Follow-up CT Angiography (CTA) is necessary for ensuring occlusion effect of endovascular coiling. However, the implanted metal coil will introduce artifacts that have a negative spillover into radiologic assessment. 
Method. 
A framework named ReMAR is proposed in this paper for metal artifacts reduction (MAR) from follow-up CTA of patients with coiled aneurysms. It employs preoperative CTA to provide the prior knowledge of the aneurysm and the expected position of the coil as a guidance thus balances the metal artifacts removal performance and clinical feasibility. The ReMAR is composed of three modules: segmentation, registration and MAR module. The segmentation and registration modules obtain the metal coil knowledge via implementing aneurysms delineation on preoperative CTA and alignment of follow-up CTA. The MAR module consisting of hybrid CNN- and transformer- architectures is utilized to restore sinogram and remove the artifact from reconstructed image. Both image quality and vessel rendering effect after metal artifacts removal are assessed in order to responding clinical concerns.
Main results. 
137 patients undergone endovascular coiling have been enrolled in the study: 13 of them have complete diagnosis/follow-up records for end-to-end validation, while the rest lacked of follow-up records are used for model training. Quantitative metrics show ReMAR significantly reduced the metal-artifact burden in follow-up CTA. Qualitative ranks show ReMAR could preserve the morphology of blood vessels during artifact removal as desired by doctors.
Significance. 
The ReMAR could significantly remove the artifacts caused by implanted metal coil in the follow-up CTA. It can be used to enhance the overall image quality and convince CTA an alternative to invasive follow-up in treated intracranial aneurysm (IA).