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Multicenter investigation of technical and clinical outcomes after thrombectomy for Proximal Medium Vessel Occlusion (pMeVO) by frontline technique

Authors :
Jonathan A Grossberg
Reda M Chalhoub
Sami Al Kasab
Dominika Pullmann
Pascal Jabbour
Marios Psychogios
Robert M Starke
Adam S Arthur
Kyle M Fargen
Reade De Leacy
Peter Kan
Travis Dumont
Ansaar Rai
Roberto J Crosa
Kareem E Naamani
Ilko Maier
Nitin Goyal
Stacey Quintero Wolfe
C Michael Cawley
J Mocco
Muhammad Hafeez
Brian M Howard
Laurie Dimisko
Hassan Saad
Christopher S Ogilvy
R Webster Crowley
Justin Mascitelli
Isabel Fragata
Michael Levitt
Alejandro M Spiotta
Ali M Alawieh
Source :
Interventional Neuroradiology. :159101992211381
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2022.

Abstract

Background Endovascular thrombectomy(EVT) is the standard of care for large vessel occlusion(LVO) stroke. Data on technical and clinical outcome in proximal medium vessel occlusions(pMeVOs) comparing frontline techniques remain limited. Methods We report an international multicenter retrospective study of patients undergoing EVT for stroke at 32 centers between 2015–2021. Patients were divided into LVOs(ICA/M1/Vertebrobasilar) or pMeVOs(M2/A1/P1) and categorized by thrombectomy technique. Primary outcome was 90-day good functional outcome(mRS ≤ 2). Multivariate logistic regressions were used to evaluate the impact of technical variables on clinical outcomes. Propensity score matching was used to compare outcome in patients with pMeVO treated with aspiration versus stent-retriever. Results In the cohort of 5977 LVO and 1287 pMeVO patients, pMeVO did not independently predict good-outcome(p = 0.55). In pMeVO patients, successful recanalization irrespective of frontline technique(aOR = 3.2,p Conclusions Clinical outcomes following EVT for pMeVO are comparable to those in LVOs. The golden hour or 3-pass rules in LVO thrombectomy still apply to pMeVO thrombectomy. Different techniques may exhibit different futility metrics; SR thrombectomy was more influenced by attempts whereas aspiration was more dependent on procedure time.

Subjects

Subjects :
General Medicine

Details

ISSN :
23852011 and 15910199
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Interventional Neuroradiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2a3cebb2997c464fda75caf7b329787c