1. Intensive Blood Pressure Lowering and DWI Lesions in Intracerebral Hemorrhage: Exploratory Analysis of the ATACH-2 Randomized Trial
- Author
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Kenneth Butcher, Mohammad Rauf Afzal, Jamary Oliveira-Filho, Frieder Schlunk, Steven M. Greenberg, Adnan I Qureshi, Michael J. Jessel, Christy Cassarly, Laura C. Gioia, Joshua N. Goldstein, Renee H Martin, Atach, Nett investigators, Ashkan Shoamanesh, Jonathan Rosand, Javier Romero, Anastasia Vashkevich, Andrea Morotti, Kristin Schwab, and Alison M. Ayres
- Subjects
Intracerebral hemorrhage ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Standard treatment ,Hemodynamics ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,medicine.disease ,law.invention ,Lesion ,Blood pressure ,Hematoma ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
With the increasing use of magnetic resonance imaging in the assessment of acute intracerebral hemorrhage, diffusion-weighted imaging hyperintense lesions have been recognized to occur at sites remote to the hematoma in up to 40% of patients. We investigated whether blood pressure reduction was associated with diffusion-weighted imaging hyperintense lesions in acute intracerebral hemorrhage and whether such lesions are associated with worse clinical outcomes by analyzing imaging data from a randomized trial. We performed exploratory subgroup analyses in an open-label randomized trial that investigated acute blood pressure lowering in 1000 patients with intracerebral hemorrhage between May 2011 and September 2015. Eligible participants were assigned to an intensive systolic blood pressure target of 110–139 mm Hg versus 140–179 mm Hg with the use of intravenous nicardipine. Of these, 171 patients had requisite magnetic resonance imaging sequences for inclusion in these subgroup analyses. The primary outcome was the presence of diffusion-weighted imaging hyperintense lesions. Secondary outcomes included death or disability and serious adverse event at 90 days. Diffusion-weighted imaging hyperintense lesions were present in 25% of patients (mean age 62 years). Hematoma volume > 30 cm3 was an adjusted predictor (adjusted relative risk 2.41, 95% confidence interval 1.00–5.80) of lesion presence. Lesions occurred in 25% of intensively treated patients and 24% of standard treatment patients (relative risk 1.01, 95% confidence interval 0.71–1.43, p = 0.97). Patients with diffusion-weighted imaging hyperintense lesions had similar frequencies of death or disability at 90 days, compared with patients without lesions. Randomized assignment to intensive acute blood pressure lowering did not result in a greater frequency of diffusion-weighted imaging hyperintense lesion. Alternative mechanisms of diffusion-weighted imaging hyperintense lesion formation other than hemodynamic fluctuations need to be explored. Clinical trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov (Ref. NCT01176565; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01176565 ).
- Published
- 2021
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