IMPORTANCE Randomized clinical trials have shown the superiority of endovascular therapy (EVT) compared with best medical management for acute ischemic strokes with large vessel occlusion (LVO) in the anterior circulation. However, of 1287 patients enrolled in 5 trials, 94 with isolated second (M2) segment occlusions were randomized and 51 of these received EVT, thereby limiting evidence for treating isolated M2 segment occlusions as reflected in American Heart Association guidelines. OBJECTIVE To evaluate EVT safety and effectiveness in M2 occlusions in a cohort of patients with acute ischemic stroke. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS This multicenter retrospective cohort study pooled patients with acute ischemic strokes and LVO isolated to M2 segments from 10 US centers. Patients with acute ischemic strokes and LVO in M2 segments presenting within 8 hours from their last known normal clinical status (LKN) from January 1, 2012, to April 30, 2015, were divided based on their treatment into EVT and medical management groups. Logistic regression was used to compare the 2 groups. Univariate and multivariate analyses evaluated associations with good outcome in the EVT group. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The primary outcome was the 90-day modified Rankin Scale score (range, 0-6; scores of 0-2 indicate a good outcome); the secondary outcome was symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage. RESULTS A total of 522 patients (256 men [49%]; 266 women [51%]; mean [SD] age, 68 [14.3] years) were identified, of whom 288 received EVT and 234 received best medical management. Patients in the medical management group were older (median [interquartile range] age, 73 [60-81] vs 68 [56-78] years) and had higher rates of intravenous tissue plasminogen activator treatment (174 [74.4%] vs 172 [59.7%]); otherwise the 2 groups were balanced. The rate of good outcomes was higher for EVT (181 [62.8%]) than for medical management (83 [35.4%]). The EVT group had 3 times the odds of a good outcome as the medical management group (odds ratio [OR], 3.1; 95% CI, 2.1-4.4; P < .001) even after adjustment for age, National Institute of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score, Alberta Stroke Program Early Computed Tomographic Score (ASPECTS), intravenous tissue plasminogen activator treatment, and time from LKN to arrival in the emergency department (OR, 3.2; 95% CI, 2-5.2; P < .001). No statistical difference in symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage was found (5.6% vs 2.1% for the EVT group vs the medical management group; P = .10). The treatment effect did not change after adjusting for center (OR, 3.3; 95% CI, 1.9-5.8; P < .001). Age, NIHSS score, ASPECTS, time from LKN to reperfusion, and successful reperfusion score of at least 2b (range, 0 [no perfusion] to 3 [full perfusion with filling of all distal branches]) were independently associated with good outcome of EVT. A linear association was found between good outcome and time from LKN to reperfusion. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Although a randomized clinical trial is needed to confirm these findings, available...
Background and Purpose Intra-arterial therapy (IAT) promotes recanalization of large artery occlusions (LAO) in acute ischemic stroke (AIS). Despite high recanalization rates, poor clinical outcomes are common. We attempted to optimize a score that combines clinical and imaging variables to more accurately predict poor outcome after IAT in anterior circulation occlusions. Methods AIS patients undergoing IAT at UT-Houston for LAO (MCA or ICA) were reviewed. Independent predictors of poor outcome (modified Rankin Scale 4-6) were studied. External validation was conducted on IAT-treated patients at Emory University. Results 163 patients were identified at UT Houston. Independent predictors of poor outcome (p values ≤0.2) were identified as score variables using sensitivity analysis and logistic regression. Houston Intra-arterial Therapy 2 (HIAT2) score ranges 0-10: age (≤59=0, 60-79=2, ≥80 years=4), glucose (<150=0, ≥150=1), NIHSS (≤10=0), 11-20=1, ≥21=2), ASPECTS (8-10=0, ≤7=3). Patients with HIAT2 ≥5 were more likely to have poor outcomes at discharge (OR:6.43, 95%CI:2.75-15.02, p<.001). After adjusting for reperfusion (TICI≥2b) and time from symptom onset to recanalization, HIAT2 ≥5 remained an independent predictor of poor outcome (OR:5.88, 95%CI 1.96-17.64, p=0.02). Results from Emory's cohort (198 patients) were consistent; patients with HIAT 2 score ≥5 had 6 times greater odds of poor outcome at discharge and at 90 days. HIAT2 outperformed other previously published predictive scores. Conclusion The HIAT2 score, which combines clinical and imaging variables, performed better than all previous scores in predicting poor outcome after IAT for anterior circulation LAO.
IMPORTANCEA direct to angiography (DTA) treatment paradigm without repeated imaging for transferred patients with large vessel occlusion (LVO) may reduce time to endovascular thrombectomy (EVT). Whether DTA is safe and associated with better outcomes in the late (>6 hours) window is unknown. Also, DTA feasibility and effectiveness in reducing time to EVT during on-call vs regular-work hours and the association of interfacility transfer times with DTA outcomes have not been established. OBJECTIVE To evaluate the functional and safety outcomes of DTA vs repeated imaging in the different treatment windows and on-call hours vs regular hours. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTSThis pooled retrospective cohort study at 6 US and European comprehensive stroke centers enrolled adults (aged Ն18 years) with anterior circulation LVO (internal cerebral artery or middle cerebral artery subdivisions M1/M2) and transferred for EVT within 24 hours of the last-known-well time from January 1, 2014, to February 29, 2020.EXPOSURES Repeated imaging (computed tomography with or without computed tomographic angiography or computed tomography perfusion) before EVT vs DTA.MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Functional independence (90-day modified Rankin Scale score, 0-2) was the primary outcome. Symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage, mortality, and time metrics were also compared between the DTA and repeated imaging groups.
Background and Purpose: Time elapsed from last-known well (LKW) and baseline imaging results are influential on endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) outcomes. Methods: In a prospective multicenter cohort study of imaging selection for endovascular thrombectomy (SELECT [Optimizing Patient’s Selection for Endovascular Treatment in Acute Ischemic Stroke], the early infarct growth rate (EIGR) was defined as ischemic core volume on perfusion imaging (relative cerebral blood flow<30%) divided by the time from LKW to imaging. The optimal EIGR cutoff was identified by maximizing the sum of the sensitivity and specificity to correlate best with favorable outcome and to improve its the predictability. Patients were stratified into slow progressors if EIGR<cutoff and fast progressors if EIGR≥the optimal cutoff. Good collaterals were defined on computed tomography perfusion as a hypoperfusion intensity ratio <0.4 and on computed tomography angiography as collateral score >2. The primary outcome was 90-day functional independence (modified Rankin Scale score =0–2). Results: Of 445 consented, 361 (285 EVT, 76 medical management only) patients met the study inclusion criteria. The optimal EIGR was <10 mL/h; 200 EVT patients were slow and 85 fast progressors. Fast progressors had a higher median National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (19 versus 15, P <0.001), shorter time from LKW to groin puncture (180 versus 266 minutes, P <0.001). Slow progressors had better collaterals on computed tomography perfusion: hypoperfusion intensity ratio (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]: 5.11 [2.43–10.76], P <0.001) and computed tomography angiography: collaterals-score (aOR: 4.43 [1.83–10.73], P =0.001). EIGR independently correlated with functional independence after EVT, adjusting for age, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale, time LKW to groin puncture, reperfusion (modified Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction score of ≥2b), IV-tPA (intravenous tissue-type plasminogen activator), and transfer status (aOR: 0.78 [0.65–0.94], P =0.01). Slow progressors had higher functional independence rates (121 [61%] versus 30 [35%], P <0.001) and had 3.5 times the likelihood of achieving modified Rankin Scale score =0–2 with EVT (aOR=2.94 [95% CI, 1.53–5.61], P =0.001) as compared to fast progressors, who had substantially worse clinical outcomes both in early and late time window. The odds of good outcome decreased by 14% for each 5 mL/h increase in EIGR (aOR, 0.87 [0.80–0.94], P <0.001) and declined more rapidly in fast progressors. Conclusions: The EIGR strongly correlates with both collateral status and clinical outcomes after EVT. Fast progressors demonstrated worse outcomes when receiving EVT beyond 6 hours of stroke onset as compared to those who received EVT within 6 hours. Registration: URL: https://clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT02446587.
This article reports the first human study that shows with direct measurements the independent influence of CO in the setting of vasospasm. Increases in CO without changes in MAP can elevate CBF. This finding has immediate clinical application because CO manipulation is much safer than increasing MAP. Because both interventions were equally efficacious, our protocol has been changed to augment CO as a first measure. Induced hypertension is reserved for patients in whom this initial treatment fails.
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