of strategies to avoid injuring this vein in the region of the foramen ovale.12 If there is drainage through a sphenopetrosal sinus, a tentorial incision that preserves drainage during a transpetrosal approach are needed.11


Venous drainage characterization is also important in anterior clinoid meningiomas. If drainage of the SMCV into the pterygoid plexus or directly into the cavernous sinus (CS) is present, a tailored surgical strategy is required.13


2.4 Imaging of Skull Base Vascular Tumors


Clinical assessment is limited by the inaccessible location of most skull base neoplasms and, as such, evaluation is predominantly radiological. Computed tomography (CT), including high-resolution bone reconstructions and CT angiography (CTA) and venography (CTV), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), including postcontrast sequences and magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) and magnetic resonance venography (MRV), are the primary imaging modalities for the initial evaluation and diagnosis of skull base pathologies. Cross-sectional imaging allows for the assessment of the primary lesion as well as involvement of adjacent tissue, bone infiltration, perineural spread, and distortion or direct invasion of vascular structures. Although vascular anatomy, gross tumoral vascularity, and the patency of involved blood vessels are adequately evaluated using CTA/CTV and MRA/MRV, these modalities cannot accurately assess the arterial feeding vessels, venous drainage, collateral blood flow, and complex vascular architecture of the lesion. Dynamic CTA can provide noninvasive high-resolution four-dimensional radiographic information of tumor vasculature but currently its clinical use is yet to be defined and does not yet replace formal angiography.14


Digital subtraction angiography (DSA) remains the “gold standard” for preoperative evaluation of tumor-involved vasculature. Comprehensive angiography of the internal and external carotid arteries, vertebral arteries, and (depending upon tumor location and extent) the thyrocervical and costocervical trunks provides essential preoperative information regarding the tumoral vascular anatomy, identifies the dominant feeding arteries that may be considered for preoperative embolization, and assesses the anatomy of and adequacy of the circle of Willis (COW), the degree of collateralization, and adequacy of the posterior circulation and venous patency and dominance. Head and neck tumors may parasitize regional pial blood supply as they enlarge and extend intracranially. Arterial displacement, distortion, and encasement may be identified (Fig. 2.6). It is also important to define the arterial supply to the retina as preoperative embolization may involve arterial connections with the central artery of the retina. Dangerous anastomoses, however, may not reveal themselves on an initial angiogram but may only become obvious when changes in blood flow occur during embolization. These are, therefore, more appropriately discussed elsewhere.


The primary aim of surgery is to achieve the greatest resection with minimal complications. On occasion, total or maximal resection may only be achievable with permanent occlusion of the ICA or other parent vessel. In this context, DSA in combination with balloon test occlusion (BTO) is necessary to evaluate whether the patient will tolerate occlusion/sacrifice of the ICA. Assessing the safety of vertebral artery (VA) occlusion will depend upon VA dominance and adequacy of the posterior communicating arteries, which can also be assessed with a VA BTO.


2.4.1 Digital Subtraction Angiography (DSA)


A standard cerebral angiogram involves selective injection of the internal and external carotid arteries and vertebral arteries bilaterally (occasionally the thyrocervical and costocervical trunks as well). When embolization is being considered, super-selective injection of tumor feeding vessels can be performed using smaller microcatheters. Collateral blood flow and the adequacy of the COW can be assessed with carotid cross compression (Matas maneuver) or compression of the ipsilateral ICA during a VA injection (Allcock maneuver).


By extending each fluoroscopic “run” into the late venous phase, it is possible to characterize not only the pattern of tumor enhancement but also its venous drainage pattern, mass effect, and eventual obstruction of intracranial venous structures.


Careful characterization of the venous anatomy and existing collateral routes will help plan the best surgical approach and minimize perioperative venous complications.


Complications


DSA confers a low risk of complication,15 ,​ 16 ,​ 17 which may occur at the site of puncture or within the cervicocerebral circulation. Puncture site complications include localized hematoma, vessel dissection, pseudoaneurysm formation, and retroperitoneal hematoma. Cervicocerebral complications include vessel dissection and distant emboli with the associated risk of transient ischemic attack (TIA) and stroke. The risk of neurological complication associated with DSA varies in the published literature, but the larger, more recent studies report a rate of 0 to 0.7% for transient neurological symptoms, and 0 to 0.5% for permanent neurological deficits. In experienced hands, DSA is therefore a safe procedure with a very low risk of significant associated morbidity.


2.5 Balloon Test Occlusion (BTO) (Fig. 2.5 and Fig. 2.6)


The ability to achieve gross total resection or significant debulking of tumors which were previously considered inoperable has come with the advancement of skull base surgical technique over the past two decades. These neoplasms frequently involve the ICA and maximum resection can sometimes only be obtained with preoperative permanent occlusion of the vessel, if surgery carries a significant risk of vessel rupture and requires intraprocedural ICA ligation. Untested vessel sacrifice carries a significant risk of neurological morbidity secondary to immediate or delayed hypoperfusion. Historic data demonstrates a 17 to 49%18 ,​ 19 ,​ 20 ,​ 21 incidence of stroke (many fatal) following permanent occlusion of the ICA and around 28% for common carotid artery occlusion without preoperative trial of temporary occlusion.




Fig. 2.5 Balloon test occlusion (BTO) right internal carotid artery (ICA). Same patient as Fig. 2.1, Fig. 2.2, and Fig. 2.3. Lateral (a) and frontal (b) projections of a right ICA angiogram demonstrate a balloon inflated (white asterisk) in the cervical ICA in a heparinized patient and injection through the double lumen balloon catheter with stagnation of contrast due to flow arrest. The patient experienced no neurological deficit. Frontal projections of a left ICA (c) and left vertebral artery (d) angiograms, with maintained right ICA occlusion, demonstrate cross flow from the left ICA via the anterior communicating artery and excellent cross flow from the right posterior cerebral artery via the posterior communicating artery ([d], white arrow). Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) axial projection (e) showed symmetric perfusion at the time of balloon occlusion without evidence of a perfusion deficit suggesting that ICA occlusion would be tolerated. Venous phase image of the left ICA angiography (f) showed no significant delay in venous filling between hemispheres. Right hemisphere venous contrast is diluted due to excellent flow and wash out of contrast from the right posterior cerebral artery across the posterior communicating artery.

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May 6, 2024 | Posted by in NEUROSURGERY | Comments Off on Evaluation of Tumor-Involved Vasculature (Including Balloon Test Occlusion)

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