Association of follow-up infarct volume with functional outcome in acute ischemic stroke: a pooled analysis of seven randomized trials

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TitreAssociation of follow-up infarct volume with functional outcome in acute ischemic stroke: a pooled analysis of seven randomized trials
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuteursBoers AMM, Jansen IGH, Beenen LFM, Devlin TG, San Roman L, Heo JHoe, Ribo M, Brown S, Almekhlafi MA, Liebeskind DS, Teitelbaum J, Lingsma HF, van Zwam WH, Cuadras P, de Rochemont Rdu Mesnil, Beaumont M, Brown MM, Yoo AJ, van Oostenbrugge RJ, Menon BK, Donnan GA, Mas JLouis, Roos YBWEM, Oppenheim C, van der Lugt A, Dowling RJ, Hill MD, Davalos A, Moulin T, Agrinier N, Demchuk AM, Lopes DK, Rodriguez LAja, Dippel DWJ, Campbell BCV, Mitchell PJ, Al-Ajlan FS, Jovin TG, Madigan J, Albers GW, Soize S, Guillemin F, Reddy VK, Bracard S, Blasco J, Muir KW, Nogueira RG, White PM, Goyal M, Davis SM, Marquering HA, Majoie CBLM
JournalJOURNAL OF NEUROINTERVENTIONAL SURGERY
Volume10
Pagination1137-1142
Date PublishedDEC
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1759-8478
Mots-clésbrain, CT, mri, Stroke, thrombectomy
Résumé

Background Follow-up infarct volume (FIV) has been recommended as an early indicator of treatment efficacy in patients with acute ischemic stroke. Questions remain about the optimal imaging approach for FIV measurement. Objective To examine the association of FIV with 90-day modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score and investigate its dependency on acquisition time and modality. Methods Data of seven trials were pooled. FIV was assessed on follow-up (12 hours to 2 weeks) CT or MRI. Infarct location was defined as laterality and involvement of the Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score regions. Relative quality and strength of multivariable regression models of the association between FIV and functional outcome were assessed. Dependency of imaging modality and acquisition time (<= 48 hours vs >48 hours) was evaluated. Results Of 1665 included patients, 83% were imaged with CT. Median FIV was 41 mL (IQR 14-120). A large FIV was associated with worse functional outcome (OR=0.88(95% CI 0.87 to 0.89) per 10 mL) in adjusted analysis. A model including FIV, location, and hemorrhage type best predicted mRS score. FIV of >= 133 mL was highly specific for unfavorable outcome. FIV was equally strongly associated with mRS score for assessment on CT and MRI, even though large differences in volume were present (48 mL (IQR 15-131) vs 22 mL (IQR 8-71), respectively). Associations of both early and late FIV assessments with outcome were similar in strength (rho=0.60(95% CI 0.56 to 0.64) and rho=0.55(95% CI 0.50 to 0.60), respectively). Conclusions In patients with an acute ischemic stroke due to a proximal intracranial occlusion of the anterior circulation, FIV is a strong independent predictor of functional outcome and can be assessed before 48 hours, oneither CT or MRI.

DOI10.1136/neurintsurg-2017-013724