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Binning MJ, Bartolini B, Baxter B, Budzik R, English J, Gupta R, Hedayat H, Krajina A, Liebeskind D, Nogueira RG, Shields R, Veznedaroglu E. Trevo 2000: Results of a Large Real-World Registry for Stent Retriever for Acute Ischemic Stroke. J Am Heart Assoc 2019; 7:e010867. [PMID: 30561262 PMCID: PMC6405611 DOI: 10.1161/jaha.118.010867] [Citation(s) in RCA: 39] [Impact Index Per Article: 7.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Background Recent randomized controlled trials show benefit of thrombectomy for large vessel occlusion in stroke. Real-world data aid in assessing reproducibility of outcomes outside of clinical trials. The Trevo Retriever Registry is a multicenter, international, prospective study designed to assess outcomes in a large cohort of patients. Methods and Results The Trevo Registry is a prospective database of patients with large vessel occlusion treated with the Trevo device as the first device. The primary end point is revascularization based on modified Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction score and secondary end points include 90-day modified Rankin Scale, 90-day mortality, neurological deterioration at 24 hours, and device/procedure related adverse events. Year 2008 patients were enrolled at 76 centers in 12 countries. Median admission National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale was 16 (interquartile range, 11-20). Occlusion sites were internal carotid artery (17.8%), middle cerebral artery (73.5%), posterior circulation (7.1%), and distal vascular locations (1.6%). A modified Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction 2b or 3 was achieved in 92.8% (95% CI, 91.6, 93.9) of procedures, with 55.3% (95% CI, 53.1, 57.5) of patients achieving modified Rankin Scale ≤2 at 3 months. Patients meeting revised 2015 American Heart Association criteria for thrombectomy had a 59.7% (95% CI , 56.0; 63.4) modified Rankin Scale 0 to 2 at 3 months, whereas 51.4% treated outside of American Heart Association criteria had modified Rankin Scale 0 to 2. 51.4% (95% CI , 49.6, 55.4). Symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage rate was 1.7% (95% CI , 1.2, 2.4). Conclusions The Trevo Retriever Registry represents real-world data with stent retriever. The registry demonstrates similar reperfusion rates and outcomes in the community compared with rigorous centrally adjudicated clinical trials. Future subgroup analysis of this cohort will assist in identifying areas of future research. Clinical Trial Registration URL : https://www.clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT 02040259.
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Greenberg K, Hedayat HS, Binning MJ, Veznedaroglu E. Innovations in Care Delivery of Stroke from Emergency Medical Services to the Neurointerventional Operating Room. Neurosurgery 2019; 85:S18-S22. [PMID: 31197327 DOI: 10.1093/neuros/nyz021] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 08/08/2018] [Accepted: 01/28/2019] [Indexed: 01/01/2023] Open
Abstract
Acute ischemic stroke (AIS) and its care is currently one of the most dynamic and evolving illnesses across the globe. Among the most crucial factors in providing the best care to patients are the expedient delivery of thrombolytics and endovascular intervention when indicated. Here, we review our unique model of efficient care centered in our innovative Neurological Emergency Department (Neuro ED). The Neuro ED acts as our hub for EMS communication, imaging, administration of intravenous alteplase, and transition to the Neurointerventional OR. Our structure with its enabling of shortened IV alteplase delivery times and faster door-to-needle (DTN) times may serve as an international model for stroke centers.
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Nguyen TN, Castonguay AC, Nogueira RG, Haussen DC, English JD, Satti SR, Chen J, Farid H, Borders C, Veznedaroglu E, Binning MJ, Puri AS, Vora NA, Budzik RF, Dabus G, Linfante I, Janardhan V, Alshekhlee A, Abraham MG, Edgell RC, Taqi MA, El Khoury R, Mokin M, Majjhoo AQ, Kabbani MR, Froehler MT, Finch I, Ansari SA, Novakovic R, Abdalkader M, Zaidat OO. Effect of balloon guide catheter on clinical outcomes and reperfusion in Trevo thrombectomy. J Neurointerv Surg 2019; 11:861-865. [DOI: 10.1136/neurintsurg-2018-014452] [Citation(s) in RCA: 32] [Impact Index Per Article: 6.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 09/28/2018] [Revised: 12/19/2018] [Accepted: 12/26/2018] [Indexed: 11/03/2022]
Abstract
IntroductionThe Solitaire stent retriever registry showed improved reperfusion, faster procedure times, and better outcome in acute stroke patients with large vessel occlusion treated with a balloon guide catheter (BGC) and Solitaire stent retriever compared with a conventional guide catheter. The goal of this study was to evaluate whether use of a BGC with the Trevo stent retriever improves outcomes compared with a conventional guide catheter.MethodsThe TRACK registry recruited 23 sites to submit demographic, clinical, and site adjudicated angiographic and outcome data on consecutive patients treated with the Trevo stent retriever. BGC use was at the discretion of the physician.Results536 anterior circulation patients (of whom 279 (52.1%) had BGC placement) were included in this analysis. Baseline characteristics were notable for younger patients in the BGC group (65.4±15.3 vs 68.1±13.6, P=0.03) and lower rate of hypertension (72% vs 79%, P=0.06). Mean time from symptom onset to groin puncture was longer in the BGC group (357 vs 319 min, P=0.06).Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction 2b/3 scores were higher in the BGC cohort (84% vs 75.5%, P=0.01). There was no difference in reperfusion time, first pass effect, number of passes, or rescue therapy. Good clinical outcome at 3 months was superior in patients with BGC (57% vs 40%; P=0.0004) with a lower mortality rate (13% vs 23%, P=0.008). Multivariate analysis demonstrated that BGC use was an independent predictor of good clinical outcome (OR 2; 95% CI 1.3 to 3.1, P=0.001).ConclusionsIn acute stroke patients presenting with anterior circulation large vessel occlusion, use of a BGC with the Trevo stent retriever resulted in improved reperfusion, improved clinical outcome, and lower mortality.
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Nogueira RG, Haussen D, Gupta R, Budzik R, Baxter B, Krajina A, English J, Malek A, Shields R, Sarraj A, Zhang Y, Morgan P, Narata AP, Bartolini B, Veznedaroglu E, Liebeskind D. Abstract WP37: Real-World Applicability of Thrombectomy in Anterior Circulation Large Vessel Occlusion Strokes Treated in the Extended Window: Analysis of the Prospective Trevo Registry. Stroke 2019. [DOI: 10.1161/str.50.suppl_1.wp37] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Background:
Two recent trials showed a strong benefit of thrombectomy in the extended window. However, these studies were performed in selected centers and utilized strict inclusion criteria. We aim to evaluate the outcomes of thrombectomy in a large prospective cohort treated outside the rigid clinical trial setting.
Methods:
Trevo Registry patients with ICA, MCA-M1 or M2 occlusions and pre-morbid mRS0-2 were categorized according to time-from-last-seen-well (TLSW) to puncture as early (0-6hours) vs. late (6-24hours). Uni- and multivariate analyzes were performed to identify good outcome (90-day mRS0-2) predictors. Subgroup analyses were performed for the basic DAWN (age >=18, NIHSS >=10, ICA or M1 occlusion, pre-morbid mRS 0-1) and DEFUSE 3 (age 18-90, NIHSS >=6, ICA or MCA-M1 occlusion, mRS 0-2) trial criteria.
Results:
As compared to the late (n=430), early patients (n=1173) were older (70 vs 68, p=0.011) and had higher IV tPA use (69 vs 25%, p<0.001), lower smoking frequency (33 vs 40%, p=0.011), larger baseline infarcts (21.2 vs 15.6 cc, p=0.045), less frequent ICA occlusions (18 vs 24%, p=0.015), and a trend towards higher admission NIHSS (16 vs 15, p=0.09). Despite significantly longer TLSW to puncture (3.5 vs 9.6 h, p<0.001), late patients had similar rates of mTICI2b-3 (92 vs 94%, p=0.20), good outcomes (60 vs 56%, p=0.128), symptomatic ICH (1.5 vs.1.4%, p=0.84), and 90-day-mortality (10.9 vs.11.4%, p=0.79). Age (OR 0.96, 95%CI [0.96-0.97]), admission-NIHSS (0.91 [0.89-0.93]), baseline mRS (0.49 [0.40-0.60]), ASPECTS >= 6 (1.37 [1.07-1.75]), DM (0.58 [0.44-0.77]), and time to treatment (0.98 [0.97-1.00]) were independent predictors of good outcomes. Imaging modality did not predict outcomes. Similar findings were observed in the early versus late DAWN-like (n=709 vs 257) and DEFUSE 3-like (n=855 vs 273) cohorts. There was great similarity between the outcomes of the Trevo Registry subsets vs their analogous RCTs: early DAWN-like vs SWIFT Prime (90-day mRS 0-2: 57.5 vs 60%; 90-day mRS 6: 11.% vs 9%), Late DAWN-like vs DAWN (50.2 vs 48.6%; 10.6 vs 18%), and Late DEFUSE 3-like vs DEFUSE 3 (52 vs 45%; 10.3 vs 14%).
Conclusions:
Our study provides favorable data for the generalizability of the safety and efficacy of thrombectomy in the “real-world” setting.
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Liebeskind DS, Zhang Y, Veznedaroglu E, English J, Baxter BW, Budzik RF, Bartolini BM, Krajina A, Malek A, Sarraj A, Nogueira RG, Gupta R. Abstract WP111: Who Needs Neuroprotection With Endovascular Stroke Therapy? Findings From the Trevo Retriever Registry. Stroke 2019. [DOI: 10.1161/str.50.suppl_1.wp111] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Background:
Combined neuroprotection with endovascular therapy may improve clinical outcomes of only a subset of individuals treated for acute ischemic stroke. The risk/benefit profile of adjunctive treatment may not warrant neuroprotection with successful reperfusion, yet many other individuals have poor outcomes despite revascularization. We hypothesized that optimal candidates for adjunctive neuroprotection may be defined by analyses of subjects with poor clinical outcome despite successful reperfusion in the Trevo Retriever Registry.
Methods:
The Trevo Retriever Registry dataset was analyzed to define the subset of cases with poor clinical outcome (day 90 mRS 4-6) after successful reperfusion (eTICI 2b50, 2b67, 2c, 3). Multivariate analyses were used to identify predictors of poor outcome using these distinct definitions of successful reperfusion. The influence of covariates, including TLSW, baseline clinical and imaging variables (e.g. ASPECTS, ASITN collateral grade), on defining such optimal neuroprotective candidates was delineated.
Results:
Successful reperfusion adjudicated by core lab, defined as eTICI ≥ 2b50 included 1,162 subjects, with eTICI ≥ 2b67 in 920, eTICI ≥ 2c in 652 and eTICI 3 in 209. Poor outcome (day 90 mRS 4-6) occurred in 316/1162 (27%) with eTICI ≥ 2b50, 243/920 (26%) with eTICI ≥ 2b67, 172/652 (26%) with eTICI ≥ 2c and 61/209 (29%) with eTICI 3. Across all subsets, multivariate analyses to predict poor outcome after successful reperfusion identified increased age (per year, OR 1.04-1.05, all p=<0.02) as a factor, adjusting for withdrawal of care. Expectedly, greater baseline NIHSS severity predicted greater day 90 disability (OR 1.07-1.08, all p<0.001). TLSW was a predictor only with eTICI ≥ 2b50 (per hour, OR 1.02, p=0.039). History of diabetes was a factor only with eTICI ≥ 2b50 and eTICI ≥ 2b67 (OR 2.05-2.19, p<0.001). Worse collateral grade (ASITN 0-1) was the most potent predictor (OR 2.27-2.71 versus ASITN 2, p=0.027-0.052; OR 3.85-4.35 versus ASITN 3-4, all p=0.003).
Conclusions:
Neuroprotection combined with endovascular therapy may optimally target stroke patients with worse collaterals, diabetes or increased age. Trial design for neuroprotection with revascularization in AIS should leverage these data.
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Liebeskind DS, Zhang Y, Veznedaroglu E, English J, Baxter BW, Budzik RF, Bartolini BM, Krajina A, Malek A, Sarraj A, Gupta R, Nogueira RG. Abstract WMP4: Fast versus Slow Progressors in Real-World Data From the Trevo Retriever Registry: Collaterals Dominate Time to Reperfusion in Clinical Outcome After Thrombectomy. Stroke 2019. [DOI: 10.1161/str.50.suppl_1.wmp4] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Background:
Time to reperfusion (TTR) is commonly cited in clinical outcome after endovascular treatment of acute ischemic stroke, yet collaterals may set the pace of ischemia. Real-world data on fast and slow progressors also remain scarce. We analyzed the impact of TTR on clinical outcome in real-world data using core lab adjudicated angiography, interventional steps and corresponding reperfusion.
Methods:
16 key time intervals were calculated from workflow (time of symptom onset, door, picture, puncture) and core lab metrics (clot visualization, first deployment, first reperfusion, final angiography) in real-world data from the Trevo Retriever Registry. These 16 variations of TTR were analyzed overall and by collateral status (ASITN 0-1 versus 2 versus 3-4) to determine the relationship with 90-day clinical outcomes.
Results:
Real-world data on endovascular therapy from 1,441 subjects in the Trevo Retriever Registry were analyzed to relate TTR with clinical outcomes. Overall metrics for TTR are shown in Table 1. TTR was not linked with collateral status. Using a multivariate model incorporating known predictors, there was no influence of TTR using any of the 16 definitions on clinical outcome. Better collateral status on DSA prior to revascularization showed a potent relationship with 90-day mRS (p<0.001) and better probability of functional independence (aOR 1.4, 95% CI 1.2, 1.7) per grade of collateral flow.
Conclusions:
Collaterals transform time to reperfusion, linking fast and slow progressors with subsequent clinical outcomes. TTR may be standardized based on these 16 key epochs in endovascular stroke therapy to document workflow metrics. Time is relative, even when measured with detailed, standardized metrics.
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Prabhakaran S, Zaidat OO, Castonguay AC, Haussen DC, English JD, Satti SR, Chen J, Farid H, Veznedaroglu E, Binning MJ, Puri A, Vora NA, Budzik RD, Dabus G, Linfante I, Janardhan V, Alshekhlee A, Abraham MG, Edgell R, Taqi A, El Khoury R, Mokin M, Majjhoo AQ, Kabbani M, Froehler MT, Finch I, Ansari SA, Novakovic R, Nguyen TN, Nogueira RG. Abstract WMP6: Predictors of Times to Reperfusion in the TRACK Trevo Stent-retriever Registry. Stroke 2018. [DOI: 10.1161/str.49.suppl_1.wmp6] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Background:
Time to mechanical thrombectomy is a significant driver of outcomes in acute ischemic stroke (AIS) patients presenting with large vessel occlusion (LVO). We aimed to evaluate predictors of onset to groin puncture (OTG), groin puncture to reperfusion (GTR), and onset to reperfusion (OTR) times in AIS patients treated with the Trevo stent-retriever.
Methods:
The investigator-initiated TRACK registry recruited 23 clinical sites to submit demographic, clinical, site-adjudicated angiographic, and outcome data on consecutive patients treated with the Trevo device. We included patients treated <8 hours from last known normal (LKN). Times for LKN, groin puncture, and TICI 2b/3 reperfusion were available to calculate OTG, GTR, and OTR times. Using multivariable linear regression, we evaluated potential predictors of times including demographics, risk factors, baseline NIHSS score, intravenous tPA use, inter-facility transfer, perfusion imaging selection, type of anesthesia, location of LVO, use of rescue intra-arterial therapies, and number of passes.
Results:
Among 433 patients analyzed (mean age 66.8 +/- 14.6 years; median NIHSS score 18; 88% anterior circulation), the median times were: OTG 240, GTR 64, and OTR 321 minutes. In multivariable analysis (Table), the independent predictors were: 1) OTG: transfer status and general anesthesia (GA) use; 2) GTR: 1 pass attempt only, use of rescue therapy, GA use, and baseline mRS >1; and 3) OTR: transfer status, use of perfusion imaging, anterior circulation LVO, use of rescue therapy, and 1 pass attempt only.
Conclusions:
Major pre-treatment contributors to delays to reperfusion in AIS patients treated <8 hours in the TRACK registry included inter-facility transfer (+82.5 minutes) and use of perfusion imaging (+30.6 minutes). Reducing inter-facility transfer delays, direct transport to thrombectomy-capable hospitals, and minimizing perfusion imaging would have major impact on reducing treatment times.
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Binning MJ, Veznedaroglu E, Budzik R, English J, Baxter B, Bartolini B, Liebeskind D, Krajina A, Gupta R, Nogueria R. Abstract 109: Trevo 2000: Results of the Largest Real-World Registry for Stent Retriever for Acute Ischemic Stroke. Stroke 2018. [DOI: 10.1161/str.49.suppl_1.109] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Objective:
The Trevo Registry was designed to assess real world outcomes of the Trevo Retriever in patients experiencing ischemic stroke. It is the largest prospective study for acute stroke intervention, with 2010 patients enrolled and 90 day outcomes in 1873 patients. The primary endpoint is revascularization status based on post-procedure TICI score and secondary endpoints include 90-day mRS, 90-day mortality, neurological deterioration at 24 hours and device/procedure related adverse events.
Methods:
The study was a prospective, open-label, consecutive enrollment, multi-center, international registry of patients who underwent mechanical thrombectomy for acute stroke using the Trevo stent retriever as the initial device.
Results:
The median NIHSS at admission was 16 (IQR 11-20). Most patients (70.8%) were treated at <= 6 hours from last known normal with a median procedure time of 50 minutes (32-77). The occlusion site was M1 or M2 in 73.9%. General anesthesia was employed in 43.5% of procedures. TICI 2b or 3 revascularization was 92.8% with an average of 1.7 passes with the device. Median NIHSS at 24 hours and discharge was 6 and 4 respectively. Fifty-five percent (55.2%) of patients had mRS ≤2 at 3 months and the overall mortality rate was 13.8%. Patients treated after 8 hours of symptom onset had a 95% revascularization rate and 51.2% mRS ≤2 at 3 months. The symptomatic ICH rate was 1.6%. Patients who met the revised AHA criteria for thrombectomy were found to have 59.5% mRS 0-2 at 90 days.
Conclusions:
The Trevo Retriever Registry represents the first real world data with stent retriever use in the era of clinical trials showing the overwhelming benefit of stent retrievers to treat acute ischemic stroke. Due to the fact that this data represents real world use of the Trevo Retriever, (e.g. subjects pre-stroke mRS >1 (29%) and those treated 6-24 hours after stroke symptoms (29%), this data cannot be compared to the results from recent trials with restricted eligibility criteria. Future subgroup analysis of this large cohort will help to identify areas of future research to enhance outcomes further with this treatment modality.
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Liebeskind DS, Zhang Y, Scalzo F, Veznedaroglu E, English J, Baxter BW, Budzik RF, Bartolini BM, Krajina A, Malek A, Sarraj A, Gupta R, Nogueira RG. Abstract 63: Collaterals in Thrombectomy for MCA Occlusion: Mapping the Collaterome in the Trevo Retriever Registry. Stroke 2018. [DOI: 10.1161/str.49.suppl_1.63] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Background:
The delay and dispersion of collateral circulation to the MCA territory is readily available prior to endovascular thrombectomy for acute ischemic stroke (AIS). Factors associated with collateral grade have never been established in such an extensive population, reflecting diverse subjects from around the world. Largescale data from the Trevo Retriever Registry enables mapping of the MCA collaterome for the first time.
Methods:
The Imaging and Angiography Core Lab of the Trevo Retriever Registry independently conducted prospective evaluation of angiography in more than 1,500 subjects. Collaterals were systematically scored using ASITN grade prior to thrombectomy. Descriptive statistics detailed the distribution of collateral grades and analyses with demographic, imaging and clinical variables to explore key associations with routinely acquired registry data.
Results:
890 subjects (68.5 ± 15.1 years; 54.6% women; baseline NIHSS median 15 (10-19)) with AIS due to MCA occlusion had angiography of collateral circulation centrally adjudicated. Proximal M1 MCA occlusion was noted in 671/890 (75.4%). Collateral grade prior to thrombectomy included grade 4 or most robust collaterals in 38/890 (4.3%), 3 in 294/890 (33.0%), 2 in 467/890 (52.5%), 1 in 80/890 (9%) and 0 or none in 11/890 (1.2%). Baseline collaterals at angiography and pre-procedure ASPECTS were closely correlated (r=0.439, p<0.001) with more modest correlation between collateral grade and CTP/DWI (rrCBF<30% or ADC<620) infarct core (r=-0.31, n=391; p<0.001) or CTP/PWI (Tmax>6s) hypoperfusion at-risk (r=-0.10, n=391; p=0.043) volumes. First pass mTICI≥2b occurred in 553/858 (64.5%) with final mTICI≥2b in 824/890 (92.6%). Collateral grade prior to thrombectomy (each 1-point increment, after adjustment for other predictors) was strongly associated (OR 1.38 95%CI (1.12-1.7), p=0.002) with good clinical outcomes (mRS 0-2) at 90 days.
Conclusions:
Largescale mapping of collaterals prior to MCA thrombectomy reveals marked variation in the extent and functional impact of the collaterome. The preponderance of partial perfusion in the downstream ischemic territory prompts the need to investigate and leverage the protective nature of the collaterome in AIS.
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Bozorgchami H, Priest R, Veznedaroglu E, Liebeskind D, Budzik R, Baxter B, Bartolini B, Shields R, Krajina A, Sarraj A, Gupta R, Nogueira R, Malek A, English J, Horikawa M. Abstract WP8: Global Real World Evidence of Balloon Guided Stent Retriever Thrombectomy. Stroke 2018. [DOI: 10.1161/str.49.suppl_1.wp8] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Background and Aims:
Balloon Guide Catheter (BGC) use during thrombectomy treatment in Stroke patients has been reported to have positive effects on revascularization, procedural characteristics, and clinical outcomes. We evaluate the use of BGC in an open-label large prospective TREVO Retriever Registry of real world patients to determine predictors of good ‘clinical’ outcomes.
Method:
Consecutive Trevo Registry patients that had Balloon Guide Catheter (BGC) used during their thrombectomy procedure were identified; a subset of patients who fulfilled the criteria (ICA and/or MCA-M1/M2 occlusion with pre-morbid mRS 0-1, TLSW ≤6 hrs) within the cohort were also identified. Multivariate analysis was performed to identify the predictors of good outcomes in BGC thrombectomy patients.
Results:
A total of 1031 BGC treated Trevo Registry patients (overall enrolled, n=2010) qualified for analysis, of which 605 patients fulfilling the subset criteria were identified. The mean age of BGC/stent retriever patients was 67.5 with a median (IQR) baseline NIHSS of 15(11-19). Occlusion location of the BCG group was ICA -20.4%, M1- 57.1%, M2/M3-20.3%, and Posterior 1.8%.
In the overall BGC cohort, the median (IQR) time to treatment was (4.2 (3.0,6.5)- hrs.) with conscious/local sedation used in 63.4% and general anesthesia used in 37.3% of cases. The median number of passes with Trevo stent retriever was 1 and revascularization (mTICI ≥ b) was achieved in 92.8% of cases. The sICH rate was low at 1.9% (20/1031) with a low rate of vessel perforation (0.2%). At 90 days post stroke, 56.0% of patients achieved functional independence (mRS 0-2) with 63.7% of the subset of “guidline “ BGC patients achieving functional independence at 90 days. Multivariate logistic regression showed age (aOR 0.97 [0.96, 0.99] P <0.001), Diabetes (aOR 0.67, [0.18,0.98] P =0.03), conscious sedation vs general anesthesia ( aOR 1.7 [1.2,2.3], P= 0.002, number of passes (aOR 0.76 [0.66-0.88],P <0.001), pre stroke mRS (aOR 0.54 [0.45-0.65], P <0.0010 and NIHSS (aOR 0.93 [0.91-0.95], P <0.001) as predictors of functional independence .
Conclusion:
Data from Trevo Registry demonstrate the use of BGC in thrombectomy procedure is safe, and leads to a reduction of disability in ischemic stroke patients.
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Sarraj A, Nogueira R, Liebeskind DS, Budzik R, Farrell CM, English J, Baxter B, Bartolini B, Krajina A, Hassan A, Veznedaroglu E, Shields R, Zhang Y, Savitz S, McCullough L, Malek A, Vora NA, Chen M, Gupta R. Abstract 112: Identifying Patients Who May Benefit From Thrombectomy in the Late Time Window: Predictors of Good Outcome Beyond Advanced Imaging. Stroke 2018. [DOI: 10.1161/str.49.suppl_1.112] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Background:
The DAWN trial showed EVT effectiveness in the late time window (6-24 hrs), however, DAWN patients were carefully selected based on advanced perfusion imaging, CTP and MRI. Similar to the early window (0-6 hrs), simple imaging (CT) and other clinical variables may select patients for thrombectomy beyond 6 hours. We evaluated a largescale, real world practice for predictors that could identify patients who may benefit from EVT in the late time window.
Methods:
Patients with LVO in the anterior circulation (M1, M2, ICA) from a prospective, single arm, multicenter, international registry (Trevo Retriever Registry) treated in the late window LSN to groin puncture (GP) (6-24 hrs) were included. Univariate and multivariate analyses assessed factors independently correlating with good outcome (90 day mRS 0-2). Furthermore, patients outcomes were compared based on their baseline imaging selection CT vs CTP and MRI.
Results:
549 patients were treated beyond 6 hours. The average age was 67, median/IQR ASPECTS 8(6-9), median/IQR NIHSS was 15 (9-20), median/IQR time LSN to GP (hr) was 9.7 (7.3-13.6) and IV-tPA rate were 22.8%. CT was the only imaging selection method in 15.9%, while additional advanced imaging was utilized in the remaining patients; CTP (70%), and MRI(14.1%). Good outcomes were observed in 51.4% of late window patients. Age (aOR 0.96, 95% CI 0.94-0.98, p<0.001), stroke severity by NIHSS (aOR 0.9, 95% CI 0.86-0.95, p<0.001) and ASPECTS (for each point increment in ASPECTS aOR 1.24, 95% CI 1.05-1.47, p=0.012) were independent pre-intervention predictors of good outcome in the late window. The addition of advanced imaging beyond CT, including CTP or MRI, did not confer higher correlation with good outcome (aOR 1.45, 95% CI 0.77-2.73, p=0.25). Good outcome was achieved in 56% of CT selected patients as compared to 53% patients selected by CTP or MRI.
Conclusion:
Simple imaging and clinical variables can identify patients that could benefit from thrombectomy in the late window. Importantly, ASPECTS reliably predicted good outcome beyond 6 hours without adjunctive benefit from adding advanced perfusion imaging, a finding that may simplify patients selection to facilitate and generalize the intervention in the late window to wide, real world practice.
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Sarraj A, Veznedaroglu E, English J, Budzik R, Baxter B, Bartolini B, Liebeskind DS, Krajina A, Nogueira R, Farrell CM, Shields R, Zhang Y, Malek A, Vora NA, Chen M, Hassan A, Gupta R. Abstract TP29: Endovascular Therapy for Distal Occlusions in the Early and Late Window: an Extension in Location and Time. Stroke 2018. [DOI: 10.1161/str.49.suppl_1.tp29] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Background:
Endovascular therapy (EVT) effectiveness is established in ischemic strokes with large vessel occlusion (LVO) in the terminal ICA and M1, which was extended up to 24 hrs by recent DAWN trial results. However this benefit is not as well established in more distal (M2) occlusions, especially late presenters (beyond 6 hrs). We evaluated thrombectomy outcomes in M2 occlusions as compared to ICA/M1 across early and late time windows.
Methods:
In a prospective, multicenter, single arm, international registry (Trevo Retriever Registry), anterior circulation LVOs were stratified on clot location into M2 vs ICA/M1 and dichotimized into early vs late (0-6 vs 6-24 hrs). 90 day mRS (0-1 excellent, 0-2 good) were the primary outcomes; sICH and dissection were the secondary (safety) outcomes. Multivariate analyses identified pre-procedure variables independently correlating with good outcome in M2s.
Results:
1581 patients were identified (1265 ICA/M1, 316 M2). The M2 and ICA/M1 groups were similar (age in both 68.4), IV-tPA (69.1 vs 69.7%, p=0.8) and same median/IQR ASPECTS 8 (7-9). M2 patients had lower NIHSS (13 vs 16, p<0.001). Higher good and excellent outcomes were observed in M2s (65.8% and 51.3%) compared to ICA/M1 (57.9% and 42.8%) (p=0.01). Similar outcomes were maintained beyond 6 hrs (64.8% good, 45.9% excellent in M2s vs 53.8% and 38.4% in ICA/M1) (p=0.08). Fig 1 shows the probabilities of good outcome in M2 vs ICA/M1 in relation to time, illustrating no association with time (p=0.4). Similar safety profiles were seen: sICH (0% M2 vs 0.7% ICA/M1, p=1.0) and dissections (0.3% M2 vs 0.4% ICA/M1, p=0.22). Age (aOR 0.96, 0.94-0.98 95% CI, p<0.001) and NIHSS (aOR 0.94, 0.9-0.98 95% CI, p<0.001) correlated with good outcome in M2, while IV-tPA did not have adjunctive benefit (aOR 0.72, 0.42-1.24 95% CI, p=0.24).
Conclusion:
Excellent and good outcomes may be achieved in distal LVO isolated to M2 similar to those with proximal occlusions. A benefit that can be reached up to 24 hrs.
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Nogueira RG, Veznedaroglu E, Budzik R, Gupta R, Krajina A, Haussen DC, Grossberg J, Barreira CM, English J, Baxter B, Bartolini B, Frankel M, Liebeskind D. Abstract WP34: Endovascular Treatment in Large Core Strokes. Stroke 2018. [DOI: 10.1161/str.49.suppl_1.wp34] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Introduction:
The recent thrombectomy trials were largely limited to patients with small strokes on presentation.
Methods:
Patients derived from a large prospective multinational stent-retriever registry (Trevo Registry, n=2,010). Baseline NCCT SPECTS and CTP Core Volumes (rCBF<30%) were adjudicated by a Core Lab. Baseline and outcome variables were compared for ASPECTS 0-5 vs. 6-10 on NCCT and large age-adjusted cores (>70mL if age <=70 years; >50mL if age >70-80 years; >30mL if age >80 years) vs. not on CTP. The primary and secondary efficacy endpoint were the rates of 90-day mRS 0-2 and mTICI 2b-3, respectively. Safety endpoints included sICH and 90-day mortality.
Results:
As compared with patients with higher baseline ASPECTS (n=1037), low baseline ASPECTS (0-4, n=78; 5, n=78) patients were younger, had higher stroke severity, and tend to have less comorbidities and undergo thrombectomy at later times (Table 1a). TICI-3 reperfusion was higher in the higher-ASPECTS group but other reperfusion outcomes were nearly the same. Safety outcomes were comparable. Rates of 90-day mRS 0-2 were significantly higher in the high-ASPECTS group (p<0.001); however, 41.8% of ASPECTS 0-5 patients were independent at 90 days and safety outcomes were similar (Table 1b). Analysis according to large age-adjusted core (n=86) vs not (n=431) yielded similarly encouraging results (Table 2a-b).
Conclusion:
Patients with large baseline cores as measured by either NCCT or CTP may still achieve favorable outcomes with endovascular treatment. A randomized clinical trial in this patient population is warranted.
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Liebeskind DS, Zhang Y, Trieu H, Revanur A, Scalzo F, Veznedaroglu E, English J, Baxter BW, Budzik RF, Bartolini BM, Krajina A, Malek A, Sarraj A, Gupta R, Jadhav AJ, Jovin TG, Nogueira RG. Abstract 114:
Aspects
versus Perfusion in the Trevo Retriever Registry: Defining the Core on the Largest Scale to Date. Stroke 2018. [DOI: 10.1161/str.49.suppl_1.114] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Background:
Routine use of advanced imaging versus ASPECTS for imaging triage of endovascular thrombectomy candidates has not been evaluated on a large scale to date. Ischemic core may be defined by ASPECTS or perfusion imaging, yet these variable definitions likely reflect different pathophysiology as perfusion may fluctuate and ASPECTS lesions may be time-dependent.
Methods:
The Trevo Retriever Registry was a prospective, open-label, consecutive enrollment, multicenter, international registry with more than 65 enrolling sites worldwide. The Imaging and Angiography Core Lab systematically adjudicated more than 1,500 subjects, scoring ASPECTS and separately processing perfusion imaging. Ischemic core volume on perfusion imaging was defined as rrCBF<30% (CTP) and analyzed with respect to ASPECTS.
Results:
488 subjects (68.3±14.4 years; 53.3% women; baseline NIHSS median 15 (10-19) with anterior circulation occlusions were evaluated with both ASPECTS and perfusion imaging prior to thrombectomy. Arterial occlusions included 87/487 (17.9%) ICA and 296/487 (60.8%) proximal M1 MCA, treated with thrombectomy at median 4.7 (3.3-7.9) hours from time last known well (TLKW). ASPECTS was median 8 (7-9) with ischemic core lesions of median 18 (4.9-39.2) cc. At-risk hypoperfusion (Tmax>6s) lesions were median 109.8 (62-156.9) cc. TLKW was associated with ASPECTS (r=-0.18, p<0.001) yet no time relationship was noted with either ischemic core or at-risk hypoperfusion on perfusion imaging. ASPECTS correlated modestly with perfusion imaging-derived ischemic core (r=-0.35, p<0.001) and at-risk hypoperfusion (r=-0.24, p<0.001). Post-procedure mTICI≥2b occurred in 448/488 (91.8%). Each increment in baseline ASPECTS was associated with an adjusted OR of 1.21 (95%CI (1.05-1.39), p<0.008 for good clinical outcomes (day 90 mRS 0-2), whereas the perfusion lesion volume for ischemic core and at-risk hypoperfusion did not predict outcomes.
Conclusions:
Largescale, systematic evaluation of ASPECTS and perfusion imaging prior to thrombectomy reveals discrepancy in the definition of ischemic core and the prediction of clinical outcomes after revascularization. ASPECTS is time-dependent, yet reliably predicts outcomes in routine clinical practice.
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English J, Veznedaroglu E, Liebeskind DS, Budzik RF, Baxter B, Krajina A, Shields R, Sarraj A, Nogueira R, Malek A, Gupta R. Abstract 107: Real World Clinical and Radiographic Outcomes With and Without Intravenous tPA in Anterior Circulation Large Vessel Occlusion Mechanical Thrombectomy Patients Treated Within 8 Hours. Stroke 2018. [DOI: 10.1161/str.49.suppl_1.107] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Background and Aims:
Intravenous tPA remains the standard of care, with MT currently indicated within 8 hours for IV tPA failures or patients with IV tPA contraindications. Whether LVO patients should receive IV tPA treatment or instead be triaged directly to MT therapy is currently unknown but greatly debated. The Trevo Registry is a real world, multi-center, international study of mechanical thrombectomy (MT) patients treated from 0-24 hours. Evaluation of the Trevo Registry clinical and procedurals outcomes of MT patients treated with or without IV tPA could provide insight into the benefit of IV tPA in MT patients. We hypothesized that in MT patients treated within 8 hours, pretreatment with intravenous tPA would lead to better clinical outcomes compared to patients who did not receive IV tPA.
Method:
Consecutively enrolled patients treated within 8 hours with ICA, M1, or M2 occlusions were selected for analysis. Univariate and multivariable regressions were conducted to identify clinical and radiographic independent variables that correlate best with the dependent variable of functional outcome: mRS 0-2, with a focus on intravenous tPA treatment.
Results:
A total of 1183 Trevo Registry patients (overall enrolled, n=2010) qualified for analysis, of whom 380 were not treated with IV tPA. Demographics were similar, however atrial fibrillation (46.3% vs 27.2%) and previous ischemic stroke (14.1% vs 7.5%) were higher in the no IV tPA group. The median time to treatment was similar (3.8 vs. 3.6 hrs). First pass mTICI ≥ 2B (63.6% vs 66.4%) and final revascularization (91.1% vs 92.8%) were similar between no IV tPA and IV tPA groups.Unadjusted, there were similar rates of functional outcome (90 day mRS 0-2; 60.9% vs. 62.5%). After adjustment, patients who did not receive IV-tPA had similar rates of good outcome (aOR 1.08, 95% CI [0.87-1.34]. P=0.58) as well as reduction (shift) in disability (aOR 1.08, 95% CI [0.87-1.34]. P=0.49). Safety outcomes (mortality, sICH) were similar between both groups.
Conclusion:
In the Trevo Registry of MT patients treated within 8 hours, patients who did not receive IV tPA had similar endovascular and clinical outcomes as patients pretreated with IV tPA. The added benefit of IV tPA for MT patients should be further investigated.
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Nogueira RG, Haussen D, Veznedaroglu E, Budzik R, Gupta R, Grossberg J, Barreira CM, Bouslama M, English J, Baxter B, Bartolini B, Frankel M, Liebeskind D. Abstract TP26: Endovascular Therapy in Patients With Low NIHSS Score on Presentation. Stroke 2018. [DOI: 10.1161/str.49.suppl_1.tp26] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Introduction:
Approximately 2/3 of all AIS present with NIHSS 0-5. While it has been demonstrated that LVO can be found in ~10-20% of all low NIHSS patients, outcome data in this population remains scarce. Indeed, only 14/1766 patients in the recent endovascular RCTs had baseline (b) NIHSS in the 0-5 range. Yet, the presence of LVO in the setting of low NIHSS is associated with ~10-fold increase in subsequent deterioration. We aim to describe the outcomes in a large cohort of low NIHSS patients undergoing thrombectomy.
Methods:
Patients derived from a large prospective multicenter international stent-retriever registry (Trevo Registry, n=2,010). Baseline and outcome variables were compared according to bNIHSS 0-8 vs >8 and bNIHSS 0-5 vs >5. The primary and secondary efficacy endpoints were the rates of 90-day mRS 0-2 and mTICI 2b-3, respectively. Safety endpoints included sICH and 90-day mortality.
Results:
A total of 1,985 patients were included. As compared with patients with higher baseline NIHSS, low baseline NIHSS (0-8, n=342; 0-5, n=160) patients were younger, had less comorbidities and better functional status, more frequently had MCA-M2 or vertebrobasilar occlusions, less frequently received IV tpa, and underwent thrombectomy at later times (Table 1). The reperfusion outcomes were nearly the same. There were no significant differences in procedure-related complications, which were overall low (Table 2). The rates of 90-day mRS 0-2 were significantly higher in the lower NIHSS patients (p<0.001); however, ~20% of those patients were not independent and ~7% were dead at 90 days despite presenting with low clinical severity.
Conclusion:
Despite safe and efficacious endovascular reperfusion, low-NIHSS LVO patients have a relatively high proportion of bad outcomes. This supports the notion that many of "mildly" presenting patients do not fare well. A randomized clinical trial including immediate endovascular treatment in this patient population is warranted.
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Nogueira RG, Jadhav AP, Haussen DC, Bonafe A, Budzik RF, Bhuva P, Yavagal DR, Ribo M, Cognard C, Hanel RA, Sila CA, Hassan AE, Millan M, Levy EI, Mitchell P, Chen M, English JD, Shah QA, Silver FL, Pereira VM, Mehta BP, Baxter BW, Abraham MG, Cardona P, Veznedaroglu E, Hellinger FR, Feng L, Kirmani JF, Lopes DK, Jankowitz BT, Frankel MR, Costalat V, Vora NA, Yoo AJ, Malik AM, Furlan AJ, Rubiera M, Aghaebrahim A, Olivot JM, Tekle WG, Shields R, Graves T, Lewis RJ, Smith WS, Liebeskind DS, Saver JL, Jovin TG. Thrombectomy 6 to 24 Hours after Stroke with a Mismatch between Deficit and Infarct. N Engl J Med 2018; 378:11-21. [PMID: 29129157 DOI: 10.1056/nejmoa1706442] [Citation(s) in RCA: 3327] [Impact Index Per Article: 554.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/16/2022]
Abstract
BACKGROUND The effect of endovascular thrombectomy that is performed more than 6 hours after the onset of ischemic stroke is uncertain. Patients with a clinical deficit that is disproportionately severe relative to the infarct volume may benefit from late thrombectomy. METHODS We enrolled patients with occlusion of the intracranial internal carotid artery or proximal middle cerebral artery who had last been known to be well 6 to 24 hours earlier and who had a mismatch between the severity of the clinical deficit and the infarct volume, with mismatch criteria defined according to age (<80 years or ≥80 years). Patients were randomly assigned to thrombectomy plus standard care (the thrombectomy group) or to standard care alone (the control group). The coprimary end points were the mean score for disability on the utility-weighted modified Rankin scale (which ranges from 0 [death] to 10 [no symptoms or disability]) and the rate of functional independence (a score of 0, 1, or 2 on the modified Rankin scale, which ranges from 0 to 6, with higher scores indicating more severe disability) at 90 days. RESULTS A total of 206 patients were enrolled; 107 were assigned to the thrombectomy group and 99 to the control group. At 31 months, enrollment in the trial was stopped because of the results of a prespecified interim analysis. The mean score on the utility-weighted modified Rankin scale at 90 days was 5.5 in the thrombectomy group as compared with 3.4 in the control group (adjusted difference [Bayesian analysis], 2.0 points; 95% credible interval, 1.1 to 3.0; posterior probability of superiority, >0.999), and the rate of functional independence at 90 days was 49% in the thrombectomy group as compared with 13% in the control group (adjusted difference, 33 percentage points; 95% credible interval, 24 to 44; posterior probability of superiority, >0.999). The rate of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage did not differ significantly between the two groups (6% in the thrombectomy group and 3% in the control group, P=0.50), nor did 90-day mortality (19% and 18%, respectively; P=1.00). CONCLUSIONS Among patients with acute stroke who had last been known to be well 6 to 24 hours earlier and who had a mismatch between clinical deficit and infarct, outcomes for disability at 90 days were better with thrombectomy plus standard care than with standard care alone. (Funded by Stryker Neurovascular; DAWN ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02142283 .).
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Zaidat OO, Castonguay AC, Nogueira RG, Haussen DC, English JD, Satti SR, Chen J, Farid H, Borders C, Veznedaroglu E, Binning MJ, Puri A, Vora NA, Budzik RF, Dabus G, Linfante I, Janardhan V, Alshekhlee A, Abraham MG, Edgell R, Taqi MA, Khoury RE, Mokin M, Majjhoo AQ, Kabbani MR, Froehler MT, Finch I, Ansari SA, Novakovic R, Nguyen TN. TREVO stent-retriever mechanical thrombectomy for acute ischemic stroke secondary to large vessel occlusion registry. J Neurointerv Surg 2017; 10:516-524. [PMID: 28963367 PMCID: PMC5969387 DOI: 10.1136/neurintsurg-2017-013328] [Citation(s) in RCA: 90] [Impact Index Per Article: 12.9] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 07/17/2017] [Revised: 08/17/2017] [Accepted: 08/24/2017] [Indexed: 01/05/2023]
Abstract
Background Recent randomized clinical trials (RCTs) demonstrated the efficacy of mechanical thrombectomy using stent-retrievers in patients with acute ischemic stroke (AIS) with large vessel occlusions; however, it remains unclear if these results translate to a real-world setting. The TREVO Stent-Retriever Acute Stroke (TRACK) multicenter Registry aimed to evaluate the use of the Trevo device in everyday clinical practice. Methods Twenty-three centers enrolled consecutive AIS patients treated from March 2013 through August 2015 with the Trevo device. The primary outcome was defined as achieving a Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction (TICI) score of ≥2b. Secondary outcomes included 90-day modified Rankin Scale (mRS), mortality, and symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (sICH). Results A total of 634patients were included. Mean age was 66.1±14.8 years and mean baseline NIH Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score was 17.4±6.7; 86.7% had an anterior circulation occlusion. Mean time from symptom onset to puncture and time to revascularization were 363.1±264.5 min and 78.8±49.6 min, respectively. 80.3% achieved TICI ≥2b. 90-day mRS ≤2 was achieved in 47.9%, compared with 51.4% when restricting the analysis to the anterior circulation and within 6 hours (similar to recent AHA/ASA guidelines), and 54.3% for those who achieved complete revascularization. The 90-day mortality rate was 19.8%. Independent predictors of clinical outcome included age, baseline NIHSS, use of balloon guide catheter, revascularization, and sICH. Conclusion The TRACK Registry results demonstrate the generalizability of the recent thrombectomy RCTs in real-world clinical practice. No differences in clinical and angiographic outcomes were shown between patients treated within the AHA/ASA guidelines and those treated outside the recommendations.
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Binning MJ, Veznedaroglu E, Budzik R, English J, Baxter B, Bartolini B, Liebeskind DS, Krajina A, Gupta R, Nogueira RG. 369 The TREVO Registry-Subgroup Analysis, Treatment Beyond 6 Hours. Neurosurgery 2017. [DOI: 10.1093/neuros/nyx417.369] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/14/2022] Open
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Binning MJ, Veznedaroglu E. Letter: Commentary: Carotid Artery Angioplasty and Stenting Without Distal Embolic Protection Devices. Neurosurgery 2017; 81:E36. [PMID: 28595342 DOI: 10.1093/neuros/nyx205] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/14/2022] Open
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Day AL, Siddiqui AH, Meyers PM, Jovin TG, Derdeyn CP, Hoh BL, Riina H, Linfante I, Zaidat O, Turk A, Howington JU, Mocco J, Ringer AJ, Veznedaroglu E, Khalessi AA, Levy EI, Woo H, Harbaugh R, Giannotta S. Training Standards in Neuroendovascular Surgery: Program Accreditation and Practitioner Certification. Stroke 2017; 48:2318-2325. [PMID: 28706116 DOI: 10.1161/strokeaha.117.016560] [Citation(s) in RCA: 41] [Impact Index Per Article: 5.9] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 01/13/2017] [Revised: 03/09/2017] [Accepted: 03/15/2017] [Indexed: 12/31/2022]
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Neuroendovascular surgery is a medical subspecialty that uses minimally invasive catheter-based technology and radiological imaging to diagnose and treat diseases of the central nervous system, head, neck, spine, and their vasculature. To perform these procedures, the practitioner needs an extensive knowledge of the anatomy of the nervous system, vasculature, and pathological conditions that affect their physiology. A working knowledge of radiation biology and safety is essential. Similarly, a sufficient volume of clinical and interventional experience, first as a trainee and then as a practitioner, is required so that these treatments can be delivered safely and effectively. METHODS This document has been prepared under the aegis of the Society of Neurological Surgeons and its Committee for Advanced Subspecialty Training in conjunction with the Joint Section of Cerebrovascular Surgery for the American Association of Neurological Surgeons and Congress of Neurological Surgeons, the Society of NeuroInterventional Surgery, and the Society of Vascular and Interventional Neurology. RESULTS The material herein outlines the requirements for institutional accreditation of training programs in neuroendovascular surgery, as well as those needed to obtain individual subspecialty certification, as agreed on by Committee for Advanced Subspecialty Training, the Society of Neurological Surgeons, and the aforementioned Societies. This document also clarifies the pathway to certification through an advanced practice track mechanism for those current practitioners of this subspecialty who trained before Committee for Advanced Subspecialty Training standards were formulated. CONCLUSIONS Representing neuroendovascular surgery physicians from neurosurgery, neuroradiology, and neurology, the above mentioned societies seek to standardize neuroendovascular surgery training to ensure the highest quality delivery of this subspecialty within the United States.
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Binning MJ, Veznedaroglu E. In Reply: Carotid Artery Angioplasty and Stenting Without Distal Embolic Protection Devices. Neurosurgery 2017; 80:E274. [PMID: 28419311 DOI: 10.1093/neuros/nyx069] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/13/2022] Open
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Sarraj A, Veznedaroglu E, Budzik RF, English JD, Baxter BW, Bartolini BM, Liebeskind DS, Krajina A, Shields RD, Xiang B, Nogueira RG, Gupta R, Dannenbaum M, Farrell CM, McCullough LD, Savitz SI. Abstract WP5: The Transfer Score May Aid Decisions Whether to Transfer Patients with Large Vessel Occlusions for Endovascular Therapy. Stroke 2017. [DOI: 10.1161/str.48.suppl_1.wp5] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Background:
While faster reperfusion with EVT leads to better outcomes in acute ischemic stroke due to large vessel occlusion (LVO), most LVO patients present to outside hospitals without EVT capability. Treating physicians are often unsure if EVT would confer benefit upon arrival to tertiary hospitals given inter-facility transfer delays.
Objective:
We evaluated independent predictors of good outcome in transferred patients treated with EVT to devise a score that may assist treating physicians to make transfer and treatment decisions.
Methods:
Transfer patients were analyzed in a multicenter international prospective cohort study of LVO patients treated with stent retriever thrombectomy (TREVO Registry) from 11/2013 to 4/2016. Independent factors correlating with good outcome after EVT were identified using univariate and multivariate analyses. We devised a score to identify patients with LVO at the referral facility who may benefit from EVT.
Results:
Of 1000 patients enrolled, 226 were anterior circulation occlusions, transferred and treated within 0-8 hrs (Table 1). Age, stroke severity, glucose level, M2 occlusion and achieving onset to groin puncture ≤ 5 hr were independent factors associated with good outcome (Table 2). Other clinical variables were analyzed, as in ASPECTS, but were not significant. A 10 point score was devised (Table 3). Patients with a score of 0-4 had 4 times the odds of good outcome compared to a score of 5-9 (aOR 4.3, 95% CI 1.9-9.9;
p
<0.001). These results were maintained after adjustment for mTICI and IV-tPA (aOR 4.0, 95% CI 1.7-9.4;
p
<0.001). Fig 1 shows good outcome rates stratified by score points. ROC curves showed better score performance (AUC= 0.8) compared to THRIVE (AUC=0.74) and HIAT (AUC=0.69) certifying good predictability.
Conclusion:
A simple transfer score may be an effective triage method to identify patients at remote facilities who may benefit from EVT upon transfer. Further validation is necessary to confirm these findings.
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Binning MJ, Budzik RF, Baxter BW, Bartolini BM, Liebeskind DS, Krajina A, English JD, Maxwell C, Veznedaroglu E. Abstract WMP2: Trevo 2000: Real-World Experience in the First 1247 Patients. Stroke 2017. [DOI: 10.1161/str.48.suppl_1.wmp2] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Objective:
The Trevo Registry is designed to assess real world outcomes of the Trevo Retriever in patients experiencing ischemic stroke. This is the largest prospective study for acute stroke intervention, with 1247 patients currently enrolled and 90 day outcomes in 1021 patients. The primary endpoint is revascularization status based on post-procedure TICI score and secondary endpoints include 90-day mRS, 90-day mortality, neurological deterioration at 24 hours and device/procedure related adverse events.
Methods:
The study is a prospective, open-label, consecutive enrollment, multi-center, international registry of patients undergoing mechanical thrombectomy for acute stroke using the Trevo stent retriever as the initial device. Enrollment is expected to reach 2000 subjects at up to 100 sites.
Results:
As of August 13, 2016 a total of 1247 patients were enrolled. The median NIHSS at admission was 16 (IQR 11-20). Most patients (66.2%) were treated at >/= 6 hours from last known normal with a median procedure time of 50 minutes (32-77). The occlusion site was M1 or M2 in 74.5%. General anesthesia was employed in 46.6% of procedures. TICI 2b or 3 revascularization was 92.8% with an average of 1.6 passes with the device. Median NIHSS at 24 hours and discharge was 6 and 4 respectively. Fifty-five percent of patients had mRS ≤2 at 3 months and the overall mortality rate was 15.4%. Patients treated after 8 hours of symptom onset had a 94.9% revascularization rate and 52.8% mRS ≤2 at 3 months. The symptomatic ICH rate was 1.2%. Patients who met the revised AHA criteria for thrombectomy were found to have 58.4% mRS 0-2 at 90 days.
Conclusions:
The Trevo Retriever Registry represents the first real world data with stent retriever use in the era of clinical trials showing the overwhelming benefit of stent retrievers to treat acute ischemic stroke. Due to the fact that this data represents real world use of the Trevo Retriever, (e.g. subjects pre-stroke mRS >1 (16.5%) and those treated 6-24 hours after stroke symptoms (33.8%), this data cannot be compared to the results from recent trials with restricted eligibility criteria. Future subgroup analysis of this large cohort will help to identify areas of future research to enhance outcomes further with this treatment modality.
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Sarraj A, Veznedaroglu E, Budzik RF, English JD, Baxter BW, Bartolini BM, Krajina A, Shields RD, Nogueira RG, Gupta R, Spiegel GR, Savitz SI, McCullough LD, Farrell CM, Liebeskind DS. Abstract WMP9: Endovascular Thrombectomy Impact in the First Three “Golden” Hours. Stroke 2017. [DOI: 10.1161/str.48.suppl_1.wmp9] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Background:
Endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) substantially increases the likelihood of good outcome in acute ischemic strokes due to large vessel occlusion (LVO). Expediting EVT to achieve faster reperfusion is an important factor that correlates with good outcome. Ultra-early intervention in the first 3 “golden” hours from onset was not well characterized in recent trials.
Objective:
We sought to assess the impact of early treatment within the first 3 hours on clinical outcomes in large, real life, world-wide practice.
Methods:
We analyzed a multicenter international prospective cohort study of LVO patients treated with stent retriever thrombectomy (TREVO Registry) between11/2013 and 4/2016. We stratified patients based on treatment time, onset to groin puncture (GP), into 3 groups: 0-3, 3-6, >6 hrs. 90 day mRS was the primary outcome (0-2 good outcome). Logistic regression modeling was performed to evaluate the impact of treatment within the golden 3 hours on outcomes and to determine the independent factors associated with EVT initiation within 3 hours.
Results:
In the 905 patients, GP occurred in: 23.1% 0-3 hrs, 44.3% 3-6 hrs and 32.6% >6 hrs. Table 1 shows similar baseline characteristics among the groups. Patient-level predictors of treatment within 3 hrs were age (aOR 1.1 per decade of age ≥18) and good ASPECTS (aOR 1.2 per point). No hospital-level predictors of early treatment were found. Patients treated within 3 hrs have a higher likelihood of good outcome as compared to those treated >3 hrs (aOR 2.0, 95% CI 1.4-2.9;
p
<0.001) after adjustment for age, NIHSS, IV tPA and mTICI ≥2b (Table 2). No differences were found in mortality and sICH. Treatment in the golden hours had the highest impact on excellent outcome rates (mRS 0-1) (Fig 1).
Conclusion:
Early thrombectomy of LVO strokes, within the first three hours provides the highest impact compared with later time windows. Streamlining processes to deliver rapid intervention within 3 hours would improve clinical outcomes.
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