Thrombectomy 6 to 24 Hours after Stroke with a Mismatch between Deficit and Infarct
Emory University · Stroke Association · +36 more institutions
Abstract
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.
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 (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).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 328.38
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 24
Authors
47Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Neurological deficit
- Stroke (engine)
- Cardiology
- Ischemic stroke
- Internal medicine
- Infarction
- Anesthesia
- Good health and well-being
Funding
- BSBristol-Myers Squibb
- JMJFK Medical Center Foundation
- PPfizer
- AAstraZeneca
- KPKaiser Permanente
- UOUniversity of Miami
- BSBoston Scientific Corporation
- RURush University
- SStryker
- UOUniversity of Tennessee at Chattanooga
- UOUniversity of Toronto
- UAUniversitat Autònoma de Barcelona
- SServier
- GGenentech
- UOUniversity of California, Los Angeles
- UOUniversity of California, San Francisco
- UAUniversity at Buffalo
- LMLeonard M. Miller School of Medicine
- AVAbbott Vascular
- DGDavid Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles