Infarct in new territory after endovascular stroke treatment: A diffusion-weighted imaging study

Johannes Kaesmacher(University of Bern), Christoph C. Kurmann(University of Bern), Noël Jungi(University of Bern), Philipe S. Breiding(University of Bern), Matthias Läng(University of Bern), Raphael Meier(University of Bern), Tomas Dobrocky(University of Bern), Eike I. Piechowiak(University of Bern), Felix Zibold(University of Bern), Sebastian Bellwald(University of Bern), Thomas R. Meinel(University of Bern), Mirjam R. Heldner(University of Bern), Pasquale Mordasini(University of Bern), Marcel Arnold(University of Bern), Pascal J. Mosimann(University of Bern), Mayank Goyal(University of Calgary), Jan Gralla(University of Bern), Urs Fischer(University of Bern)
Scientific Reports
May 20, 2020
Cited by 26Open Access
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Abstract

Data on infarcts in new territory (INT) in patients undergoing endovascular stroke treatment for acute large-vessel occlusions are sparse. Aim of this study was to assess the prevalence, risk factors, and clinical relevance of INT. For this purpose, all patients in a single-center prospective registry who underwent endovascular stroke treatment and received pre- and post-interventional diffusion-weighted imaging were included (N = 259). Using an established scoring system, INT were classified according to size (I-III, ≤2 mm, >2 mm ≤20 mm, >20 mm) and likelihood of being related to the intervention (A, high likelihood; B, low likelihood). Additionally, a new type of infarct, that occurred in a territory distal to the occlusion, but was initially not hypoperfused, was defined as an infarct in initially not hypoperfused territory (IINHT). A total of 180 INT and 38 IINHT were observed in 32.8% (N = 85/259) of patients. In most patients, INT were angiographically occult (90.2%), and 13 patients had INT/IINHT larger than 2 cm (type III). Absence of protection during stent-retrieval and a cardio-embolic stroke origin were associated with higher incidence of INT/IINHT, whereas pretreatment with IV tPA showed no association, even when different bolus timing was considered. INT/IINHT were associated with lower rates of functional independence with increasing size type after adjusting for confounders (adjusted Odds Ratio per size group increase 0.63, 95% confidence interval 0.46-0.86). In conclusion, INT and IINHT are not rare, are associated with poor outcome with increasing size, and they may serve as a surrogate endpoint for safety evaluation of new devices and endovascular techniques. Further research on associated factors is warranted.


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