1. Direct to Angiography vs Repeated Imaging Approaches in Transferred Patients Undergoing Endovascular Thrombectomy
- Author
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Osman Mir, Adam S Arthur, Bader Alenzi, Lucas Elijovich, James C. Grotta, Nitin Goyal, Mark Dannenbaum, Ameer E. Hassan, Amrou Sarraj, Sheryl Martin-Schild, Yazan Radaideh, Marc Ribo, Arthur L. Day, Andrei V. Alexandrov, Wondwossen G Tekle, Chunyan Cai, Deep Pujara, Clark Sitton, Michael G. Abraham, Daniel Hoit, Manuel Requena, Kaushik Niranjan Parsha, Georgios Tsivgoulis, Mohammad Ammar Abdulrazzak, Jonathan Greco, Faris Shaker, Laith Maali, Sarah Song, Sujan T Reddy, Haris Kamal, Michael Chen, and Spiros Blackburn
- Subjects
Male ,Patient Transfer ,Middle Cerebral Artery ,Anterior Cerebral Artery ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Perfusion Imaging ,Arterial Occlusive Diseases ,Time-to-Treatment ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Modified Rankin Scale ,Interquartile range ,medicine.artery ,Medical imaging ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Stroke ,Original Investigation ,Aged ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,Retrospective Studies ,Thrombectomy ,Intracerebral hemorrhage ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Endovascular Procedures ,Retrospective cohort study ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Cerebral Angiography ,Treatment Outcome ,Anesthesia ,Reperfusion ,Angiography ,Middle cerebral artery ,Female ,Independent Living ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
IMPORTANCE: A direct to angiography (DTA) treatment paradigm without repeated imaging for transferred patients with large vessel occlusion (LVO) may reduce time to endovascular thrombectomy (EVT). Whether DTA is safe and associated with better outcomes in the late (>6 hours) window is unknown. Also, DTA feasibility and effectiveness in reducing time to EVT during on-call vs regular-work hours and the association of interfacility transfer times with DTA outcomes have not been established. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the functional and safety outcomes of DTA vs repeated imaging in the different treatment windows and on-call hours vs regular hours. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This pooled retrospective cohort study at 6 US and European comprehensive stroke centers enrolled adults (aged ≥18 years) with anterior circulation LVO (internal cerebral artery or middle cerebral artery subdivisions M1/M2) and transferred for EVT within 24 hours of the last-known-well time from January 1, 2014, to February 29, 2020. EXPOSURES: Repeated imaging (computed tomography with or without computed tomographic angiography or computed tomography perfusion) before EVT vs DTA. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Functional independence (90-day modified Rankin Scale score, 0-2) was the primary outcome. Symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage, mortality, and time metrics were also compared between the DTA and repeated imaging groups. RESULTS: A total of 1140 patients with LVO received EVT after transfer, including 327 (28.7%) in the DTA group and 813 (71.3%) in the repeated imaging group. The median age was 69 (interquartile range [IQR], 59-78) years; 529 were female (46.4%) and 609 (53.4%) were male. Patients undergoing DTA had greater use of intravenous alteplase (200 of 327 [61.2%] vs 412 of 808 [51.0%]; P = .002), but otherwise groups were similar. Median time from EVT center arrival to groin puncture was faster with DTA (34 [IQR, 20-62] vs 60 [IQR, 37-95] minutes; P 6 to 24 hours; P = .88 for interaction). Three-month mortality was lower with DTA (53 of 312 [17.0%] vs 186 of 763 [24.4%]; P = .008). A 10-minute increase in EVT-center arrival to groin puncture in the repeated imaging group correlated with 5% reduction in the functional independence odds (aOR, 0.95 [95% CI, 0.91-0.99]; P = .01). The rates of modified Rankin Scale score of 0 to 2 decreased with interfacility transfer times of greater than 3 hours in the DTA group (96 of 161 [59.6%] vs 15 of 42 [35.7%]; P = .006), but not in the repeated imaging group (75 of 208 [36.1%] vs 71 of 192 [37.0%]; P = .85). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The DTA approach may be associated with faster treatment and better functional outcomes during all hours and treatment windows, and repeated imaging may be reasonable with prolonged transfer times. Optimal EVT workflow in transfers may be associated with faster, safe reperfusion with improved outcomes.
- Published
- 2021
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