Japanese Surveillance of Neuroendovascular Therapy in JR-NET - Part II. Japanese Registry of NeuroEndovascular Treatment 3. Main Report

This study, following Japanese Registry of NeuroEndovascular Treatment 1 and 2 (JR-NET 1 & 2), shows an annual trend of cases including adverse events and clinical outcomes at 30 days after NET. JR-NET3 was registered by 749 cumulative total number of physicians, certified by the Japanese Societ...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neurologia medico-chirurgica 2019, Vol.59(3), pp.106-115
Hauptverfasser: SAKAI, Nobuyuki, UCHIDA, Kazutaka, IIHARA, Koji, SATOW, Tetsu, EZURA, Masayuki, HYODO, Akio, MIYACHI, Shigeru, MIYAMOTO, Susumu, NAGAI, Yoji, NISHIMURA, Kunihiro, TOYODA, Kazunori, YOSHIMURA, Shinichi, IMAMURA, Hirotoshi, SAKAI, Chiaki, MATSUMARU, Yuji, Japanese Registry of Neuroendovascular Therapy (JR-NET) investigators
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container_end_page 115
container_issue 3
container_start_page 106
container_title Neurologia medico-chirurgica
container_volume 59
creator SAKAI, Nobuyuki
UCHIDA, Kazutaka
IIHARA, Koji
SATOW, Tetsu
EZURA, Masayuki
HYODO, Akio
MIYACHI, Shigeru
MIYAMOTO, Susumu
NAGAI, Yoji
NISHIMURA, Kunihiro
TOYODA, Kazunori
YOSHIMURA, Shinichi
IMAMURA, Hirotoshi
SAKAI, Chiaki
MATSUMARU, Yuji
Japanese Registry of Neuroendovascular Therapy (JR-NET) investigators
description This study, following Japanese Registry of NeuroEndovascular Treatment 1 and 2 (JR-NET 1 & 2), shows an annual trend of cases including adverse events and clinical outcomes at 30 days after NET. JR-NET3 was registered by 749 cumulative total number of physicians, certified by the Japanese Society of Neuroendovascular Therapy in 166 centers, between 2010 and 2014. Medical information about the patients was anonymized and retrospectively registered through a website. A total of 40,177 patients were recruited, 632 patients were excluded because data of preprocedural status were not available. So we analyzed 39,545 patients retrospectively. The proportion of octogenarians is increasing year-by-year and 14.7% in 2014 compared with 10.4% in 2010. Most frequent target disease is intracranial aneurysm. For the proportion of the treatment of intracranial aneurysm, 50.0% in 2010, but that has decreased to 44.8% in 2014. However, number of procedures were increased from 3150 in 2010 to 3419 in 2014. Although before the positive clinical evidence of mechanical thrombectomy for acute ischemic stroke (AIS) was established, the proportion of endovascular treatment for AIS increased 13.8% in 2014 compared with 6.3% in 2010. The number of patients requiring neuroendovascular treatment in Japan is increasing since 2010–2013, but that declined a little in 2014 caused by study operation suspended at the end of 2013. The outcomes of such therapy are clinically acceptable. Details of each type of treatment will be investigated in sub-analyses of the database.
doi_str_mv 10.2176/nmc.oa.2018-0267
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Details of each type of treatment will be investigated in sub-analyses of the database.</description><subject>Aneurysm</subject><subject>Aneurysms</subject><subject>Cardiovascular system</subject><subject>clinical outcome</subject><subject>endovascular treatment</subject><subject>Ischemia</subject><subject>nationwide surveillance</subject><subject>Original</subject><subject>Patients</subject><subject>registry study</subject><subject>safety endpoint</subject><issn>0470-8105</issn><issn>1349-8029</issn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>article</rsrctype><creationdate>2019</creationdate><recordtype>article</recordtype><recordid>eNpVkU9v00AQxVcIRKPQOye0EmeH2T9ery9IqEpLqlJQCOfVZjNOXDm7YW1Hyifo12ZNimkvM4d585uneYS8ZzDjrFCf_N7Ngp1xYDoDropXZMKELDMNvHxNJiALyDSD_IJctm29BuBSS6GLt-RCgJZcaD0hj7f2YD22SH_28Yh101jvkIaK3mMfA_pNONrW9Y2NdLXDaA8nWnt6u8zu5yua0R82dnSxmNGRs8Rt3XbxNDLmLxgRbbdH31Exo99sQi3xEGL3jrypbNPi5VOfkl_X89XV1-zu-83i6std5gqtukyWUCjLAQsoRaVVBUrnZa64tusiV-hYKVklmWUSVMU3gjGFYJPabtJvpJiSz2fuoV_vceOSk2gbc4j13saTCbY2Lye-3pltOBolhUw_S4CPT4AYfvfYduYh9NEnz4ZzUSoOMudJBWeVi6FtI1bjBQZmSM-k9NI1M6RnhvTSyofnzsaFf1klwc1ZkKa1s03wTe3x_3m3YT79GwdmaQDyEsTQDDBQqbBccClFetyUXJ9JD21ntzieSlnWrsG_3vLSiKE89zgK3M5Gg178AaQtxcI</recordid><startdate>2019</startdate><enddate>2019</enddate><creator>SAKAI, Nobuyuki</creator><creator>UCHIDA, Kazutaka</creator><creator>IIHARA, Koji</creator><creator>SATOW, Tetsu</creator><creator>EZURA, Masayuki</creator><creator>HYODO, Akio</creator><creator>MIYACHI, Shigeru</creator><creator>MIYAMOTO, Susumu</creator><creator>NAGAI, Yoji</creator><creator>NISHIMURA, Kunihiro</creator><creator>TOYODA, Kazunori</creator><creator>YOSHIMURA, Shinichi</creator><creator>IMAMURA, Hirotoshi</creator><creator>SAKAI, Chiaki</creator><creator>MATSUMARU, Yuji</creator><creator>Japanese Registry of Neuroendovascular Therapy (JR-NET) investigators</creator><general>The Japan Neurosurgical Society</general><general>THE JAPAN NEUROSURGICAL SOCIETY</general><general>Japan Science and Technology Agency</general><scope>NPM</scope><scope>AAYXX</scope><scope>CITATION</scope><scope>7TK</scope><scope>5PM</scope></search><sort><creationdate>2019</creationdate><title>Japanese Surveillance of Neuroendovascular Therapy in JR-NET - Part II. 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So we analyzed 39,545 patients retrospectively. The proportion of octogenarians is increasing year-by-year and 14.7% in 2014 compared with 10.4% in 2010. Most frequent target disease is intracranial aneurysm. For the proportion of the treatment of intracranial aneurysm, 50.0% in 2010, but that has decreased to 44.8% in 2014. However, number of procedures were increased from 3150 in 2010 to 3419 in 2014. Although before the positive clinical evidence of mechanical thrombectomy for acute ischemic stroke (AIS) was established, the proportion of endovascular treatment for AIS increased 13.8% in 2014 compared with 6.3% in 2010. The number of patients requiring neuroendovascular treatment in Japan is increasing since 2010–2013, but that declined a little in 2014 caused by study operation suspended at the end of 2013. The outcomes of such therapy are clinically acceptable. 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subjects Aneurysm
Aneurysms
Cardiovascular system
clinical outcome
endovascular treatment
Ischemia
nationwide surveillance
Original
Patients
registry study
safety endpoint
title Japanese Surveillance of Neuroendovascular Therapy in JR-NET - Part II. Japanese Registry of NeuroEndovascular Treatment 3. Main Report
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