TY - JOUR
T1 - Diagnosis and treatment of Chiari malformation and syringomyelia in adults: international consensus document
AU - Ciaramitaro, Palma
AU - Massimi, Luca
AU - Bertuccio, Alessandro
AU - Solari, Alessandra
AU - Farinotti, Mariangela
AU - Peretta, Paola
AU - Saletti, Veronica
AU - Chiapparini, Luisa
AU - Barbanera, Andrea
AU - Garbossa, Diego
AU - Bolognese, Paolo
AU - Brodbelt, Andrew
AU - Celada, Carlo
AU - Cocito, Dario
AU - Curone, Marcella
AU - Devigili, Grazia
AU - Erbetta, Alessandra
AU - Ferraris, Marilena
AU - Furlanetto, Marika
AU - Gilanton, Mado
AU - Jallo, George
AU - Karadjova, Marieta
AU - Klekamp, Jorg
AU - Massaro, Fulvio
AU - Morar, Sylvia
AU - Parker, Fabrice
AU - Perrini, Paolo
AU - Poca, Maria Antonia
AU - Sahuquillo, Juan
AU - Stoodley, Marcus
AU - Talamonti, Giuseppe
AU - Triulzi, Fabio
AU - Valentini, Maria Consuelo
AU - Visocchi, Massimiliano
AU - Valentini, Laura
AU - Valentini, Anna Lia
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Background: Syringomyelia and Chiari malformation are classified as rare diseases on Orphanet, but international guidelines on diagnostic criteria and case definition are missing. Aim of the study: to reach a consensus among international experts on controversial issues in diagnosis and treatment of Chiari 1 malformation and syringomyelia in adults. Methods: A multidisciplinary panel of the Chiari and Syringomyelia Consortium (4 neurosurgeons, 2 neurologists, 1 neuroradiologist, 1 pediatric neurologist) appointed an international Jury of experts to elaborate a consensus document. After an evidence-based review and further discussions, 63 draft statements grouped in 4 domains (definition and classification/planning/surgery/isolated syringomyelia) were formulated. A Jury of 32 experts in the field of diagnosis and treatment of Chiari and syringomyelia and patient representatives were invited to take part in a three-round Delphi process. The Jury received a structured questionnaire containing the 63 statements, each to be voted on a 4-point Likert-type scale and commented. Statements with agreement <75% were revised and entered round 2. Round 3 was face-to-face, during the Chiari Consensus Conference (Milan, November 2019). Results: Thirty-one out of 32 Jury members (6 neurologists, 4 neuroradiologists, 19 neurosurgeons, and 2 patient association representatives) participated in the consensus. After round 2, a consensus was reached on 57/63 statements (90.5%). The six difficult statements were revised and voted in round 3, and the whole set of statements was further discussed and approved. Conclusions: The consensus document consists of 63 statements which benefited from expert discussion and fine-tuning, serving clinicians and researchers following adults with Chiari and syringomyelia.
AB - Background: Syringomyelia and Chiari malformation are classified as rare diseases on Orphanet, but international guidelines on diagnostic criteria and case definition are missing. Aim of the study: to reach a consensus among international experts on controversial issues in diagnosis and treatment of Chiari 1 malformation and syringomyelia in adults. Methods: A multidisciplinary panel of the Chiari and Syringomyelia Consortium (4 neurosurgeons, 2 neurologists, 1 neuroradiologist, 1 pediatric neurologist) appointed an international Jury of experts to elaborate a consensus document. After an evidence-based review and further discussions, 63 draft statements grouped in 4 domains (definition and classification/planning/surgery/isolated syringomyelia) were formulated. A Jury of 32 experts in the field of diagnosis and treatment of Chiari and syringomyelia and patient representatives were invited to take part in a three-round Delphi process. The Jury received a structured questionnaire containing the 63 statements, each to be voted on a 4-point Likert-type scale and commented. Statements with agreement <75% were revised and entered round 2. Round 3 was face-to-face, during the Chiari Consensus Conference (Milan, November 2019). Results: Thirty-one out of 32 Jury members (6 neurologists, 4 neuroradiologists, 19 neurosurgeons, and 2 patient association representatives) participated in the consensus. After round 2, a consensus was reached on 57/63 statements (90.5%). The six difficult statements were revised and voted in round 3, and the whole set of statements was further discussed and approved. Conclusions: The consensus document consists of 63 statements which benefited from expert discussion and fine-tuning, serving clinicians and researchers following adults with Chiari and syringomyelia.
KW - Adults
KW - Chiari malformation
KW - Classification
KW - Consensus
KW - Surgery
KW - Syringomyelia
KW - Adults
KW - Chiari malformation
KW - Classification
KW - Consensus
KW - Surgery
KW - Syringomyelia
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/304671
U2 - 10.1007/s10072-021-05347-3
DO - 10.1007/s10072-021-05347-3
M3 - Article
SN - 1590-1874
VL - 43
SP - 1327
EP - 1342
JO - Neurological Sciences
JF - Neurological Sciences
ER -