95 results on '"Roos, Yvo"'
Search Results
2. Collateral-based selection for endovascular treatment of acute ischaemic stroke in the late window (MR CLEAN-LATE): 2-year follow-up of a phase 3, multicentre, open-label, randomised controlled trial in the Netherlands.
- Author
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Huijberts, Ilse, Pinckaers, Florentina M E, Olthuis, Susanne G H, van Kuijk, Sander M J, Postma, Alida A, Boogaarts, Hieronymus D, Roos, Yvo B W E M, Majoie, Charles B L M, van der Lugt, Aad, Dippel, Diederik W J, van Zwam, Wim H, and van Oostenbrugge, Robert J
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HEMORRHAGIC stroke , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *ISCHEMIC stroke , *THERAPEUTICS , *MISSING data (Statistics) - Abstract
The MR CLEAN-LATE trial provided evidence for the safety and efficacy of endovascular treatment for acute ischaemic stroke within the late window (after 6–24 h) in patients who were preselected based on the presence of collateral flow on CT angiography. We aimed to evaluate clinical outcomes 2 years after randomisation. MR CLEAN-LATE was a phase 3, multicentre, open-label, blinded-endpoint, randomised controlled trial conducted at 18 stroke intervention centres in the Netherlands. If endovascular treatment could be initiated within 6–24 h of symptom onset or last seen well, patients (aged 18 years or older) with an acute ischaemic stroke due to a large vessel occlusion in the anterior circulation and at least some collateral flow in the affected middle cerebral artery territory on CT angiography were randomly assigned (1:1) to either endovascular treatment with best medical treatment (endovascular treatment group) or best medical treatment alone (control group). Web-based randomisation, stratified by centre, was performed with the use of permuted blocks (block size eight to 20). The researchers who collected clinical outcomes and analysed the results were masked to treatment allocation; treating physicians, local investigators, and patients were aware of the received treatment. The primary outcome of MR CLEAN-LATE was the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score at 90 days after randomisation. For this 2-year prespecified analysis, the primary outcome was mRS score at 2 years (minus 3 months to plus 6 months). Primary and safety analyses were performed based on the modified intention-to-treat principle, and included patients who provided (deferred) consent or died before consent could be obtained. Missing data were handled with multiple imputation by chained equations. The trial is completed and is registered at ISRCTN, ISRCTN19922220. Between Feb 2, 2018, and Jan 27, 2022, 535 patients were randomly assigned in the MR CLEAN-LATE trial, of whom 502 (94%) gave deferred consent and comprised the modified intention-to-treat population (255 in the endovascular treatment group and 247 in the control group). 261 (52%) patients were female and 241 (48%) were male. Data for mRS score at 2 years were available for 226 (89%) patients in the endovascular treatment group and for 202 (82%) patients in the control group. The median mRS score at 2 years was 4 (IQR 2–6) in the endovascular treatment group and 6 (2–6) in the control group. The endovascular treatment group demonstrated a shift towards better functional outcomes on the mRS (adjusted common odds ratio 1·41 [95% CI 1·00–1·99]; p=0·049). All-cause mortality at 2 years was 34% (87 of 255) in the endovascular treatment group and 41% (101 of 247) in the control group (adjusted hazard ratio 0·81 [95% CI 0·60–1·08]; p=0·15). Major vascular events (ie, transient ischaemic attack, ischaemic stroke, haemorrhagic stroke, and cardiac events) were reported between 90 days and 2 years in 23 patients in the endovascular treatment group and 13 patients in the control group. Our results show that the effectiveness of late-window (after 6–24 h) endovascular treatment in improving clinical outcomes is sustained for up to 2 years in a population preselected based on the presence of collateral flow on CT angiography. This finding might be important for prompting further evaluations of cost-effectiveness, health-care policy development, and clinical decision making. The Dutch Organization for Health Research and Health Innovation (ZonMW), Collaboration for New Treatments of Acute Stroke Consortium, Dutch Heart Foundation, Stryker, Medtronic, Cerenovus, Health Holland Top Sector Life Sciences & Health, and the Netherlands Brain Foundation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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3. EDTA stabilizes the concentration of platelet-derived extracellular vesicles during blood collection and handling.
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Buntsma, Naomi C., Gąsecka, Aleksandra, Roos, Yvo B.W.E.M., van Leeuwen, Ton G., van der Pol, Edwin, and Nieuwland, Rienk
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EXTRACELLULAR vesicles , *BLOOD collection , *BLOOD platelet activation , *FREEZE-thaw cycles - Abstract
Citrate is the recommended anticoagulant for studies on plasma extracellular vesicles (EVs). Because citrate incompletely blocks platelet activation and the release of platelet-derived EVs, we compared EDTA and citrate in that regard. Blood from healthy individuals (n = 7) was collected and incubated with thrombin receptor-activating peptide-6 (TRAP-6) to activate platelets, subjected to pneumatic tube transportation (n = 6), a freeze-thaw cycle (n = 10), and stored before plasma preparation (n = 6). Concentrations of EVs from platelets (CD61+), activated platelets (P-selectin+), erythrocytes (CD235a+), and leukocytes (CD45+) were measured by flow cytometry. Concentrations of EVs from platelets and activated platelets increased 1.4-fold and 1.9-fold in EDTA blood upon platelet activation, and 4.2-fold and 9.6-fold in citrate blood. Platelet EV concentrations were unaffected by pneumatic tube transport in EDTA blood but increased in citrate blood, and EV concentrations of erythrocytes and leukocytes were comparable. The stability of EVs during a freeze-thaw cycle was comparable for both anticoagulants. Finally, the concentration of platelet EVs was stable during storage of EDTA blood for six hours, whereas this concentration increased 1.5-fold for citrate blood. Thus, EDTA improves the robustness of studies on plasma EVs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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4. Pontine capillary telangiectasia as visualized on MR imaging causing a clinical picture resembling basilar-type migraine: a case report.
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Beukers, Richard Johan and Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M.
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CASE studies , *TELANGIECTASIA , *MIGRAINE , *DIAGNOSIS , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging - Abstract
A case of presumed pontine capillary telangiectasia in an 18-year-old woman with a clinical diagnosis of basilar-type migraine is reported. Since both are very rare diagnoses, this case provides some evidence to suggest that pontine capillary telangiectasia might cause a clinical picture resembling basilar-type migraine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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5. Deep learning-based white matter lesion volume on CT is associated with outcome after acute ischemic stroke.
- Author
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van Voorst, Henk, Pitkänen, Johanna, van Poppel, Laura, de Vries, Lucas, Mojtahedi, Mahsa, Martou, Laura, Emmer, Bart J., Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., van Oostenbrugge, Robert, Postma, Alida A., Marquering, Henk A., Majoie, Charles B. L. M., Curtze, Sami, Melkas, Susanna, Bentley, Paul, Caan, Matthan W. A., Dippel, Diederik, Majoie, Charles, van der Lugt, Aad, and van Es, Adriaan
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ISCHEMIC stroke , *WHITE matter (Nerve tissue) , *INTRACEREBRAL hematoma , *STROKE patients , *INTRACRANIAL hemorrhage , *DEEP learning - Abstract
Background: Intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) before endovascular treatment (EVT) for acute ischemic stroke might induce intracerebral hemorrhages which could negatively affect patient outcomes. Measuring white matter lesions size using deep learning (DL-WML) might help safely guide IVT administration. We aimed to develop, validate, and evaluate a DL-WML volume on CT compared to the Fazekas scale (WML-Faz) as a risk factor and IVT effect modifier in patients receiving EVT directly after IVT. Methods: We developed a deep-learning model for WML segmentation on CT and validated with internal and external test sets. In a post hoc analysis of the MR CLEAN No-IV trial, we associated DL-WML volume and WML-Faz with symptomatic-intracerebral hemorrhage (sICH) and 90-day functional outcome according to the modified Rankin Scale (mRS). We used multiplicative interaction terms between WML measures and IVT administration to evaluate IVT treatment effect modification. Regression models were used to report unadjusted and adjusted common odds ratios (cOR/acOR). Results: In total, 516 patients from the MR CLEAN No-IV trial (male/female, 291/225; age median, 71 [IQR, 62–79]) were analyzed. Both DL-WML volume and WML-Faz are associated with sICH (DL-WML volume acOR, 1.78 [95%CI, 1.17; 2.70]; WML-Faz acOR, 1.53 95%CI [1.02; 2.31]) and mRS (DL-WML volume acOR, 0.70 [95%CI, 0.55; 0.87], WML-Faz acOR, 0.73 [95%CI 0.60; 0.88]). Only in the unadjusted IVT effect modification analysis WML-Faz was associated with more sICH if IVT was given (p = 0.046). Neither WML measure was associated with worse mRS if IVT was given. Conclusion: DL-WML volume and WML-Faz had a similar relationship with functional outcome and sICH. Although more sICH might occur in patients with more severe WML-Faz receiving IVT, no worse functional outcome was observed. Clinical relevance statement: White matter lesion severity on baseline CT in acute ischemic stroke patients has a similar predictive value if measured with deep learning or the Fazekas scale. Safe administration of intravenous thrombolysis using white matter lesion severity should be further studied. Key Points: White matter damage is a predisposing risk factor for intracranial hemorrhage in patients with acute ischemic stroke but remains difficult to measure on CT. White matter lesion volume on CT measured with deep learning had a similar association with symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhages and worse functional outcome as the Fazekas scale. A patient-level meta-analysis is required to study the benefit of white matter lesion severity-based selection for intravenous thrombolysis before endovascular treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
6. Blood pressure reduction and intravenous thrombolysis.
- Author
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Kruyt, Nyika D, Roos, Yvo B, and Nederkoorn, Paul J
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BLOOD pressure , *CEREBRAL ischemia , *STROKE , *THROMBOLYTIC therapy , *TISSUE plasminogen activator - Published
- 2019
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7. Cost-effectiveness of CT perfusion for the detection of large vessel occlusion acute ischemic stroke followed by endovascular treatment: a model-based health economic evaluation study.
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van Voorst, Henk, Hoving, Jan W., Koopman, Miou S., Daems, Jasper D., Peerlings, Daan, Buskens, Erik, Lingsma, Hester F., Beenen, Ludo F. M., de Jong, Hugo W. A. M., Berkhemer, Olvert A., van Zwam, Wim H., Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., van Walderveen, Marianne A. A., van den Wijngaard, Ido, Dippel, Diederik W. J., Yoo, Albert J., Campbell, Bruce C. V., Kunz, Wolfgang G., Emmer, Bart J., and Majoie, Charles B. L. M.
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ISCHEMIC stroke , *STROKE units , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *STROKE patients , *QUALITY-adjusted life years , *PATIENT selection - Abstract
Objectives: CT perfusion (CTP) has been suggested to increase the rate of large vessel occlusion (LVO) detection in patients suspected of acute ischemic stroke (AIS) if used in addition to a standard diagnostic imaging regime of CT angiography (CTA) and non-contrast CT (NCCT). The aim of this study was to estimate the costs and health effects of additional CTP for endovascular treatment (EVT)–eligible occlusion detection using model-based analyses. Methods: In this Dutch, nationwide retrospective cohort study with model-based health economic evaluation, data from 701 EVT-treated patients with available CTP results were included (January 2018–March 2022; trialregister.nl:NL7974). We compared a cohort undergoing NCCT, CTA, and CTP (NCCT + CTA + CTP) with a generated counterfactual where NCCT and CTA (NCCT + CTA) was used for LVO detection. The NCCT + CTA strategy was simulated using diagnostic accuracy values and EVT effects from the literature. A Markov model was used to simulate 10-year follow-up. We adopted a healthcare payer perspective for costs in euros and health gains in quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). The primary outcome was the net monetary benefit (NMB) at a willingness to pay of €80,000; secondary outcomes were the difference between LVO detection strategies in QALYs (ΔQALY) and costs (ΔCosts) per LVO patient. Results: We included 701 patients (median age: 72, IQR: [62–81]) years). Per LVO patient, CTP-based occlusion detection resulted in cost savings (ΔCosts median: € − 2671, IQR: [€ − 4721; € − 731]), a health gain (ΔQALY median: 0.073, IQR: [0.044; 0.104]), and a positive NMB (median: €8436, IQR: [5565; 11,876]) per LVO patient. Conclusion: CTP-based screening of suspected stroke patients for an endovascular treatment eligible large vessel occlusion was cost-effective. Clinical relevance statement.: Although CTP-based patient selection for endovascular treatment has been recently suggested to result in worse patient outcomes after ischemic stroke, an alternative CTP-based screening for endovascular treatable occlusions is cost-effective. Key Points: • Using CT perfusion to detect an endovascular treatment-eligible occlusions resulted in a health gain and cost savings during 10 years of follow-up. • Depending on the screening costs related to the number of patients needed to image with CT perfusion, cost savings could be considerable (median: € − 3857, IQR: [€ − 5907; € − 1916] per patient). • As the gain in quality adjusted life years was most affected by the sensitivity of CT perfusion-based occlusion detection, additional studies for the diagnostic accuracy of CT perfusion for occlusion detection are required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. Value of Automatically Derived Full Thrombus Characteristics: An Explorative Study of Their Associations with Outcomes in Ischemic Stroke Patients.
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Mojtahedi, Mahsa, Bruggeman, Agnetha E., van Voorst, Henk, Ponomareva, Elena, Kappelhof, Manon, van der Lugt, Aad, Hoving, Jan W., Dutra, Bruna G., Dippel, Diederik, Cavalcante, Fabiano, Yo, Lonneke, Coutinho, Jonathan, Brouwer, Josje, Treurniet, Kilian, Tolhuisen, Manon L., LeCouffe, Natalie, Arrarte Terreros, Nerea, Konduri, Praneeta R., van Zwam, Wim, and Roos, Yvo
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ISCHEMIC stroke , *THROMBOSIS , *STROKE patients - Abstract
(1) Background: For acute ischemic strokes caused by large vessel occlusion, manually assessed thrombus volume and perviousness have been associated with treatment outcomes. However, the manual assessment of these characteristics is time-consuming and subject to inter-observer bias. Alternatively, a recently introduced fully automated deep learning-based algorithm can be used to consistently estimate full thrombus characteristics. Here, we exploratively assess the value of these novel biomarkers in terms of their association with stroke outcomes. (2) Methods: We studied two applications of automated full thrombus characterization as follows: one in a randomized trial, MR CLEAN-NO IV (n = 314), and another in a Dutch nationwide registry, MR CLEAN Registry (n = 1839). We used an automatic pipeline to determine the thrombus volume, perviousness, density, and heterogeneity. We assessed their relationship with the functional outcome defined as the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) at 90 days and two technical success measures as follows: successful final reperfusion, which is defined as an eTICI score of 2b-3, and successful first-pass reperfusion (FPS). (3) Results: Higher perviousness was significantly related to a better mRS in both MR CLEAN-NO IV and the MR CLEAN Registry. A lower thrombus volume and lower heterogeneity were only significantly related to better mRS scores in the MR CLEAN Registry. Only lower thrombus heterogeneity was significantly related to technical success; it was significantly related to a higher chance of FPS in the MR CLEAN-NO IV trial (OR = 0.55, 95% CI: 0.31–0.98) and successful reperfusion in the MR CLEAN Registry (OR = 0.88, 95% CI: 0.78–0.99). (4) Conclusions: Thrombus characteristics derived from automatic entire thrombus segmentations are significantly related to stroke outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. Clinical consequence of vessel perforations during endovascular treatment of acute ischemic stroke.
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van der Sluijs, P. Matthijs, Su, R., Cornelissen, S. A. P., van Es, A. C. G. M., Lycklama a Nijeholt, G., Roozenbeek, B., van Doormaal, P. J., Hofmeijer, J., van der Lugt, A., van Walsum, T., On Behalf Of the MR CLEAN Registry investigators, Dippel, Diederik W. J., Majoie, Charles B. L. M., Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., van Oostenbrugge, Robert J., van Zwam, Wim H., Boiten, Jelis, Vos, Jan Albert, Jansen, Ivo G. H., and Mulder, Maxim J. H. L.
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REPORTING of diseases , *CEREBRAL angiography , *ISCHEMIC stroke , *SURGICAL complications , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *RISK assessment , *THROMBECTOMY , *CATHETERIZATION complications , *RESEARCH funding , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *ODDS ratio , *CEREBRAL ischemia , *DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Purpose: Endovascular treatment (EVT) of acute ischemic stroke can be complicated by vessel perforation. We studied the incidence and determinants of vessel perforations. In addition, we studied the association of vessel perforations with functional outcome, and the association between location of perforation on digital subtraction angiography (DSA) and functional outcome, using a large EVT registry. Methods: We included all patients in the MR CLEAN Registry who underwent EVT. We used DSA to determine whether EVT was complicated by a vessel perforation. We analyzed the association with baseline clinical and interventional parameters using logistic regression models. Functional outcome was measured using the modified Rankin Scale at 90 days. The association between vessel perforation and angiographic imaging features and functional outcome was studied using ordinal logistic regression models adjusted for prognostic parameters. These associations were expressed as adjusted common odds ratios (acOR). Results: Vessel perforation occurred in 74 (2.6%) of 2794 patients who underwent EVT. Female sex (aOR 2.0 (95% CI 1.2–3.2)) and distal occlusion locations (aOR 2.2 (95% CI 1.3–3.5)) were associated with increased risk of vessel perforation. Functional outcome was worse in patients with vessel perforation (acOR 0.38 (95% CI 0.23–0.63)) compared to patients without a vessel perforation. No significant association was found between location of perforation and functional outcome. Conclusion: The incidence of vessel perforation during EVT in this cohort was low, but has severe clinical consequences. Female patients and patients treated at distal occlusion locations are at higher risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. A simplified mesoscale 3D model for characterizing fibrinolysis under flow conditions.
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Petkantchin, Remy, Rousseau, Alexandre, Eker, Omer, Zouaoui Boudjeltia, Karim, Raynaud, Franck, Chopard, Bastien, Majoie, Charles, van Bavel, Ed, Marquering, Henk, Arrarte-Terreros, Nerea, Konduri, Praneeta, Georgakopoulou, Sissy, Roos, Yvo, Hoekstra, Alfons, Padmos, Raymond, Azizi, Victor, Miller, Claire, van der Kolk, Max, van der Lugt, Aad, and Dippel, Diederik W. J.
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FIBRINOLYSIS , *INTRACRANIAL hemorrhage , *ISCHEMIC stroke , *BLOOD flow , *POROUS materials , *ATRIAL fibrillation - Abstract
One of the routine clinical treatments to eliminate ischemic stroke thrombi is injecting a biochemical product into the patient's bloodstream, which breaks down the thrombi's fibrin fibers: intravenous or intravascular thrombolysis. However, this procedure is not without risk for the patient; the worst circumstances can cause a brain hemorrhage or embolism that can be fatal. Improvement in patient management drastically reduced these risks, and patients who benefited from thrombolysis soon after the onset of the stroke have a significantly better 3-month prognosis, but treatment success is highly variable. The causes of this variability remain unclear, and it is likely that some fundamental aspects still require thorough investigations. For that reason, we conducted in vitro flow-driven fibrinolysis experiments to study pure fibrin thrombi breakdown in controlled conditions and observed that the lysis front evolved non-linearly in time. To understand these results, we developed an analytical 1D lysis model in which the thrombus is considered a porous medium. The lytic cascade is reduced to a second-order reaction involving fibrin and a surrogate pro-fibrinolytic agent. The model was able to reproduce the observed lysis evolution under the assumptions of constant fluid velocity and lysis occurring only at the front. For adding complexity, such as clot heterogeneity or complex flow conditions, we propose a 3-dimensional mesoscopic numerical model of blood flow and fibrinolysis, which validates the analytical model's results. Such a numerical model could help us better understand the spatial evolution of the thrombi breakdown, extract the most relevant physiological parameters to lysis efficiency, and possibly explain the failure of the clinical treatment. These findings suggest that even though real-world fibrinolysis is a complex biological process, a simplified model can recover the main features of lysis evolution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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11. Role of intravenous alteplase on late lesion growth and clinical outcome after stroke treatment.
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Konduri, Praneeta, Cavalcante, Fabiano, van Voorst, Henk, Rinkel, Leon, Kappelhof, Manon, van Kranendonk, Katinka, Treurniet, Kilian, Emmer, Bart, Coutinho, Jonathan, Wolff, Lennard, Hofmeijer, Jeanette, Uyttenboogaart, Maarten, van Zwam, Wim, Roos, Yvo, Majoie, Charles, and Marquering, Henk
- Abstract
Several acute ischemic stroke mechanisms that cause lesion growth continue after treatment which is detrimental to long-term clinical outcome. The potential role of intravenous alteplase treatment (IVT), a standard in stroke care, in cessing the physiological processes causing post-treatment lesion development is understudied. We analyzed patients from the MR CLEAN-NO IV trial with good quality 24-hour and 1-week follow-up Non-Contrast CT scans. We delineated hypo- and hyper-dense regions on the scans as lesion. We performed univariable logistic and linear regression to estimate the influence of IVT on the presence (growth > 0 ml) and extent of late lesion growth. The association between late lesion growth and mRS was assessed using ordinal logistic regression. Interaction analysis was performed to evaluate the influence of IVT on this association. Of the 63/116 were randomized to included patients, IVT. Median growth was 8.4(−0.88–26) ml. IVT was not significantly associated with the presence (OR: 1.24 (0.57–2.74, p = 0.59) or extent (β = 5.1(−8.8–19), p = 0.47) of growth. Late lesion growth was associated with worse clinical outcome (aOR: 0.85(0.76–0.95), p < 0.01; per 10 ml). IVT did not influence this association (p = 0.18). We did not find evidence that IVT influences late lesion growth or the relationship between growth and worse clinical outcome. Therapies to reduce lesion development are necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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12. Mathematical modelling of haemorrhagic transformation in the human brain.
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Chen, Xi, Wang, Jiayu, van Kranendonk, Katinka R., Józsa, Tamas.I., El-Bouri, Wahbi K., Kappelhof, Manon, van der Sluijs, Matthijs, Dippel, Diederik, Roos, Yvo B.W.M., Marquering, Henk A, Majoie, Charles B.L.M., and Payne, Stephen J.
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ISCHEMIC stroke , *MATHEMATICAL models , *BLOOD viscosity , *BLOOD pressure , *HYPERTENSION , *CEREBRAL arteries , *COLLATERAL circulation , *REPERFUSION - Abstract
• The first mathematical model is developed to simulate haemorrhagic transformation in the full brain. • This model is compared with real clinical images (MR CLEAN NO IV). • A reduction in perfusion after HT onset is found in the range of 5–16%. • Increased blood glucose level and high blood pressure potentially lead to more severe HT. Haemorrhagic transformation (HT) is one of the most common complications after ischaemic stroke. HT can be the result of stroke progression or a complication of reperfusion treatment for stroke. The aim of this study is to apply a previously proposed HT mathematical model within a computational whole brain model to determine the factors that affect the severity of HT. In addition, these simulations are directly compared with neuroimaging data. The MR CLEAN NO IV trial assessed the effect of endovascular therapy (EVT) alone compared with intravenous alteplase treatment (IVT) followed by EVT for patients with acute ischaemic stroke due to anterior circulation large vessel occlusion. We included imaging data of 15 HT patients from the MR CLEAN NO IV trial, 5 patients suffered from haemorrhagic infarction type 1, 5 from haemorrhagic infarction type 2 and 5 had parenchymal haematoma type 1. The comparison of simulations with patient image data is carried out by comparing the haematoma locations and haematoma volume. The parameters of the model are then optimised to improve agreement with clinical data. Finally, the model is used to investigate the factors that affect the severity of HT. Based on the computational whole brain model, we found that perfusion reduced by 5–16% after HT onset. The results are in good agreement with the clinical data. We then showed that 1% increase of blood viscosity reduces perfusion by 0.04% and increases haematoma volume by 10.35% from baseline, and 1% increase of blood pressure reduces perfusion by 0.80% and increases haematoma volume by 4.73% from baseline. These results indicate that increased blood glucose and hypertension (among other factors) both appear to lead to a higher severity of HT. This model, by enabling us to bridge the gap between the mathematical HT model and clinical imaging data, provides the first whole brain prediction model for HT severity assessment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. A simplified mesoscale 3D model for characterizing fibrinolysis under flow conditions.
- Author
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Petkantchin, Remy, Rousseau, Alexandre, Eker, Omer, Zouaoui Boudjeltia, Karim, Raynaud, Franck, Chopard, Bastien, the INSIST investigators, Majoie, Charles, van Bavel, Ed, Marquering, Henk, Arrarte-Terreros, Nerea, Konduri, Praneeta, Georgakopoulou, Sissy, Roos, Yvo, Hoekstra, Alfons, Padmos, Raymond, Azizi, Victor, Miller, Claire, van der Kolk, Max, and van der Lugt, Aad
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FIBRINOLYSIS , *INTRACRANIAL hemorrhage , *ISCHEMIC stroke , *BLOOD flow , *POROUS materials , *ATRIAL fibrillation - Abstract
One of the routine clinical treatments to eliminate ischemic stroke thrombi is injecting a biochemical product into the patient's bloodstream, which breaks down the thrombi's fibrin fibers: intravenous or intravascular thrombolysis. However, this procedure is not without risk for the patient; the worst circumstances can cause a brain hemorrhage or embolism that can be fatal. Improvement in patient management drastically reduced these risks, and patients who benefited from thrombolysis soon after the onset of the stroke have a significantly better 3-month prognosis, but treatment success is highly variable. The causes of this variability remain unclear, and it is likely that some fundamental aspects still require thorough investigations. For that reason, we conducted in vitro flow-driven fibrinolysis experiments to study pure fibrin thrombi breakdown in controlled conditions and observed that the lysis front evolved non-linearly in time. To understand these results, we developed an analytical 1D lysis model in which the thrombus is considered a porous medium. The lytic cascade is reduced to a second-order reaction involving fibrin and a surrogate pro-fibrinolytic agent. The model was able to reproduce the observed lysis evolution under the assumptions of constant fluid velocity and lysis occurring only at the front. For adding complexity, such as clot heterogeneity or complex flow conditions, we propose a 3-dimensional mesoscopic numerical model of blood flow and fibrinolysis, which validates the analytical model's results. Such a numerical model could help us better understand the spatial evolution of the thrombi breakdown, extract the most relevant physiological parameters to lysis efficiency, and possibly explain the failure of the clinical treatment. These findings suggest that even though real-world fibrinolysis is a complex biological process, a simplified model can recover the main features of lysis evolution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Association between computed tomography perfusion and the effect of intravenous alteplase prior to endovascular treatment in acute ischemic stroke.
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Hoving, Jan W., van Voorst, Henk, Peerlings, Daan, Daems, Jasper D., Koopman, Miou S., Wouters, Anke, Kappelhof, Manon, LeCouffe, Natalie E., Treurniet, Kilian M., Bruggeman, Agnetha A. E., Rinkel, Leon A., van den Wijngaard, Ido R., Coutinho, Jonathan M., van der Lugt, Aad, Marquering, Henk A., Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., Majoie, Charles B. L. M., and Emmer, Bart J.
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STATISTICS , *INTRAVENOUS therapy , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *ISCHEMIC stroke , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *FUNCTIONAL status , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *MANN Whitney U Test , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *SEVERITY of illness index , *STROKE patients , *THROMBECTOMY , *CHI-squared test , *RESEARCH funding , *COMPUTED tomography , *PERFUSION imaging , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *DATA analysis , *ODDS ratio , *DATA analysis software , *STATISTICAL models , *PERFUSION , *TISSUE plasminogen activator , *ACUTE diseases - Abstract
Purpose: Intravenous alteplase (IVT) prior to endovascular treatment (EVT) is neither superior nor noninferior to EVT alone in acute ischemic stroke patients. We aim to assess whether the effect of IVT prior to EVT differs according to CT perfusion (CTP)–based imaging parameters. Methods: In this retrospective post hoc analysis, we included patients from the MR CLEAN-NO IV with available CTP data. CTP data were processed using syngo.via (version VB40). We performed multivariable logistic regression to obtain the effect size estimates (adjusted common odds ratio a[c]OR) on 90-day functional outcome (modified Rankin Scale [mRS]) and functional independence (mRS 0-2) for CTP parameters with two-way multiplicative interaction terms between IVT administration and the studied parameters. Results: In 227 patients, median CTP-estimated core volume was 13 (IQR 5–35) mL. The treatment effect of IVT prior to EVT on outcome was not altered by CTP-estimated ischemic core volume, penumbral volume, mismatch ratio, and presence of a target mismatch profile. None of the CTP parameters was significantly associated with functional outcome after adjusting for confounders. Conclusion: In directly admitted patients with limited CTP-estimated ischemic core volumes who presented within 4.5 h after symptom onset, CTP parameters did not statistically significantly alter the treatment effect of IVT prior to EVT. Further studies are needed to confirm these results in patients with larger core volumes and more unfavorable baseline perfusion profiles on CTP imaging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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15. Outcome prediction in large vessel occlusion ischemic stroke with or without endovascular stroke treatment: THRIVE-EVT.
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Flint, Alexander C, Chan, Sheila L, Edwards, Nancy J, Rao, Vivek A, Klingman, Jeffrey G, Nguyen-Huynh, Mai N, Yan, Bernard, Mitchell, Peter J, Davis, Stephen M., Campbell, Bruce CV, Dippel, Diederik W, Roos, Yvo BWEM, van Zwam, Wim H, Saver, Jeffrey L, Kidwell, Chelsea S, Hill, Michael D, Goyal, Mayank, Demchuk, Andrew M, Bracard, Serge, and Bendszus, Martin
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ISCHEMIC stroke , *NIH Stroke Scale , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *STROKE patients , *ATRIAL fibrillation - Abstract
Introduction: The THRIVE score and the THRIVE-c calculation are validated ischemic stroke outcome prediction tools based on patient variables that are readily available at initial presentation. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have demonstrated the benefit of endovascular treatment (EVT) for many patients with large vessel occlusion (LVO), and pooled data from these trials allow for adaptation of the THRIVE-c calculation for use in shared clinical decision making regarding EVT. Methods: To extend THRIVE-c for use in the context of EVT, we extracted data from the Virtual International Stroke Trials Archive (VISTA) from 7 RCTs of EVT. Models were built in a randomly selected development cohort using logistic regression that included the predictors from THRIVE-c: age, NIH Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score, presence of hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and/or atrial fibrillation, as well as randomization to EVT and, where available, the Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score (ASPECTS). Results: Good outcome was achieved in 366/787 (46.5%) of subjects randomized to EVT and in 236/795 (29.7%) of subjects randomized to control (P < 0.001), and the improvement in outcome with EVT was seen across age, NIHSS, and THRIVE-c good outcome prediction. Models to predict outcome using THRIVE elements (age, NIHSS, and comorbidities) together with EVT, with or without ASPECTS, had similar performance by ROC analysis in the development and validation cohorts (THRIVE-EVT ROC area under the curve (AUC) = 0.716 in development, 0.727 in validation, P = 0.30; THRIVE-EVT + ASPECTS ROC AUC = 0.718 in development, 0.735 in validation, P = 0.12). Conclusion: THRIVE-EVT may be used alongside the original THRIVE-c calculation to improve outcome probability estimation for patients with acute ischemic stroke, including patients with or without LVO, and to model the potential improvement in outcomes with EVT for an individual patient based on variables that are available at initial presentation. Online calculators for THRIVE-c estimation are available at www.thrivescore.org and www.mdcalc.com/thrive-score-for-stroke-outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. Tranexamic acid for traumatic brain injury.
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Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M.
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ANTIFIBRINOLYTIC agents , *BRAIN injuries , *THERAPEUTICS - Published
- 2011
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17. Cerebrospinal fluid volume improves prediction of malignant edema after endovascular treatment of stroke.
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Kauw, Frans, Bernsen, Marie Louise E, Dankbaar, Jan W, de Jong, Hugo WAM, Kappelle, L Jaap, Velthuis, Birgitta K, van der Worp, H Bart, van der Lugt, Aad, Roos, Yvo BWEM, Yo, Lonneke SF, van Walderveen, Marianne AA, Hofmeijer, Jeannette, and Bennink, Edwin
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ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *CEREBROSPINAL fluid , *STROKE patients , *ISCHEMIC stroke , *INTERNAL carotid artery - Abstract
Background: The ratio of intracranial cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) volume to intracranial volume (ICV) has been identified as a potential predictor of malignant edema formation in patients with acute ischemic stroke. Aims: We aimed to evaluate the added value of the CSF/ICV ratio in a model to predict malignant edema formation in patients who underwent endovascular treatment. Methods: We included patients from the MR CLEAN Registry, a prospective national multicenter registry of patients who were treated with endovascular treatment between 2014 and 2017 because of acute ischemic stroke caused by large vessel occlusion. The CSF/ICV ratio was automatically measured on baseline thin-slice noncontrast CT. The primary outcome was the occurrence of malignant edema based on clinical and imaging features. The basic model included the following predictors: age, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale, Alberta Stroke Program Early CT score, occlusion of the internal carotid artery, collateral score, time between symptom onset and groin puncture, and unsuccessful reperfusion. The extended model included the basic model and the CSF/ICV ratio. The performance of the basic and the extended model was compared with the likelihood ratio test. Results: Malignant edema occurred in 40 (6%) of 683 patients. In the extended model, a lower CSF/ICV ratio was associated with the occurrence of malignant edema (odds ratio (OR) per percentage point, 1.2; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.1–1.3, p < 0.001). Age lost predictive value for malignant edema in the extended model (OR 1.1; 95% CI 0.9–1.5, p = 0.372). The performance of the extended model was higher than that of the basic model (p < 0.001). Conclusions: Adding the CSF/ICV ratio improves a multimodal prediction model for the occurrence of malignant edema after endovascular treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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18. Leukocyte Count Predicts Carotid Artery Stenosis in Men with Ischemic Stroke: Sub Study of the Preventive Antibiotics in Stroke Study (PASS).
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van Velzen, Twan J., Stolp, Jeffrey, Westendorp, Willeke F., Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., van de Beek, Diederik, and Nederkoorn, Paul J.
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ISCHEMIC stroke , *STROKE , *LEUKOCYTE count , *INTERNAL carotid artery ,CAROTID artery stenosis - Abstract
Background: Inflammation is important in the development of atherosclerosis. Research suggested sex-dependent differences for the value of inflammatory markers for risk stratification of stroke patients with internal carotid artery stenosis (ICAS). We investigated whether leukocytes and thrombocytes were associated with ≥50% ICAS in acute stroke and whether this was sex-dependent. Patients included in the Preventive Antibiotics in Stroke Study (PASS) were used. PASS is a randomized controlled trial that randomized between four days of preventive ceftriaxone intravenously or standard stroke care alone. It investigated whether ceftriaxone could improve functional outcome at three months after stroke. Methods: Patients included in PASS were evaluated for the predictive value of leukocytes and thrombocytes for ICAS. Ischemic stroke and TIA patients were selected out of PASS patients. Logistic regression analysis was performed adjusting for NIHSS and other covariates. Results: 2550 patients were included in PASS. 1413 of 2550 patients (55%) were evaluated in this sub study. Female patients showed a mean of 8.55 × 109/L for leukocytes and 259 × 109/L for thrombocytes. Men showed a mean of 8.29 × 109/L for leukocytes and 224 × 109/L for thrombocytes. Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that leukocytes were independently associated with ICAS ≥ 50% in male patients (OR 1.094, p = 0.008), but not in female patients (OR 1.041, p = 0.360). Thrombocytes were not associated with ICAS. Conclusions: We conclude that blood leukocyte count independently predicts ICAS in men after acute stroke, but not in women. Clinical Trial unique identifier: ISRCTN66140176. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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19. Influence of recent direct-to-EVT trials on practical decision-making for the treatment of acute ischemic stroke patients.
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McDonough, Rosalie, Ospel, Johanna, Kashani, Nima, Kappelhof, Manon, Liu, Jianmin, Yang, Pengfei, Majoie, Charles, Roos, Yvo, and Goyal, Mayank
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STROKE patients , *ISCHEMIC stroke , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery - Abstract
Background: Current guidelines recommend that eligible acute ischemic stroke (AIS) patients receive intravenous alteplase (IVT) prior to endovascular treatment (EVT). Six randomized controlled trials recently sought to determine the risks of administering IVT prior to EVT, five of which have been published/presented. It is unclear whether and how the results of these trials will change guidelines. With the DEBATE survey, we assessed the influence of the recent trials on physicians' IVT treatment strategies in the setting of EVT for large vessel occlusion (LVO) stroke. Methods: Participants were provided with 15 direct-to-mothership case-scenarios of LVO stroke patients and asked whether they would treat with IVT + EVT or EVT alone, a) before publication/presentation of the direct-to-EVT trials, and b) now (knowing the trial results). Logistic regression clustered by respondent was performed to assess factors influencing the decision to adopt an EVT-alone paradigm after publication/presentation of the trial results. Results: 289 participants from 37 countries provided 4335 responses, of which 13.5% (584/4335) changed from an IVT + EVT strategy to EVT alone after knowing the trial results. Very few switched from EVT alone to IVT + EVT (8/4335, 0.18%). Scenarios involving a long thrombus (RR 1.88, 95%CI:1.56–2.26), cerebral micro-hemorrhages (RR 1.78, 95%CI:1.43–2.23), and an expected short time to recanalization (RR 1.46 95%CI:1.19–1.78) had the highest chance of participants switching to an EVT-only strategy. Conclusion: In light of the recent direct-to-EVT trials, a sizeable proportion of stroke physicians appears to be rethinking IVT treatment strategies of EVT-eligible mothership patients with AIS due to LVO in specific situations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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20. Value of CT Perfusion for Collateral Status Assessment in Patients with Acute Ischemic Stroke.
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Prasetya, Haryadi, Tolhuisen, Manon L., Koopman, Miou S., Kappelhof, Manon, Meijer, Frederick J. A., Yo, Lonneke S. F., á Nijeholt, Geert J. Lycklama, van Zwam, Wim H., van der Lugt, Aad, Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., Majoie, Charles B. L. M., van Bavel, Ed T., and Marquering, Henk A.
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STROKE patients , *PERFUSION imaging , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging - Abstract
Good collateral status in acute ischemic stroke patients is an important indicator for good outcomes. Perfusion imaging potentially allows for the simultaneous assessment of local perfusion and collateral status. We combined multiple CTP parameters to evaluate a CTP-based collateral score. We included 85 patients with a baseline CTP and single-phase CTA images from the MR CLEAN Registry. We evaluated patients' CTP parameters, including relative CBVs and tissue volumes with several time-to-maximum ranges, to be candidates for a CTP-based collateral score. The score candidate with the strongest association with CTA-based collateral score and a 90-day mRS was included for further analyses. We assessed the association of the CTP-based collateral score with the functional outcome (mRS 0–2) by analyzing three regression models: baseline prognostic factors (model 1), model 1 including the CTA-based collateral score (model 2), and model 1 including the CTP-based collateral score (model 3). The model performance was evaluated using C-statistic. Among the CTP-based collateral score candidates, relative CBVs with a time-to-maximum of 6–10 s showed a significant association with CTA-based collateral scores (p = 0.02) and mRS (p = 0.05) and was therefore selected for further analysis. Model 3 most accurately predicted favorable outcomes (C-statistic = 0.86, 95% CI: 0.77–0.94) although differences between regression models were not statistically significant. We introduced a CTP-based collateral score, which is significantly associated with functional outcome and may serve as an alternative collateral measure in settings where MR imaging is not feasible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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21. Preventive Ceftriaxone in Patients with Stroke Treated with Intravenous Thrombolysis: Post Hoc Analysis of the Preventive Antibiotics in Stroke Study.
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Vermeij, Jan-Dirk, Westendorp, Willeke F., Roos, Yvo B., Brouwer, Matthijs C., van de Beek, Diederik, and Nederkoorn, Paul J.
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CEFTRIAXONE , *STROKE treatment , *THROMBOLYTIC therapy - Abstract
Background: The Preventive Antibiotics in Stroke Study (PASS), a randomized open-label masked endpoint trial, showed that preventive ceftriaxone did not improve functional outcome at 3 months in patients with acute stroke (adjusted common OR 0.95; 95% CI 0.82-1.09). Post-hoc analyses showed that among patients who received intravenous thrombolysis (IVT), patients who received ceftriaxone had a significantly better outcome as compared with the control group. This study aimed to gain more insight into the characteristics of these patients. Methods: In PASS, 2,550 patients were randomly assigned to preventive antibiotic treatment with ceftriaxone or standard care. In current post-hoc analysis, 836 patients who received IVT were included. Primary outcome included functional status on the modified Rankin Scale, analyzed with adjusted ordinal regression. Secondary outcomes included infection rate and symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage (sICH) rate. Results: For all patients in PASS, the p value for the interaction between IVT and preventive ceftriaxone regarding functional outcome was 0.03. Of the 836 IVT-treated patients, 437 were administered ceftriaxone and 399 were allocated to the control group. Baseline characteristics were similar. In the IVT subgroup, preventive ceftriaxone was associated with a significant reduction in unfavorable outcome (adjusted common OR 0.77; 95% CI 0.61- 0.99; p = 0.04). Mortality at 3 months was similar (OR 0.75; 95% CI 0.48-1.18). Preventive ceftriaxone was associated with a reduction in infections (OR 0.43; 95% CI 0.28-0.66), and a trend towards an increased risk for sICH (OR 3.09; 95% CI 0.85-11.31). Timing of ceftriaxone administration did not influence the outcome (aOR 1.00; 95% CI 0.98-1.03; p = 0.85). Conclusions: According to the post-hoc analysis of PASS, preventive ceftriaxone may improve the functional outcome in IVT-treated patients with acute stroke, despite a trend towards an increased rate of post-IVT-sICH. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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22. THE AUTHORS REPLY.
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LeCouffe, Natalie E., Kappelhof, Manon, and Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M.
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The article presents the discussion on difference in the percentage of patients with a history of atrial fibrillation based on chance.
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- 2022
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23. Brain atrophy and endovascular treatment effect in acute ischemic stroke: a secondary analysis of the MR CLEAN trial.
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Luijten, Sven PR, Compagne, Kars CJ, van Es, Adriaan CGM, Roos, Yvo BWEM, Majoie, Charles BLM, van Oostenbrugge, Robert J, van Zwam, Wim H, Dippel, Diederik WJ, Wolters, Frank J, van der Lugt, Aad, and Bos, Daniel
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CEREBRAL atrophy , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *ISCHEMIC stroke , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *STROKE patients - Abstract
Background: Brain atrophy is suggested to impair the potential for functional recovery after acute ischemic stroke. We assessed whether the effect of endovascular treatment is modified by brain atrophy in patients with acute ischemic stroke due to large vessel occlusion. Methods: We used data from MR CLEAN, a multicenter trial including patients with acute ischemic stroke due to anterior circulation large vessel occlusion randomized to endovascular treatment plus medical care (intervention) versus medical care alone (control). We segmented total brain volume (TBV) and intracranial volume (ICV) on baseline non-contrast computed tomography (n = 410). Next, we determined the degree of atrophy as the proportion of brain volume in relation to head size (1 − TBV/ICV) × 100%, analyzed as continuous variable and in tertiles. The primary outcome was a shift towards better functional outcome on the modified Rankin Scale expressed as adjusted common odds ratio. Treatment effect modification was tested using an interaction term between brain atrophy (as continuous variable) and treatment allocation. Results: We found that brain atrophy significantly modified the effect of endovascular treatment on functional outcome (P for interaction = 0.04). Endovascular treatment led to larger shifts towards better functional outcome in the higher compared to the lower range of atrophy (adjusted common odds ratio, 1.86 [95% CI: 0.97–3.56] in the lowest tertile vs. 1.97 [95% CI: 1.03–3.74] in the middle tertile vs. 3.15 [95% CI: 1.59–6.24] in the highest tertile). Conclusion: Benefit of endovascular treatment is larger in the higher compared to the lower range of atrophy, demonstrating that advanced atrophy should not be used as an argument to withhold endovascular treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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24. Association of thrombus density and endovascular treatment outcomes in patients with acute ischemic stroke due to M1 occlusions.
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Bruggeman, Agnetha A. E., Aberson, Nyk, Kappelhof, Manon, Dutra, Bruna G., Hoving, Jan W., Brouwer, Josje, Tolhuisen, Manon L., Terreros, Nerea Arrarte, Konduri, Praneeta R., Boodt, Nikki, Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., van Zwam, Wim H., Bokkers, Reinoud, Martens, Jasper, Marquering, Henk A., Emmer, Bart J., and Majoie, Charles B. L. M.
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CEREBRAL embolism & thrombosis , *BRAIN , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *INFARCTION , *ISCHEMIC stroke , *CEREBRAL arteries , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *STROKE patients , *THROMBECTOMY , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *COMPUTED tomography , *ODDS ratio , *REPERFUSION , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Purpose: We aimed to study the association of non-contrast CT (NCCT) thrombus density with procedural and clinical outcomes in patients with acute ischemic stroke who underwent endovascular treatment (EVT). Since thrombus density is associated with thrombus location, we focused on M1 occlusions only. Methods: Patients with available thin-slice (< 2.5 mm) NCCT were included from a nationwide registry. Regression models were used to assess the relation between thrombus density (per Hounsfield unit [HU]) and the following outcomes. For reperfusion grade, adjusted common odds ratios (acOR) indicated a 1-step shift towards improved outcome per HU increase in thrombus density. For the binary outcomes of first-pass reperfusion (first-pass extended thrombolysis in cerebral infarction [eTICI] 2C-3, FPR), functional independence [90-day modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score of 0–2] and mortality), aORs were reported. Adjusted β coefficients (aβ) were reported for 24-h NIHSS and procedure duration in minutes. Outcome differences between first-line treatment devices (stent retriever versus aspiration) were assessed with interaction terms. Results: In 566 patients with M1 occlusions, thrombus density was not associated with reperfusion (acOR 1.01, 95% CI 0.99–1.02), FPR (aOR 1.01, 95% CI 0.99–1.03), mortality (aOR 0.98, 95% CI 0.95–1.00), 24-h NIHSS (aβ − 0.7%, 95% CI − 1.4–0.2), or procedure duration (aβ 0.27, 95% CI − 0.05–0.58). In multivariable analysis, thrombus density was associated with functional independence (aOR 1.02, 95% CI 1.00–1.05). No interaction was found between thrombus density and first-line treatment device for any outcome. Conclusion: In patients with M1 occlusions, thrombus density was not clearly associated with procedural and clinical outcomes after EVT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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25. Outcome Prediction Based on Automatically Extracted Infarct Core Image Features in Patients with Acute Ischemic Stroke.
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Tolhuisen, Manon L., Hoving, Jan W., Koopman, Miou S., Kappelhof, Manon, van Voorst, Henk, Bruggeman, Agnetha E., Demchuck, Adam M., Dippel, Diederik W. J., Emmer, Bart J., Bracard, Serge, Guillemin, Francis, van Oostenbrugge, Robert J., Mitchell, Peter J., van Zwam, Wim H., Hill, Michael D., Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., Jovin, Tudor G., Berkhemer, Olvert A., Campbell, Bruce C. V., and Saver, Jeffrey
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STROKE patients , *ISCHEMIC stroke , *DIFFUSION magnetic resonance imaging - Abstract
Infarct volume (FIV) on follow-up diffusion-weighted imaging (FU-DWI) is only moderately associated with functional outcome in acute ischemic stroke patients. However, FU-DWI may contain other imaging biomarkers that could aid in improving outcome prediction models for acute ischemic stroke. We included FU-DWI data from the HERMES, ISLES, and MR CLEAN-NO IV databases. Lesions were segmented using a deep learning model trained on the HERMES and ISLES datasets. We assessed the performance of three classifiers in predicting functional independence for the MR CLEAN-NO IV trial cohort based on: (1) FIV alone, (2) the most important features obtained from a trained convolutional autoencoder (CAE), and (3) radiomics. Furthermore, we investigated feature importance in the radiomic-feature-based model. For outcome prediction, we included 206 patients: 144 scans were included in the training set, 21 in the validation set, and 41 in the test set. The classifiers that included the CAE and the radiomic features showed AUC values of 0.88 and 0.81, respectively, while the model based on FIV had an AUC of 0.79. This difference was not found to be statistically significant. Feature importance results showed that lesion intensity heterogeneity received more weight than lesion volume in outcome prediction. This study suggests that predictions of functional outcome should not be based on FIV alone and that FU-DWI images capture additional prognostic information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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26. Deep-Learning-Based Thrombus Localization and Segmentation in Patients with Posterior Circulation Stroke.
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Zoetmulder, Riaan, Bruggeman, Agnetha A. E., Išgum, Ivana, Gavves, Efstratios, Majoie, Charles B. L. M., Beenen, Ludo F. M., Dippel, Diederik W. J., Boodt, Nikkie, den Hartog, Sanne J., van Doormaal, Pieter J., Cornelissen, Sandra A. P., Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., Brouwer, Josje, Schonewille, Wouter J., Pirson, Anne F. V., van Zwam, Wim H., van der Leij, Christiaan, Brans, Rutger J. B., van Es, Adriaan C. G. M., and Marquering, Henk A.
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THROMBOSIS , *CONVOLUTIONAL neural networks , *INTRACLASS correlation , *IMAGE analysis , *BASILAR artery - Abstract
Thrombus volume in posterior circulation stroke (PCS) has been associated with outcome, through recanalization. Manual thrombus segmentation is impractical for large scale analysis of image characteristics. Hence, in this study we develop the first automatic method for thrombus localization and segmentation on CT in patients with PCS. In this multi-center retrospective study, 187 patients with PCS from the MR CLEAN Registry were included. We developed a convolutional neural network (CNN) that segments thrombi and restricts the volume-of-interest (VOI) to the brainstem (Polar-UNet). Furthermore, we reduced false positive localization by removing small-volume objects, referred to as volume-based removal (VBR). Polar-UNet is benchmarked against a CNN that does not restrict the VOI (BL-UNet). Performance metrics included the intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) between automated and manually segmented thrombus volumes, the thrombus localization precision and recall, and the Dice coefficient. The majority of the thrombi were localized. Without VBR, Polar-UNet achieved a thrombus localization recall of 0.82, versus 0.78 achieved by BL-UNet. This high recall was accompanied by a low precision of 0.14 and 0.09. VBR improved precision to 0.65 and 0.56 for Polar-UNet and BL-UNet, respectively, with a small reduction in recall to 0.75 and 0.69. The Dice coefficient achieved by Polar-UNet was 0.44, versus 0.38 achieved by BL-UNet with VBR. Both methods achieved ICCs of 0.41 (95% CI: 0.27–0.54). Restricting the VOI to the brainstem improved the thrombus localization precision, recall, and segmentation overlap compared to the benchmark. VBR improved thrombus localization precision but lowered recall. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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27. Silent cerebral infarcts associated with cardiac disease and procedures.
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Hassell, Mariëlla E. C., Nijveldt, Robin, Roos, Yvo B. W., Majoie, Charles B. L., Hamon, Martial, Piek, Jan J., and Delewi, Ronak
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CEREBRAL infarction , *ATRIAL fibrillation , *CARDIOMYOPATHIES , *STROKE - Abstract
The occurrence of clinically silent cerebral infarcts (SCIs) in individuals affected by cardiac disease and after invasive cardiac procedures is frequently reported. Indeed, atrial fibrillation, left ventricular thrombus formation, cardiomyopathy, and patent foramen ovale have all been associated with SCIs. Furthermore, postprocedural SCIs have been observed after left cardiac catheterization, transcatheter aortic valve implantation, CABG surgery, pulmonary vein isolation, and closure of patent foramen ovale. Such SCIs are often described as precursors to symptomatic stroke and are associated with cognitive decline, dementia, and depression. Increased recognition of SCIs might advance our understanding of their relationship with heart disease and invasive cardiac procedures, facilitate further improvement of therapies or techniques aimed at preventing their occurrence and, therefore, decrease the risk of adverse neurological outcomes. In this Review, we provide an overview of the occurrence and clinical significance of, and the available diagnostic modalities for, SCIs related to cardiac disease and associated invasive cardiac procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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28. Estimation of treatment effects in observational stroke care data: comparison of statistical approaches.
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Amini, Marzyeh, van Leeuwen, Nikki, Eijkenaar, Frank, van de Graaf, Rob, Samuels, Noor, van Oostenbrugge, Robert, van den Wijngaard, Ido R., van Doormaal, Pieter Jan, Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., Majoie, Charles, Roozenbeek, Bob, Dippel, Diederik, Burke, James, Lingsma, Hester F., on behalf of the, MR CLEAN Registry Investigators, Dippel, Diederik W. J., van der Lugt, Aad, Majoie, Charles B. L. M., van Oostenbrugge, Robert J., and van Zwam, Wim H.
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TREATMENT effectiveness , *GENERAL anesthesia , *STROKE units , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *STATISTICS , *ISCHEMIC stroke , *HOSPITAL utilization - Abstract
Introduction: Various statistical approaches can be used to deal with unmeasured confounding when estimating treatment effects in observational studies, each with its own pros and cons. This study aimed to compare treatment effects as estimated by different statistical approaches for two interventions in observational stroke care data.Patients and Methods: We used prospectively collected data from the MR CLEAN registry including all patients (n = 3279) with ischemic stroke who underwent endovascular treatment (EVT) from 2014 to 2017 in 17 Dutch hospitals. Treatment effects of two interventions - i.e., receiving an intravenous thrombolytic (IVT) and undergoing general anesthesia (GA) before EVT - on good functional outcome (modified Rankin Scale ≤2) were estimated. We used three statistical regression-based approaches that vary in assumptions regarding the source of unmeasured confounding: individual-level (two subtypes), ecological, and instrumental variable analyses. In the latter, the preference for using the interventions in each hospital was used as an instrument.Results: Use of IVT (range 66-87%) and GA (range 0-93%) varied substantially between hospitals. For IVT, the individual-level (OR ~ 1.33) resulted in significant positive effect estimates whereas in instrumental variable analysis no significant treatment effect was found (OR 1.11; 95% CI 0.58-1.56). The ecological analysis indicated no statistically significant different likelihood (β = - 0.002%; P = 0.99) of good functional outcome at hospitals using IVT 1% more frequently. For GA, we found non-significant opposite directions of points estimates the treatment effect in the individual-level (ORs ~ 0.60) versus the instrumental variable approach (OR = 1.04). The ecological analysis also resulted in a non-significant negative association (0.03% lower probability).Discussion and Conclusion: Both magnitude and direction of the estimated treatment effects for both interventions depend strongly on the statistical approach and thus on the source of (unmeasured) confounding. These issues should be understood concerning the specific characteristics of data, before applying an approach and interpreting the results. Instrumental variable analysis might be considered when unobserved confounding and practice variation is expected in observational multicenter studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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29. Detection of large vessel occlusion stroke with electroencephalography in the emergency room: first results of the ELECTRA-STROKE study.
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van Meenen, Laura C. C., van Stigt, Maritta N., Marquering, Henk A., Majoie, Charles B. L. M., Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., Koelman, Johannes H. T. M., Potters, Wouter V., and Coutinho, Jonathan M.
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HOSPITAL emergency services , *RECEIVER operating characteristic curves , *ISCHEMIC stroke , *TRANSPORTATION of patients , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY - Abstract
Background: Prehospital detection of large vessel occlusion stroke of the anterior circulation (LVO-a) would enable direct transportation of these patients to an endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) capable hospital. The ongoing ELECTRA-STROKE study investigates the diagnostic accuracy of dry electrode electroencephalography (EEG) for LVO-a stroke in the prehospital setting. To determine which EEG features are most useful for this purpose and assess EEG data quality, EEG recordings are also performed in the emergency room (ER). Here, we report data of the first 100 patients included in the ER. Methods: Patients presented to the ER with a suspected stroke or known LVO-a stroke underwent a single EEG prior to EVT. Diagnostic accuracy for LVO-a stroke of frequency band power, brain symmetry and phase synchronization measures were evaluated by calculating receiver operating characteristic curves. Optimal cut-offs were determined as the highest sensitivity at a specificity of ≥ 80%. Results: EEG data were of sufficient quality for analysis in 65/100 included patients. Of these, 35/65 (54%) had an acute ischemic stroke, of whom 9/65 (14%) had an LVO-a stroke. Median onset-to-EEG-time was 266 min (IQR 121–655) and median EEG-recording-time was 3 min (IQR 3–5). The EEG feature with the highest diagnostic accuracy for LVO-a stroke was theta–alpha ratio (AUC 0.83; sensitivity 75%; specificity 81%). Combined, weighted phase lag index and relative theta power best identified LVO-a stroke (sensitivity 100%; specificity 84%). Conclusion: Dry electrode EEG is a promising tool for LVO-a stroke detection, but data quality needs to be improved and validation in the prehospital setting is necessary. (TRN: NCT03699397, registered October 9 2018). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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30. Fully Automated Thrombus Segmentation on CT Images of Patients with Acute Ischemic Stroke.
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Mojtahedi, Mahsa, Kappelhof, Manon, Ponomareva, Elena, Tolhuisen, Manon, Jansen, Ivo, Bruggeman, Agnetha A. E., Dutra, Bruna G., Yo, Lonneke, LeCouffe, Natalie, Hoving, Jan W., van Voorst, Henk, Brouwer, Josje, Terreros, Nerea Arrarte, Konduri, Praneeta, Meijer, Frederick J. A., Appelman, Auke, Treurniet, Kilian M., Coutinho, Jonathan M., Roos, Yvo, and van Zwam, Wim
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STROKE patients , *COMPUTED tomography , *THROMBOSIS , *IMAGE segmentation , *CONVOLUTIONAL neural networks - Abstract
Thrombus imaging characteristics are associated with treatment success and functional outcomes in stroke patients. However, assessing these characteristics based on manual annotations is labor intensive and subject to observer bias. Therefore, we aimed to create an automated pipeline for consistent and fast full thrombus segmentation. We used multi-center, multi-scanner datasets of anterior circulation stroke patients with baseline NCCT and CTA for training (n = 228) and testing (n = 100). We first found the occlusion location using StrokeViewer LVO and created a bounding box around it. Subsequently, we trained dual modality U-Net based convolutional neural networks (CNNs) to segment the thrombus inside this bounding box. We experimented with: (1) U-Net with two input channels for NCCT and CTA, and U-Nets with two encoders where (2) concatenate, (3) add, and (4) weighted-sum operators were used for feature fusion. Furthermore, we proposed a dynamic bounding box algorithm to adjust the bounding box. The dynamic bounding box algorithm reduces the missed cases but does not improve Dice. The two-encoder U-Net with a weighted-sum feature fusion shows the best performance (surface Dice 0.78, Dice 0.62, and 4% missed cases). Final segmentation results have high spatial accuracies and can therefore be used to determine thrombus characteristics and potentially benefit radiologists in clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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31. Value of infarct location in the prediction of functional outcome in patients with an anterior large vessel occlusion: results from the HERMES study.
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Tolhuisen, Manon L., Ernst, Marielle, Boers, Anne M. M., Brown, Scott, Beenen, Ludo F. M., Guillemin, Francis, Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., Saver, Jeffrey L., van Oostenbrugge, Robert, Demchuck, Andrew M., van Zwam, Wim, Jovin, Tudor G., Berkhemer, Olvert A., Muir, Keith W., Bracard, Serge, Campbell, Bruce C. V., van der Lugt, Aad, White, Phill, Hill, Michael D., and Dippel, Diederik W. J.
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ARTERIAL occlusions , *FUNCTIONAL assessment - Abstract
Purpose: Follow-up infarct volume (FIV) is moderately associated with functional outcome. We hypothesized that accounting for infarct location would strengthen the association of FIV with functional outcome. Methods: We included 252 patients from the HERMES collaboration with follow-up diffusion weighted imaging. Patients received endovascular treatment combined with best medical management (n = 52%) versus best medical management alone (n = 48%). FIV was quantified in low, moderate and high modified Rankin Scale (mRS)-relevant regions. We used binary logistic regression to study the relation between the total, high, moderate or low mRS-relevant FIVs and favorable outcome (mRS < 2) after 90 days. The strength of association was evaluated using the c-statistic. Results: Small lesions only occupied high mRS-relevant brain regions. Lesions additionally occupied lower mRS-relevant brain regions if FIV expanded. Higher FIV was associated with a higher risk of unfavorable outcome, as were volumes of tissue with low, moderate and high mRS relevance. In multivariable modeling, only the volume of high mRS-relevant infarct was significantly associated with favorable outcome. The c-statistic was highest (0.76) for the models that included high mRS-relevant FIV or the combination of high, moderate and low mRS-relevant FIV but was not significantly different from the model that included only total FIV (0.75). Conclusion: This study confirms the association of FIV and unfavorable functional outcome but showed no strengthened association if lesion location was taken into account. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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32. Ethnicity and thrombolysis in ischemic stroke: a hospital based study in Amsterdam.
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Coutinho, Jonathan M., Klaver, Eva C., Roos, Yvo B., Stam, Jan, and Nederkoorn, Paul J.
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CASE studies , *ETHNICITY , *MEDICAL care , *DRUG therapy - Abstract
Background: Ethnic differences have been reported with regard to several medical therapies. The aim of this study was to investigate the relation between ethnicity and thrombolysis in stroke patients. Methods: Retrospective single-centre study. Patients admitted with an ischemic stroke between 2003 and 2008 were included. Ethnicity was determined by self-identification and stratified into white and non-white (all other ethnicities). The main outcome measure was the difference in thrombolysis rate between white and non-white patients. Logistic regression analysis was used to identify potential confounders of the relation between ethnicity and thrombolysis. Results: 510 patients were included, 392 (77%) white and 118 (23%) non-white. Non-white patients were younger (median 69 vs. 60 years, p < 0.001), had a higher blood pressure at admission (median systolic 150 vs. 160 mmHg, p = 0.02) and a lower stroke severity (median NIHSS 5 vs. 4, p = 0.04). Non-white patients were significantly less often treated with thrombolysis compared to white patients (odds ratio 0.34, 95% CI 0.17-0.71), which was partly explained by a later arrival at the hospital. After adjustment for potential confounders (late arrival, age, blood pressure above upper limit for thrombolysis, and oral anticoagulation use), a trend towards a lower thrombolysis rate in non-whites remained (adjusted odds ratio 0.38, 95% CI 0.13 to 1.16). Conclusions: Non-white stroke patients less often received thrombolysis than white patients, partly as a result of a delay in presentation. In this single centre study, potential bias due to hospital differences or insurance status could be ruled out as a cause. The magnitude of the difference is worrisome and requires further investigation. Modifiable causes, such as patient delay, awareness of stroke symptoms, language barriers and treatment of cardiovascular risk factors, should be addressed specifically in these ethnic groups in future stroke campaigns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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33. Effect of nimodipine on outcome in patients with traumatic subarachnoid haemorrhage: a systematic review
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Vergouwen, Mervyn DI, Vermeulen, Marinus, and Roos, Yvo BWEM
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NIMODIPINE , *CALCIUM antagonists , *PYRIDINE , *BRAIN injuries , *PLACEBOS - Abstract
Summary: Background: Despite several randomised controlled trials, there is still much debate whether nimodipine improves outcome in patients with traumatic subarachnoid haemorrhage. A 2003 Cochrane review reported improved outcome with nimodipine in these patients; however, because the results of Head Injury Trial (HIT) 4 were only partly presented there is still discussion whether patients with traumatic subarachnoid haemorrhage should be treated with this drug. Here, we present data from all head-injury trials, including previously unpublished results from HIT 4. Methods: We systematically searched PubMed and EMBASE databases using the following combinations of variables: “nimodipine” or “calcium antagonist” with “traumatic subarachnoid haemorrhage”, “head injury”, “head trauma”, “brain injury”, or “brain trauma”. Bayer AG and all principal investigators or corresponding authors of the identified studies were contacted for additional information. Findings: Five manuscripts were identified, describing the results of four trials. We obtained additional data from HIT 1, 2, and 4. In total, 1074 patients with traumatic subarachnoid haemorrhage were included. The occurrence of poor outcome was similar in patients treated with nimodipine (39%) and those treated with placebo (40%); odds ratio was 0·88 (95% CI 0·51–1·54). Mortality rates did not differ between nimodipine (26%) and placebo (27%) treated patients (odds ratio 0·95; 95% CI 0·71–1·26). Interpretation: Our results do not lend support to the finding of a beneficial effect of nimodipine on outcome in patients with traumatic subarachnoid haemorrhage as reported in an earlier Cochrane review. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2006
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34. Malignant infarction after endovascular treatment: Incidence and prediction.
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Bernsen, Marie Louise E, Kauw, Frans, Martens, Jasper M, van der Lugt, Aad, Yo, Lonneke SF, van Walderveen, Marianne AA, Roos, Yvo BWEM, van der Worp, H Bart, Dankbaar, Jan W, and Hofmeijer, Jeannette
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INFARCTION , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *MOYAMOYA disease , *RECEIVER operating characteristic curves , *INTERNAL carotid artery - Abstract
Background: Early prediction of malignant infarction may guide treatment decisions. For patients who received endovascular treatment, the risk of malignant infarction is unknown and risk factors are unrevealed. Aims: The objective of this study is to estimate the incidence of malignant infarction after endovascular treatment in patients with an occlusion of the anterior circulation, to identify independent risk factors, and to establish a model for prediction. Methods: We analyzed patients who received endovascular treatment for a large vessel occlusion in the anterior circulation within 6.5 h after symptom onset, included in the Dutch MR CLEAN Registry between March 2014 and June 2016. We compared patients with and without malignant infarction. Candidate predictors were incorporated in a multivariable binary logistic regression model. The final prediction model was established using backward elimination. Discrimination and calibration were evaluated with the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) and the Hosmer-Lemeshow test. Results: Of 1445 patients, 82 (6%) developed malignant infarction. Independent predictors were lower age, higher National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS), lower alberta stroke program early CT score (ASPECTS), internal carotid artery occlusion, lower collateral score, longer times from onset to groin puncture, and unsuccessful reperfusion. The AUROC of a prediction model combining these features was 0.83 (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.79–0.88) and the Hosmer-Lemeshow test indicated appropriate calibration (P = 0.937). Conclusion: The risk of malignant infarction after endovascular treatment started within 6.5 h of stroke onset is approximately 6%. Successful reperfusion decreases the risk. A prediction model combining easily retrievable measures of age, ASPECTS, collateral status, and reperfusion shows good discrimination between patients who will develop malignant infarction and those who will not. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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35. Performance feedback on the quality of care in hospitals performing thrombectomy for ischemic stroke (PERFEQTOS): protocol of a stepped wedge cluster randomized trial.
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Amini, Marzyeh, den Hartog, Sanne J., van Leeuwen, Nikki, Eijkenaar, Frank, Kuhrij, Laurien S., Stolze, Lotte J., Nederkoorn, Paul J., Lingsma, Hester F., van Es, Adriaan C. G. M., van den Wijngaard, Ido R., van der Lugt, Aad, Dippel, Diederik W. J., Roozenbeek, Bob, on behalf of the PERFEQTOS Investigators, Janssen, Paula M., van Doormaal, Pieter-Jan, Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., Emmer, Bart J., Silvis, Suzanne M., and Dinkelaar, Wouter
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ISCHEMIC stroke , *HOSPITAL care quality , *CLUSTER randomized controlled trials , *MEDICAL registries , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *THROMBECTOMY , *PSYCHOLOGICAL feedback - Abstract
Background: Although the provision of performance feedback to healthcare professionals based on data from quality registries is common practice in many fields of medicine, observational studies of its effect on the quality of care have shown mixed results. The objective of this study is to evaluate the effect of performance feedback on the quality of care for acute ischemic stroke.Methods: PERFEQTOS is a stepped wedge cluster randomized trial in 13 hospitals in the Netherlands providing endovascular thrombectomy for ischemic stroke. The primary outcome is the hospital's door-to-groin time. The study starts with a 6-month period in which none of the hospitals receives the performance feedback intervention. Subsequently, every 6 months, three or four hospitals are randomized to cross over from the control to the intervention conditions, until all hospitals receive the feedback intervention. The feedback intervention consists of a dashboard with quarterly reports on patient characteristics, structure, process, and outcome indicators related to patients with ischemic stroke treated with endovascular thrombectomy. Hospitals can compare their present performance with their own performance in the past and with other hospitals. The performance feedback is provided to local quality improvement teams in each hospital, who define their own targets on specific indicators and develop performance improvement plans. The impact of the performance feedback and improvement plans will be evaluated by comparing the primary outcome before and after the intervention.Discussion: This study will provide evidence on the effectiveness of performance feedback to healthcare providers. The results will be actively disseminated through peer-reviewed journals, conference presentations, and various stakeholder engagement activities.Trial Registration: Netherlands Trial Register NL9090 . Registered on December 3, 2020. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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36. Relationship between primary stroke center volume and time to endovascular thrombectomy in acute ischemic stroke.
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van Meenen, Laura C. C., den Hartog, Sanne J., Groot, Adrien E., Emmer, Bart J., Smeekes, Martin D., Siegers, Arjen, Kommer, Geert Jan, Majoie, Charles B. L. M., Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., van Es, Adriaan C. G. M., Dippel, Diederik W., van der Worp, H. Bart, Lingsma, Hester F., Roozenbeek, Bob, and Coutinho, Jonathan M.
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ISCHEMIC stroke , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *STROKE patients - Abstract
Background and purpose: We investigated whether the annual volume of patients with acute ischemic stroke referred from a primary stroke center (PSC) for endovascular treatment (EVT) is associated with treatment times and functional outcome. Methods: We used data from the Multicenter Randomized Clinical Trial of Endovascular Treatment for Acute Ischemic Stroke in the Netherlands (MR CLEAN) registry (2014–2017). We included patients with acute ischemic stroke of the anterior circulation who were transferred from a PSC to a comprehensive stroke center (CSC) for EVT. We examined the association between EVT referral volume of PSCs and treatment times and functional outcome using multivariable regression modeling. The main outcomes were time from arrival at the PSC to groin puncture (PSC‐door‐to‐groin time), adjusted for estimated ambulance travel times, time from arrival at the CSC to groin puncture (CSC‐door‐to‐groin time), and modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score at 90 days after stroke. Results: Of the 3637 patients in the registry, 1541 patients (42%) from 65 PSCs were included. Mean age was 71 years (SD ± 13.3), median National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score was 16 (interquartile range [IQR]: 12–19), and median time from stroke onset to arrival at the PSC was 53 min (IQR: 38–90). Eighty‐three percent had received intravenous thrombolysis. EVT referral volume was not associated with PSC‐door‐to‐groin time (adjusted coefficient: −0.49 min/annual referral, 95% confidence interval [CI]: −1.27 to 0.29), CSC‐door‐to‐groin time (adjusted coefficient: −0.34 min/annual referral, 95% CI: −0.69 to 0.01) or 90‐day mRS score (adjusted common odds ratio: 0.99, 95% CI: 0.96–1.01). Conclusions: In patients transferred from a PSC for EVT, higher PSC volumes do not seem to translate into better workflow metrics or patient outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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37. Intracranial carotid artery calcification subtype and collaterals in patients undergoing endovascular thrombectomy.
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Luijten, Sven P.R., van der Donk, Sophie C., Compagne, Kars C.J., Yo, Lonneke S.F., Sprengers, Marieke E.S., Majoie, Charles B.L.M., Roos, Yvo B.W.E.M., van Zwam, Wim H., van Oostenbrugge, Robert, Dippel, Diederik W.J., van der Lugt, Aad, Roozenbeek, Bob, and Bos, Daniel
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ARTERIAL calcification , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *CAROTID artery , *ISCHEMIC stroke - Abstract
Distinct subtypes of intracranial carotid artery calcification (ICAC) have been found (i.e., medial and intimal), which may differentially be associated with the formation of collaterals. We investigated the association of ICAC subtype with collateral status in patients undergoing endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) for ischemic stroke. We further investigated whether ICAC subtype modified the association between collateral status and functional outcome. We used data from 2701 patients with ischemic stroke undergoing EVT. Presence and subtype of ICAC were assessed on baseline non-contrast CT. Collateral status was assessed on baseline CT angiography using a visual scale from 0 (absent) to 3 (good). We investigated the association of ICAC subtype with collateral status using ordinal and binary logistic regression. Next, we assessed whether ICAC subtype modified the association between collateral status and functional outcome (modified Rankin Scale, 0–6). Compared to patients without ICAC, we found no association of intimal or medial ICAC with collateral status (ordinal variable). When collateral grades were dichotomized (3 versus 0–2), we found that intimal ICAC was significantly associated with good collaterals in comparison to patients without ICAC (aOR, 1.41 [95%CI:1.06–1.89]) or with medial ICAC (aOR, 1.50 [95%CI:1.14–1.97]). The association between higher collateral grade and better functional outcome was significantly modified by ICAC subtype (p for interaction = 0.01). Patients with intimal ICAC are more likely to have good collaterals and benefit more from an extensive collateral circulation in terms of functional outcome after EVT. [Display omitted] • In patients with ischemic stroke undergoing endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) , intimal carotid artery calcification (ICAC) is associated with good collaterals. • Patients with intimal ICAC benefit more from an extensive collateral circulation in terms of functional outcome after EVT. • ICAC subtype may have important clinical consequences for ischemic stroke patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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38. The association between computed tomography angiography timing and workflow times in patients with acute ischemic stroke.
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Dessens, Femke M, Groot, Adrien E, van der Veen, Bas, Treurniet, Kilian M, Majoie, Charles BLM, Driessen-Waaijer, Annet, Weinstein, Henry C, Roos, Yvo BWEM, Van den Berg-Vos, Renske M, Coutinho, Jonathan M, and van Schaik, Sander M
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COMPUTED tomography , *STROKE patients , *ANGIOGRAPHY , *QUANTILE regression - Abstract
Background: In most hospitals, computed tomography angiography (CTA) is nowadays routinely performed in patients with acute ischemic stroke. However, it is unclear whether CTA is best performed before or after start of intravenous thrombolysis (IVT), since acquisition of CTA before IVT may prolong door-to-needle times, while acquisition after IVT may prolong door-to-groin times in patients undergoing endovascular treatment. Methods: We performed a before-versus-after study (CTA following IVT, period I and CTA prior to IVT, period II), consisting of two periods of one year each. This study is based on a prospective registry of consecutive patients treated with IVT in two collaborating high-volume stroke centers; one primary stroke center and one comprehensive stroke center. The primary outcome was door-to-needle times. Secondary outcomes included door-to-groin times. Quantile regression analyses were performed to evaluate the association between timing of CTA and workflow times, adjusted for prognostic factors. Results: A total of 519 patients received IVT during the study period (246 in period I, 273 in period II). In the adjusted analysis, we found a nonsignificant 1.13 min median difference in door-to-needle times (95% confidence interval: 1.03–3.29). Door-to-groin times was significantly shorter in period II in both unadjusted and adjusted analysis with the latter showing a 19.16 min median difference (95% confidence interval: 3.08–35.24). Conclusions: CTA acquisition prior to start of IVT did not adversely affect door-to-needle times. However, a significantly shorter door-to-groin times was observed in endovascular treatment eligible patients. Performing CTA prior to start of IVT seems the preferred strategy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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39. Prior antiplatelet therapy in patients undergoing endovascular treatment for acute ischemic stroke: Results from the MR CLEAN Registry.
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van de Graaf, Rob A, Zinkstok, Sanne M, Chalos, Vicky, Goldhoorn, Robert-Jan B, Majoie, Charles BLM, van Oostenbrugge, Robert J, van der Lugt, Aad, Dippel, Diederik WJ, Roos, Yvo BWEM, Lingsma, Hester F, van Es, Adriaan CGM, and Roozenbeek, Bob
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ISCHEMIC stroke , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *THROMBOLYTIC therapy , *PROGNOSIS , *FUNCTIONAL assessment , *CEREBRAL infarction - Abstract
Background: Antiplatelet therapy may increase the risk of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage after endovascular treatment for ischemic stroke but may also have a beneficial effect on functional outcome. The aim of this study is to compare safety and efficacy outcomes after endovascular treatment in patients with and without prior antiplatelet therapy. Methods: We analyzed patients registered in the MR CLEAN Registry between March 2014 and November 2017, for whom data on antiplatelet therapy were available. We used propensity score nearest-neighbor matching with replacement to balance the probability of receiving prior antiplatelet therapy between the prior antiplatelet therapy and no prior antiplatelet therapy group and adjusted for baseline prognostic factors to compare these groups. Primary outcome was symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage. Secondary outcomes were 90-day functional outcome (modified Rankin Scale), successful reperfusion (extended thrombolysis in cerebral infarction score ≥2B) and 90-day mortality. Results: Thirty percent (n = 937) of the 3154 patients were on prior antiplatelet therapy, who were matched to 477 patients not on prior antiplatelet therapy. Symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage occurred in 74/937 (7.9%) patients on prior antiplatelet therapy and in 27/477 (5.6%) patients without prior antiplatelet therapy adjusted odds ratio 1.47, 95% confidence interval 0.86–2.49. No associations were found between prior antiplatelet therapy and functional outcome (adjusted common odds ratio 0.87, 95% confidence interval 0.65–1.16), successful reperfusion (adjusted odds ratio 1.23, 95% confidence interval 0.77–1.97), or 90-day mortality (adjusted odds ratio 1.15, 95% confidence interval 0.86–1.54). Conclusion: We found no evidence of an association of prior antiplatelet therapy with the risk of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage after endovascular treatment, nor on functional outcome, reperfusion, or mortality. A substantial beneficial or detrimental effect of antiplatelet therapy on clinical outcome cannot be excluded. A randomized clinical trial comparing antiplatelet therapy versus no antiplatelet therapy is needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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40. MR CLEAN-LATE, a multicenter randomized clinical trial of endovascular treatment of acute ischemic stroke in The Netherlands for late arrivals: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial.
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Pirson, F. A. V. (Anne), Hinsenveld, Wouter H., Goldhoorn, Robert-Jan B., Staals, Julie, de Ridder, Inger R., van Zwam, Wim H., van Walderveen, Marianne A. A., Lycklama à Nijeholt, Geert J., Uyttenboogaart, Maarten, Schonewille, Wouter J., van der Lugt, Aad, Dippel, Diederik W. J., Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., Majoie, Charles B. L. M., van Oostenbrugge, Robert J., Lycklama À Nijeholt, Geert J, and MR CLEAN-LATE investigators
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ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *CLINICAL trials , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *DRUG efficacy , *ISCHEMIC preconditioning - Abstract
Background: Endovascular therapy (EVT) for acute ischemic stroke due to proximal occlusion of the anterior intracranial circulation, started within 6 h from symptom onset, has been proven safe and effective. Recently, EVT has been proven effective beyond the 6-h time window in a highly selected population using CT perfusion or MR diffusion. Unfortunately, these imaging modalities are not available in every hospital, and strict selection criteria might exclude patients who could still benefit from EVT. The presence of collaterals on CT angiography (CTA) may offer a more pragmatic imaging criterion that predicts possible benefit from EVT beyond 6 h from time last known well. The aim of this study is to assess the safety and efficacy of EVT for patients treated between 6 and 24 h from time last known well after selection based on the presence of collateral flow.Methods: The MR CLEAN-LATE trial is a multicenter, randomized, open-label, blinded endpoint trial, aiming to enroll 500 patients. We will investigate the efficacy of EVT between 6 and 24 h from time last known well in acute ischemic stroke due to a proximal intracranial anterior circulation occlusion confirmed by CTA or MRA. Patients with any collateral flow (poor, moderate, or good collaterals) on CTA will be included. The inclusion of poor collateral status will be restricted to a maximum of 100 patients. In line with the current Dutch guidelines, patients who fulfill the characteristics of included patients in DAWN and DEFUSE 3 will be excluded as they are eligible for EVT as standard care. The primary endpoint is functional outcome at 90 days, assessed with the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score. Treatment effect will be estimated with ordinal logistic regression (shift analysis) on the mRS at 90 days. Secondary endpoints include clinical stroke severity at 24 h and 5-7 days assessed by the NIHSS, symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage, recanalization at 24 h, follow-up infarct size, and mortality at 90 days, DISCUSSION: This study will provide insight into whether EVT is safe and effective for patients treated between 6 and 24 h from time last known well after selection based on the presence of collateral flow on CTA.Trial Registration: NL58246.078.17 , ISRCTN19922220 , Registered on 11 December 2017. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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41. MR CLEAN-NO IV: intravenous treatment followed by endovascular treatment versus direct endovascular treatment for acute ischemic stroke caused by a proximal intracranial occlusion-study protocol for a randomized clinical trial.
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Treurniet, Kilian M., LeCouffe, Natalie E., Kappelhof, Manon, Emmer, Bart J., van Es, Adriaan C. G. M., Boiten, Jelis, Lycklama, Geert J., Keizer, Koos, Yo, Lonneke S. F., Lingsma, Hester F., van Zwam, Wim H., de Ridder, Inger, van Oostenbrugge, Robert J., van der Lugt, Aad, Dippel, Diederik W. J., Coutinho, Jonathan M., Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., Majoie, Charles B. L. M., and MR CLEAN-NO IV Investigators
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RESEARCH protocols , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *ISCHEMIC preconditioning , *OCCLUSION (Chemistry) , *DRUG efficacy , *ISCHEMIC stroke , *CLINICAL trials - Abstract
Background: Endovascular treatment (EVT) has greatly improved the prognosis of acute ischemic stroke (AIS) patients with a proximal intracranial large vessel occlusion (LVO) of the anterior circulation. Currently, there is clinical equipoise concerning the added benefit of intravenous alteplase administration (IVT) prior to EVT. The aim of this study is to assess the efficacy and safety of omitting IVT before EVT in patients with AIS caused by an anterior circulation LVO.Methods: MR CLEAN-NO IV is a multicenter randomized open-label clinical trial with blinded outcome assessment (PROBE design). Patients ≥ 18 years of age with a pre-stroke mRS < 3 with an LVO confirmed on CT angiography/MR angiography eligible for both IVT and EVT are randomized to receive either IVT (0.9 mg/kg) followed by EVT, or direct EVT in a 1:1 ratio. The primary objective is to assess superiority of direct EVT. Secondarily, non-inferiority of direct EVT compared to IVT before EVT will be explored. The primary outcome is the score on the modified Rankin Scale at 90 days. Ordinal regression with adjustment for prognostic variables will be used to estimate treatment effect. Secondary outcomes include reperfusion graded with the eTICI scale after EVT and stroke severity (National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale) at 24 h. Safety outcomes include intracranial hemorrhages scored according to the Heidelberg criteria. A total of 540 patients will be included.Discussion: IVT prior to EVT might facilitate early reperfusion before EVT or improved reperfusion rates during EVT. Conversely, among other potential adverse effects, the increased risk of bleeding could nullify the beneficial effects of IVT. MR CLEAN-NO IV will provide insight into whether IVT is still of added value in patients eligible for EVT.Trial Registration: www.isrctn.com : ISRCTN80619088 . Registered on 31 October 2017. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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42. qTICI: Quantitative assessment of brain tissue reperfusion on digital subtraction angiograms of acute ischemic stroke patients.
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Prasetya, Haryadi, Ramos, Lucas A, Epema, Thabiso, Treurniet, Kilian M, Emmer, Bart J, van den Wijngaard, Ido R, Zhang, Guang, Kappelhof, Manon, Berkhemer, Olvert A, Yoo, Albert J, Roos, Yvo BEWM, van Oostenbrugge, Robert J, Dippel, Diederik WJ, van Zwam, Wim H, van der Lugt, Aad, de Mol, Bas AJM, Majoie, Charles BLM, Bavel, Ed van, and Marquering, Henk A
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STROKE patients , *DIGITAL subtraction angiography , *RECEIVER operating characteristic curves , *REPERFUSION , *INTERNAL carotid artery - Abstract
Background: The Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction (TICI) scale is an important outcome measure to evaluate the quality of endovascular stroke therapy. The TICI scale is ordinal and observer-dependent, which may result in suboptimal prediction of patient outcome and inconsistent reperfusion grading. Aims: We present a semi-automated quantitative reperfusion measure (quantified TICI (qTICI)) using image processing techniques based on the TICI methodology. Methods: We included patients with an intracranial proximal large vessel occlusion with complete, good quality runs of anteroposterior and lateral digital subtraction angiography from the MR CLEAN Registry. For each vessel occlusion, we identified the target downstream territory and automatically segmented the reperfused area in the target downstream territory on final digital subtraction angiography. qTICI was defined as the percentage of reperfused area in target downstream territory. The value of qTICI and extended TICI (eTICI) in predicting favorable functional outcome (modified Rankin Scale 0–2) was compared using area under receiver operating characteristics curve and binary logistic regression analysis unadjusted and adjusted for known prognostic factors. Results: In total, 408 patients with M1 or internal carotid artery occlusion were included. The median qTICI was 78 (interquartile range 58–88) and 215 patients (53%) had an eTICI of 2C or higher. qTICI was comparable to eTICI in predicting favorable outcome with area under receiver operating characteristics curve of 0.63 vs. 0.62 (P = 0.8) and 0.87 vs. 0.86 (P = 0.87), for the unadjusted and adjusted analysis, respectively. In the adjusted regression analyses, both qTICI and eTICI were independently associated with functional outcome. Conclusion: qTICI provides a quantitative measure of reperfusion with similar prognostic value for functional outcome to eTICI score. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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43. Aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage.
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de Gans, Koen, Vergouwen, Mervyn D., and Roos, Yvo B.
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LETTERS to the editor , *CEREBRAL hemorrhage - Abstract
A letter to the editor is presented in response to the article "Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage" in the January 26, 2006 issue.
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- 2006
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44. 7T versus 3T MR Angiography to Assess Unruptured Intracranial Aneurysms.
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Leemans, Eva, Cornelissen, Bart, Sing, M. L. C., Sprengers, Marieke, Berg, Rene, Roos, Yvo, Vandertop, W. Pieter, Slump, Cornelius, Marquering, Henk, and Majoie, Charles
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INTRACRANIAL aneurysms , *MAGNETIC resonance angiography , *ANGIOGRAPHY , *WIDTH measurement , *INTRACLASS correlation - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Aneurysm size and neck measurements are important for treatment decisions. The introduction of 7T magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) led to new possibilities assessing aneurysm morphology and flow due to the higher signal‐to‐noise ratio. However, it is unknown if the size measurements on 7T MRA are similar to those on the standard 3T MRA. This study aimed to compare aneurysm size measurements between 7T and 3T MRA. METHODS: We included 18 patients with 22 aneurysms who underwent both 3T and 7T MRA. Three acquisition protocols were compared: 3T time of flight (TOF), 7T TOF, and 7T contrast‐enhanced MRA. Each aneurysm on each protocol was measured by at least two experienced neuroradiologists. Subsequently, the differences were evaluated using scatterplots and the intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) of agreement. RESULTS: There was a good agreement among the neuroradiologists for the height and width measurements (mean ICC:.78‐.93); the neck measurements showed a moderate agreement with a mean ICC of.57‐.72. Between the MR acquisition protocols, there was a high agreement for all measurements with a mean ICC of.81‐.96. Measurement differences between acquisition protocols (0‐2.9 mm) were in the range of the differences between the neuroradiologists (0‐3.6 mm). CONCLUSION: Our study showed that 7T MRA, both nonenhanced and contrast‐enhanced, has a high agreement in aneurysm size measurements compared to 3T. This suggests that 7T is useful for reliable aneurysm size assessment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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45. Direct Intra-arterial thrombectomy in order to Revascularize AIS patients with large vessel occlusion Efficiently in Chinese Tertiary hospitals: A Multicenter randomized clinical Trial (DIRECT-MT)—Protocol.
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Yang, Pengfei, Treurniet, Kilian M, Zhang, Lei, Zhang, Yongwei, Li, Zifu, Xing, Pengfei, Zhang, Yongxin, Zhang, Ping, Wang, Hao, Hong, Bo, Dippel, Diederik WJ, Roos, Yvo BWEM, Majoie, Charles BLM, Deng, Benqiang, and Liu, Jianmin
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STROKE patients , *THROMBOLYTIC therapy , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *CEREBRAL hemorrhage , *CLINICAL trials - Abstract
Rationale: Intravenous thrombolysis combined with mechanical thrombectomy (MT) has been proven safe and clinical effective in patients with acute ischemic stroke of anterior circulation large vessel occlusion. However, despite reperfusion, a considerable proportion of patients do not recover. Incidence of symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage was similar between patients treated with the combination of intravenous thrombolysis and MT, as compared to intravenous thrombolysis alone, suggesting that this complication should be attributed to pre-treatment with intravenous thrombolysis. Conversely, intravenous thrombolysis may be beneficial in patients with small clots occluding intracranial arteries with underlying intracranial atherosclerotic disease, not accessible for MT. Aim: To assess whether direct MT is non-inferior compared to combined intravenous thrombolysis plus MT in patients with AIS due to an anterior circulation large vessel occlusion, and to assess treatment effect modification by presence of intracranial atherosclerotic disease. Sample size: Aim to randomize 636 patients 1:1 to receive direct MT (intervention) or combined intravenous thrombolysis plus MT (control). Design: This is a multicenter, prospective, open label parallel group trial with blinded outcome assessment (PROBE design) assessing non-inferiority of direct MT compared to combined intravenous thrombolysis plus MT. Outcomes: The primary outcome is the score on the modified Rankin Scale assessed blindly at 90 (±14) days. An common odds ratio, adjusted for the prognostic factors (age, NIHSS, collateral score), representing the shift on the 6-category mRS scale measured at three months, estimated with ordinal logistic regression, will be the primary effect parameter. Non-inferiority is established if the lower boundary of the 95% confidence interval does not cross 0.8. Discussion: DIRECT-MT could result in improved therapeutic efficiency and cost reduction in treatment of anterior circulation large vessel occlusion stroke. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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46. Multicenter randomized clinical trial of endovascular treatment for acute ischemic stroke. The effect of periprocedural medication: acetylsalicylic acid, unfractionated heparin, both, or neither (MR CLEAN-MED). Rationale and study design.
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Chalos, Vicky, A. van de Graaf, Rob, Roozenbeek, Bob, C. G. M. van Es, Adriaan, M. den Hertog, Heleen, Staals, Julie, van Dijk, Lukas, F.M. Jenniskens, Sjoerd, J. van Oostenbrugge, Robert, H. van Zwam, Wim, B.W.E.M. Roos, Yvo, B.L.M. Majoie, Charles, F. Lingsma, Hester, van der Lugt, Aad, W.J. Dippel, Diederik, on behalf of the MR CLEAN-MED investigators, Dippel, Diederik, van der Lugt, Aad, van de Graaf, Rob, and van der Steen, Wouter
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ASPIRIN , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *HEPARIN , *PLATELET aggregation inhibitors , *CLINICAL trials , *TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Background: Despite evidence of a quite large beneficial effect of endovascular treatment (EVT) for ischemic stroke caused by anterior circulation large vessel occlusion, many patients do not recover even after complete recanalization. To some extent, this may be attributable to incomplete microvascular reperfusion, which can possibly be improved by antiplatelet agents and heparin. It is unknown whether periprocedural antithrombotic medication in patients treated with EVT improves functional outcome. The aim of this study is to assess the effect of acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) and unfractionated heparin (UFH), alone, or in combination, given to patients with an ischemic stroke caused by an intracranial large vessel occlusion in the anterior circulation during EVT.Methods: MR CLEAN-MED is a multicenter phase III trial with a prospective, 2 × 3 factorial randomized, open label, blinded end-point (PROBE) design, which aims to enroll 1500 patients. The trial is designed to evaluate the effect of intravenous ASA (300 mg), UFH (low or moderate dose), both or neither as adjunctive therapy to EVT. We enroll adult patients with a clinical diagnosis of stroke (NIHSS ≥ 2) and with a confirmed intracranial large vessel occlusion in the anterior circulation on CTA or MRA, when EVT within 6 h from symptom onset is indicated and possible. The primary outcome is the score on the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) at 90 days. Treatment effect on the mRS will be estimated with ordinal logistic regression analysis, with adjustment for main prognostic variables. Secondary outcomes include stroke severity measured with the NIHSS at 24 h and at 5-7 days, follow-up infarct volume, symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (sICH), and mortality.Discussion: Clinical equipoise exists whether antithrombotic medication should be administered during EVT for a large vessel occlusion, as ASA and/or UFH may improve functional outcome, but might also lead to an increased risk of sICH. When one or both of the study treatments show the anticipated effect on outcome, we will be able to improve outcome of patients treated with EVT by 5%. This amounts to more than 50 patients annually in the Netherlands, more than 1800 in Europe, and more than 1300 in the USA.Trial Registration: ISRCT, ISRCTN76741621 . Dec 6, 2017. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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47. Interhospital transfer vs. direct presentation of patients with a large vessel occlusion not eligible for IV thrombolysis.
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van Meenen, Laura C. C., Groot, Adrien E., Venema, Esmee, Emmer, Bart J., Smeekes, Martin D., Kommer, Geert Jan, Majoie, Charles B. L. M., Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., Schonewille, Wouter J., Roozenbeek, Bob, Coutinho, Jonathan M., the MR CLEAN Registry Investigators, Dippel, Diederik W. J., van der Lugt, Aad, van Oostenbrugge, Robert J., van Zwam, Wim H., Boiten, Jelis, Vos, Jan Albert, Brouwer, Josje, and den Hartog, Sanne J.
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STROKE patients , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery - Abstract
Background and purpose: Direct presentation of patients with acute ischemic stroke to a comprehensive stroke center (CSC) reduces time to endovascular treatment (EVT), but may increase time to treatment for intravenous thrombolysis (IVT). This dilemma, however, is not applicable to patients who have a contraindication for IVT. We examined the effect of direct presentation to a CSC on outcomes after EVT in patients not eligible for IVT. Methods: We used data from the MR CLEAN Registry (2014–2017). We included patients who were not treated with IVT and compared patients directly presented to a CSC to patients transferred from a primary stroke center. Outcomes included treatment times and 90-day modified Rankin Scale scores (mRS) adjusted for potential confounders. Results: Of the 3637 patients, 680 (19%) did not receive IVT and were included in the analyses. Of these, 389 (57%) were directly presented to a CSC. The most common contraindications for IVT were anticoagulation use (49%) and presentation > 4.5 h after onset (26%). Directly presented patients had lower baseline NIHSS scores (median 16 vs. 17, p = 0.015), higher onset-to-first-door times (median 105 vs. 66 min, p < 0.001), lower first-door-to-groin times (median 93 vs. 150 min; adjusted β = − 51.6, 95% CI: − 64.0 to − 39.2) and lower onset-to-groin times (median 220 vs. 230 min; adjusted β = − 44.0, 95% CI: − 65.5 to − 22.4). The 90-day mRS score did not differ between groups (adjusted OR: 1.23, 95% CI: 0.73–2.08). Conclusions: In patients who were not eligible for IVT, treatment times for EVT were better for patients directly presented to a CSC, but without a statistically significant effect on clinical outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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48. CT angiography vs echocardiography for detection of cardiac thrombi in ischemic stroke: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Groeneveld, Nina-Suzanne, Guglielmi, Valeria, Leeflang, Mariska M. G., Matthijs Boekholdt, S., Nils Planken, R., Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., Majoie, Charles B. L. M., and Coutinho, Jonathan M.
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ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *META-analysis , *PATIENT selection , *TRANSESOPHAGEAL echocardiography , *ANGIOGRAPHY - Abstract
Background and purpose: Cardiac thrombi are an important cause of embolic stroke. We studied the diagnostic yield and diagnostic accuracy of cardiac CT angiography (CTA) compared to echocardiography for detection of cardiac thrombi in ischemic stroke patients. Methods: We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of the literature on cardiac CTA versus echocardiography for detection of cardiac thrombi in ischemic stroke patients. We included studies (N ≥ 20) in which both cardiac CTA (index test) and echocardiography (reference test) were performed and data on cardiac thrombi were reported. Results were stratified for type of echocardiography: transesophageal (TEE) vs transthoracic (TTE). Results: Out of 1530 studies, 14 were included (all single center cohort studies), with data on 1568 patients. Mean age varied between 52 and 69 years per study and 66% were men. Reported time intervals ranged from 0 to 21 days between stroke and first test, and from 0 to 199 days between tests. In ten studies that compared CTA to TEE, CTA detected cardiac thrombi in 87/1385 (6.3%) patients versus 68/1385 (4.9%) on TEE (p < 0.001). In four studies comparing CTA to TTE, CTA detected thrombi in 23/183 (12.5%) patients versus 12/183 (6.6%) on TTE (p = 0.010). Pooled sensitivity and specificity of CTA versus TEE were 86.0% (95% CI 65.6–95.2) and 97.4% (95% CI 95.0–98.7), respectively. Conclusions: CTA may be a promising alternative to echocardiography for detection of cardiac thrombi in patients with ischemic stroke, especially now that CTA is standard care for patient selection for endovascular treatment. However, studies were too heterogeneous and of insufficient methodological quality to draw firm conclusions. Large, prospective studies on this topic are warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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49. Intracerebral Haemorrhage Segmentation in Non-Contrast CT.
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Patel, Ajay, Schreuder, Floris H. B. M., Klijn, Catharina J. M., Prokop, Mathias, Ginneken, Bram van, Marquering, Henk A., Roos, Yvo B. W. E. M., Baharoglu, M. Irem, Meijer, Frederick J. A., and Manniesing, Rashindra
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CEREBRAL hemorrhage , *CONVOLUTIONAL neural networks , *COMPUTED tomography - Abstract
A 3-dimensional (3D) convolutional neural network is presented for the segmentation and quantification of spontaneous intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH) in non-contrast computed tomography (NCCT). The method utilises a combination of contextual information on multiple scales for fast and fully automatic dense predictions. To handle a large class imbalance present in the data, a weight map is introduced during training. The method was evaluated on two datasets of 25 and 50 patients respectively. The reference standard consisted of manual annotations for each ICH in the dataset. Quantitative analysis showed a median Dice similarity coefficient of 0.91 [0.87–0.94] and 0.90 [0.85–0.92] for the two test datasets in comparison to the reference standards. Evaluation of a separate dataset of 5 patients for the assessment of the observer variability produced a mean Dice similarity coefficient of 0.95 ± 0.02 for the inter-observer variability and 0.97 ± 0.01 for the intra-observer variability. The average prediction time for an entire volume was 104 ± 15 seconds. The results demonstrate that the method is accurate and approaches the performance of expert manual annotation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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50. Predicting Delayed Cerebral Ischemia with Quantified Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Blood Volume.
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van der Steen, Wessel E., Marquering, Henk A., Boers, Anna M.M., Ramos, Lucas A., van den Berg, René, Vergouwen, Mervyn D.I., Majoie, Charles B.L.M., Coert, Bert A., Vandertop, William P., Verbaan, Dagmar, and Roos, Yvo B.W.E.M.
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BLOOD volume , *CEREBRAL ischemia , *MODELS & modelmaking , *SUBARACHNOID hemorrhage , *LOGISTIC regression analysis - Abstract
The amount of blood detected on brain computed tomography scan is frequently used in prediction models for delayed cerebral ischemia (DCI) in patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH). These models, which include coarse grading scales to assess the amount of blood, have only moderate predictive value. Therefore, we aimed to develop a predictive model for DCI including automatically quantified total blood volume (TBV). We included patients from a prospective aSAH registry. TBV was assessed with an automatic hemorrhage quantification algorithm. The outcome measure was clinical deterioration due to DCI. Clinical and radiologic variables were included in a logistic regression model. The final model was selected by bootstrapped backward selection and internally validated by assessing the optimism-corrected R 2 value, c-statistic, and calibration plot. The c-statistic of the TBV model was compared with models that used the (modified) Fisher scale instead. We included 369 patients. After backward selection, only TBV was included in the final model. The internally validated R 2 value was 6%, and the c-statistic was 0.64. The c-statistic of the TBV model was higher than both the Fisher scale model (0.56; P < 0.001) and the modified Fisher scale model (0.58; P < 0.05). In our registry, only TBV independently predicted DCI. TBV discriminated better than the (modified) Fisher scale, but still had only moderate value for predicting DCI. Our findings suggest that other factors need to be identified to achieve better accuracy for predicting DCI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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