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Endovascular Treatment for Acute Ischemic Stroke With or Without General Anesthesia: A Matched Comparison

Authors :
Benjamin Wagner
Johannes Lorscheider
Andrea Wiencierz
Kristine Blackham
Marios Psychogios
Daniel Bolliger
Gian Marco De Marchis
Stefan T. Engelter
Philippe Lyrer
Patrick R. Wright
Urs Fischer
Pasquale Mordasini
Stefania Nannoni
Francesco Puccinelli
Timo Kahles
Giovanni Bianco
Emmanuel Carrera
Andreas R. Luft
Carlo W. Cereda
Georg Kägi
Johannes Weber
Krassen Nedeltchev
Patrik Michel
Jan Gralla
Marcel Arnold
Leo H. Bonati
Javier Anon
Sandra Clarke
Michael Diepers
Philipp Gruber
Eileen Martin
Luca Remonda
Andreas Schweikert
Vedrana Zupa.
Valerian Altersberger
Alex Brehm
Tolga Dittrich
Amgad El Mekabaty
Joachim Fladt
Urs Fisch
Henrik Gensicke
Lisa Hert
Sabrina Manuzzi
Marina Maurer
Louisa Meya
Nils Peters
Alexandros Polymeris
Sebastian Thilemann
Christopher Traenka
Ioannes Tsogkas
Anaelle Zietz
Martina Goeldlin
Mirjam Heldner
Simon Jung
Johannes Kaesmacher
Basel Mamaari
Thomas Meinel
Madlaine Mueller
Hakan Sarykaya
David Seiffge
Bernhard Siepen
Jan Vynkier
Ashraf Eskandari
Vasiliki Pantazou
Davide Strambo
Jane Frangi
Shairin Sihabdeen
Jochen Vehoff
Mira Katan
Achim Mueller
Susanne Wegener
Source :
Stroke. 53(5)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background: Endovascular treatment in large artery occlusion stroke reduces disability. However, the impact of anesthesia type on clinical outcomes remains uncertain. Methods: We compared consecutive patients in the Swiss Stroke Registry with anterior circulation stroke receiving endovascular treatment with or without general anesthesia (GA). The primary outcome was disability on the modified Rankin Scale after 3 months, analyzed with ordered logistic regression. Secondary outcomes included dependency or death (modified Rankin Scale score ≥ 3), National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale after 24 hours, symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage with ≥ 4 points worsening on National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale within 7 days, and mortality. Coarsened exact matching and propensity score matching were performed to adjust for indication bias. Results: One thousand two hundred eighty-four patients (GA: n=851, non-GA: n=433) from 8 Stroke Centers were included. Patients treated with GA had higher modified Rankin Scale scores after 3 months than patients treated without GA, in the unmatched (odds ratio [OR], 1.75 [1.42–2.16]; P P =0.020), and the propensity score matching analysis (n=568; OR, 1.61 [1.20–2.15]; P =0.001). In the coarsened exact matching analysis, there were no significant differences in National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale after 1 day (estimated coefficient 2.61 [0.59–4.64]), symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (OR, 1.06 [0.30–3.75]), dependency or death (OR, 1.42 [0.91–2.23]), or mortality (OR, 1.65 [0.94–2.89]). In the propensity score matching analysis, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale after 24 hours (estimated coefficient, 3.40 [1.76–5.04]), dependency or death (OR, 1.49 [1.07–2.07]), and mortality (OR, 1.65 [1.11–2.45]) were higher in the GA group, whereas symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage did not differ significantly (OR, 1.77 [0.73–4.29]). Conclusions: This large study showed worse functional outcome after endovascular treatment of anterior circulation stroke with GA than without GA in a real-world setting. This finding appears to be independent of known differences in patient characteristics between groups.

Details

ISSN :
15244628
Volume :
53
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Stroke
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f76371b6b2c95c74dbef2b0d08714115