Introduction
The aim of this study was to evaluate the accuracy of automated software (iStroke) on magnetic resonance (MR) apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) and perfusion-weighted imaging (PWI) against ground truth in assessing infarct core, and compare the hypoperfusion volume and mismatch volume on iStroke with those on Food and Drug Administration-approved software (RAPID) in patients with acute ischemic stroke.
Methods
We used the single-volume decomposition method to develop the iStroke (iStroke; Beijing Tiantan Hospital, Beijing, China) software. Patients with ischemic stroke were collected from two educational hospitals in China with MR-PWI performed in the emergency department within 24 h of symptom onset. Infarct core volume was defined as ADC < 620 × 10
−6
mm
2
/s and hypoperfusion volume was defined as Tmax > 6 s. We compared the accuracy of infarct core volume using iStroke and RAPID (iSchema View Inc, Menlo Park, CA) software with ground truth.
Results
We included 405 patients with acute ischemic stroke with MR ADC and PWI sequences. The infarct core volume on iStroke (median 2.43 ml, interquartile range [IQR] 0.60–10.32 ml) was not significantly different from the ground truth (median 2.89 ml, IQR 0.77–9.17 ml) (
P
= 0.07); Bland–Altman curves showed that the core volume of iStroke and RAPID software were comparable with each other on individual agreement with ground truth. The hypoperfusion volume and mismatch volume on iStroke were not statistically different from those on the RAPID software, respectively. In patients with large vessel occlusion (
n
= 74), the agreement between iStroke and RAPID was substantial (kappa = 0.76) according to DEFUSE 3 criteria (infarct core < 70 ml, mismatch volume ≥ 15 ml, and mismatch ratio ≥ 1.8).
Conclusions
The iStroke automatic processing of ADC and PWI is a reliable software for the identification of diffusion–perfusion mismatch in acute ischemic stroke.
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