Frontiers in Neurology (Jan 2024)

Early and late basilar artery thrombectomy time window outcomes

  • Adam T. Mierzwa,
  • Adam T. Mierzwa,
  • Rahul Rao,
  • Rahul Rao,
  • Sami Al Kasab,
  • Ashley Nelson,
  • Santiago Ortega-Gutierrez,
  • Juan Vivanco-Suarez,
  • Mudassir Farooqui,
  • Ashutosh P. Jadhav,
  • Shashvat Desai,
  • Gabor Toth,
  • Anas Alrohimi,
  • Thanh N. Nguyen,
  • Piers Klein,
  • Mohamad Abdalkader,
  • Hisham Salahuddin,
  • Aditya Pandey,
  • Zachary Wilseck,
  • Sravanthi Koduri,
  • Nirav Vora,
  • Nameer Aladamat,
  • Khaled Gharaibeh,
  • Ehad Afreen,
  • Ehad Afreen,
  • Syed Zaidi,
  • Syed Zaidi,
  • Mouhammad Jumaa,
  • Mouhammad Jumaa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2024.1352310
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

Read online

ImportanceStroke-to-recanalization time is a strong predictor of outcomes in anterior circulation large-vessel occlusion (LVO). The authors aimed to evaluate functional outcomes in early (<6 h) vs. late (6–24 h) time windows for thrombectomy-treated basilar artery occlusions.MethodsPatients were derived from the Posterior Circulation Ischemic Stroke Evaluation: Analyzing Radiographic and Intra-procedural Predictors of Mechanical Thrombectomy (PC-SEARCH) Registry and retrospectively analyzed early and late basilar artery thrombectomy time windows cohorts. Patients were dichotomized based on the last known well and correlated to 90-day functional outcomes (mRS 0–3). A multiple logistic regression analysis was performed.ResultsA total of 405 patients were included in this study: 216 and 189 patients in the early and late time windows, respectively. Baseline demographic, stroke, radiographic, and intraprocedural characteristics were similar between the groups. A total of 99 (46%) and 79 (42%) patients in the early and late time windows, respectively, achieved favorable functional outcomes at 90 days (p = 0.41), and multiple logistic regression analysis did not reveal differences between cohorts (OR: 0.74; 95% CI: 0.46–1.19; p = 0.22). Symptomatic hemorrhage (7% vs. 5%; p = 0.69) and neurological complications (8% vs. 9%; p = 0.83) were similar between the groups; however, hospital complications were more common in the early time window cohort (22% vs. 13%; p = 0.01).ConclusionThe early and late thrombectomy time windows can achieve similar rates of 90-day favorable functional outcomes. However, timely thrombectomy influences the likelihood of achieving excellent functional outcomes (mRS ≤ 2) within the early time window.

Keywords