Endovascular Therapy for Ischemic Stroke with Perfusion-Imaging Selection

Bruce Campbell(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), Peter Mitchell, Timothy Kleinig(The University of Melbourne), Helen M. Dewey(Austin Health), Leonid Churilov(Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health), Nawaf Yassi(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), Bernard Yan(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), Richard Dowling, Mark Parsons(John Hunter Hospital), Thomas J. Oxley(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), Teddy Y. Wu(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), Mark Brooks(Austin Health), Marion Simpson(Austin Health), Ferdinand Miteff(Royal North Shore Hospital), Christopher Levi(John Hunter Hospital), Martín Krause(The University of Sydney), Timothy Harrington(Royal North Shore Hospital), Kenneth Faulder(Royal North Shore Hospital), Brendan Steinfort(Royal North Shore Hospital), Miriam Priglinger(The University of Sydney), Timothy Ang(John Hunter Hospital), Rebecca Scroop(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), P. Alan Barber(Auckland City Hospital), Ben McGuinness(Auckland City Hospital), Tissa Wijeratne(Western Hospital), Thanh G. Phan(Monash University), Winston Chong(Monash Medical Centre), Ronil V. Chandra(Monash University), Christopher F. Bladin(Box Hill Hospital), Monica Badve(Gold Coast Hospital), Henry E. Rice(Monash University), Laetitia de Villiers(Monash University), Henry Ma(Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health), Patricia Desmond, Geoffrey A. Donnan(Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health), Stephen M. Davis(The Royal Melbourne Hospital)
New England Journal of Medicine
February 11, 2015
Cited by 5,791Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Trials of endovascular therapy for ischemic stroke have produced variable results. We conducted this study to test whether more advanced imaging selection, recently developed devices, and earlier intervention improve outcomes. METHODS: We randomly assigned patients with ischemic stroke who were receiving 0.9 mg of alteplase per kilogram of body weight less than 4.5 hours after the onset of ischemic stroke either to undergo endovascular thrombectomy with the Solitaire FR (Flow Restoration) stent retriever or to continue receiving alteplase alone. All the patients had occlusion of the internal carotid or middle cerebral artery and evidence of salvageable brain tissue and ischemic core of less than 70 ml on computed tomographic (CT) perfusion imaging. The coprimary outcomes were reperfusion at 24 hours and early neurologic improvement (≥8-point reduction on the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale or a score of 0 or 1 at day 3). Secondary outcomes included the functional score on the modified Rankin scale at 90 days. RESULTS: The trial was stopped early because of efficacy after 70 patients had undergone randomization (35 patients in each group). The percentage of ischemic territory that had undergone reperfusion at 24 hours was greater in the endovascular-therapy group than in the alteplase-only group (median, 100% vs. 37%; P<0.001). Endovascular therapy, initiated at a median of 210 minutes after the onset of stroke, increased early neurologic improvement at 3 days (80% vs. 37%, P=0.002) and improved the functional outcome at 90 days, with more patients achieving functional independence (score of 0 to 2 on the modified Rankin scale, 71% vs. 40%; P=0.01). There were no significant differences in rates of death or symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with ischemic stroke with a proximal cerebral arterial occlusion and salvageable tissue on CT perfusion imaging, early thrombectomy with the Solitaire FR stent retriever, as compared with alteplase alone, improved reperfusion, early neurologic recovery, and functional outcome. (Funded by the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council and others; EXTEND-IA ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01492725, and Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry number, ACTRN12611000969965.).


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