Frontiers in Neurology (May 2024)

The lesion core extent modulates the impact of early perfusion mismatch imaging on outcome variability after thrombectomy in stroke

  • Maria Marburg,
  • Linda F. Rudolf,
  • Christine Matthis,
  • Alexander Neumann,
  • Constantin Schareck,
  • Hannes Schacht,
  • Robert Schulz,
  • Björn Machner,
  • Peter Schramm,
  • Georg Royl,
  • Georg Royl,
  • Philipp J. Koch,
  • Philipp J. Koch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2024.1366240
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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IntroductionDespite profitable group effects on functional outcomes after mechanical thrombectomy (MT) in large vessel occlusion (LVO), many patients with successful reperfusion show a non-favorable long-term outcome, highlighting the necessity to identify potential biomarkers predicting outcome variability. In this regard, the role of perfusion mismatch imaging for outcome variability in the early time window within 6 h after symptom onset is a matter of debate. We attempted to investigate under which conditions early perfusion mismatch imaging accounts for variability in functional outcomes after mechanical thrombectomy.Patients and methodsIn a retrospective single-center study, we examined 190 consecutive patients with LVO who were admitted to the Medical Center Lübeck within 6 h after symptom onset, all of whom underwent MT. Perfusion mismatch was quantified by applying the Alberta Stroke Program Early CT score (ASPECTS) on CT-measured cerebral blood flow (CBF-ASPECTS) and subtracting it from an ASPECTS application on cerebral blood volume (CBV-ASPECTS), i.e., ASPECTS mismatch. Using multivariate ordinal regression models, associations between ASPECTS mismatch and modified Rankin Scale (mRS) after 90 days were assessed. Furthermore, the interaction between ASPECTS mismatch and the core lesion volume was calculated to evaluate conditional associations.ResultsASPECTS mismatch did not correlate with functional outcomes when corrected for multiple influencing covariables. However, interactions between ASPECTS mismatch and CBV-ASPECTS [OR: 1.12 (1.06–1.18), p-value < 0.001], as well as NCCT-ASPECTS [OR: 1.15 (1.06–1.25), p-value < 0.001], did show a significant association with functional outcomes. Model comparisons revealed that, profoundly, in patients with large core lesion volumes (CBV-ASPECTS < 6 or NCCT-ASPECTS < 6), perfusion mismatch showed a negative correlation with the mRS.Discussion and conclusionPerfusion mismatch imaging within the first 6 h of symptom onset provides valuable insights into the outcome variability of LVO stroke patients receiving thrombectomy but only in patients with large ischemic core lesions.

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