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Discrepancy between post-treatment infarct volume and 90-day outcome in the ESCAPE randomized controlled trial.

Authors :
Ganesh, Aravind
Menon, Bijoy K
Assis, Zarina A
Demchuk, Andrew M
Al-Ajlan, Fahad S
Al-Mekhlafi, Mohammed A
Rempel, Jeremy L
Shuaib, Ashfaq
Baxter, Blaise W
Devlin, Thomas
Thornton, John
Williams, David
Poppe, Alexandre Y
Roy, Daniel
Krings, Timo
Casaubon, Leanne K
Kashani, Nima
Hill, Michael D
Goyal, Mayank
Source :
International Journal of Stroke; Jul2021, Vol. 16 Issue 5, p593-601, 9p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background: Some patients with ischemic stroke have poor outcomes despite small infarcts after endovascular thrombectomy, while others with large infarcts sometimes fare better. Aims: We explored factors associated with such discrepancies between post-treatment infarct volume (PIV) and functional outcome. Methods: We identified patients with small PIV (volume ≤ 25th percentile) and large PIV (volume ≥ 75th percentile) on 24–48-h CT/MRI in the ESCAPE randomized-controlled trial. Demographics, comorbidities, baseline, and 24–48-h stroke severity (NIHSS), stroke location, treatment type, post-stroke complications, and other outcome scales like Barthel Index, and EQ-5D were compared between "discrepant cases" – those with 90-day modified Rankin Scale(mRS) ≤ 2 despite large PIV or mRS ≥ 3 despite small PIV – and "non-discrepant cases". Multi-variable logistic regression was used to identify pre-treatment and post-treatment factors associated with small-PIV/mRS ≥ 3 and large-PIV/mRS ≤ 2. Sensitivity analyses used different definitions of small/large PIV and good/poor outcome. Results: Among 315 patients, median PIV was 21 mL; 27/79 (34.2%) patients with PIV ≤ 7 mL (25th percentile) had mRS ≥ 3; 12/80 (15.0%) with PIV ≥ 72 mL (75th percentile) had mRS ≤ 2. Discrepant cases did not differ by CT versus MRI-based PIV ascertainment, or right versus left-hemisphere involvement (p = 0.39, p = 0.81, respectively, for PIV ≤ 7 mL/mRS ≥ 3). Pre-treatment factors independently associated with small-PIV/mRS ≥ 3 included older age (p = 0.010), cancer, and vascular risk-factors; post-treatment factors included 48-h NIHSS (p = 0.007) and post-stroke complications (p = 0.026). Absence of vascular risk-factors (p = 0.004), CT-based lentiform nucleus sparing (p = 0.002), lower 24-hour NIHSS (p = 0.001), and absence of complications (p = 0.013) were associated with large-PIV/mRS ≤ 2. Sensitivity analyses yielded similar results. Conclusions: Discrepancies between functional ability and PIV are likely explained by differences in age, comorbidities, and post-stroke complications, emphasizing the need for high-quality post-thrombectomy stroke care. Clinical trial registration: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01778335. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17474930
Volume :
16
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
International Journal of Stroke
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
151330855
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/1747493020929943