Optimizing Surgical Timing to Reduce Stroke Risk in Pediatric Moyamoya Disease
Optimizing Surgical Timing to Reduce Stroke Risk in Pediatric Moyamoya Disease

Optimizing Surgical Timing to Reduce Stroke Risk in Pediatric Moyamoya Disease

Stroke. 2025 Sep 17. doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.125.052044. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Identifying the optimal surgical timing is critical for reducing stroke risk in pediatric patients with Moyamoya disease, but evidence to guide clinical decision-making remains limited. This study aimed to determine the optimal surgical timing based on different symptom onset patterns.

METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed pediatric patients with Moyamoya disease who underwent revascularization surgery at a single center in China between July 2007 and July 2018. Patients were categorized by symptom onset pattern: infarction-onset, transient ischemic attack (TIA)-onset, or nonischemic. The TIA-onset group was further subdivided into high-risk and low-risk subgroups. Data on preoperative/perioperative stroke events and diagnosis-to-operation intervals were collected. Receiver operating characteristic curves and multivariate analyses were used to identify surgical timing thresholds. Stroke incidences were compared across groups stratified by surgical interval.

RESULTS: A total of 736 patients (mean age 7.2±3.9 years; 50.7% male) were included. The incidence density of preoperative cerebral infarction was 11.83 per 1000 person-months, while that of cerebral hemorrhage was 1.21 per 1000 person-months. For patients with infarction-onset and high-risk TIA-onset patterns, a surgical waiting time exceeding 2.5 months (area under the curve, 0.722; specificity, 0.561; sensitivity, 0.882; P<0.001) and 6.5 months (area under the curve, 0.631; specificity, 0.400; sensitivity, 0.804; P=0.006), respectively, was associated with a significantly increased risk of preoperative cerebral infarction. In nonischemic patients, a prolonged surgical waiting time exceeding 5 years (area under the curve, 0.761; specificity, 0.856; sensitivity, 0.571; P<0.05) was associated with a significantly increased risk of cerebral hemorrhage. For patients with initial symptoms of infarction or high-risk TIA, earlier surgery did not increase the incidence of perioperative stroke events.

CONCLUSIONS: For children with Moyamoya disease, surgical intervention was beneficial within 2.5 months for patients with infarction-onset, 6.5 months for patients with high-risk TIA onset, and 5 years for nonischemic patients in reducing stroke risk.

PMID:40959927 | DOI:10.1161/STROKEAHA.125.052044