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  4. Preserved Corticospinal Tract Revealed by Acute Perfusion Imaging Relates to Better Outcome After Thrombectomy in Stroke
 
research article

Preserved Corticospinal Tract Revealed by Acute Perfusion Imaging Relates to Better Outcome After Thrombectomy in Stroke

Koch, Philipp J.
•
Rudolf, Linda F.
•
Schramm, Peter
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December 1, 2023
Stroke

BACKGROUND:The indication for mechanical thrombectomy (MT) in stroke patients with large vessel occlusion has been constantly expanded over the past years. Despite remarkable treatment effects at the group level in clinical trials, many patients remain severely disabled even after successful recanalization. A better understanding of this outcome variability will help to improve clinical decision-making on MT in the acute stage. Here, we test whether current outcome models can be refined by integrating information on the preservation of the corticospinal tract as a functionally crucial white matter tract derived from acute perfusion imaging.METHODS:We retrospectively analyzed 162 patients with stroke and large vessel occlusion of the anterior circulation who were admitted to the University Medical Center Lubeck between 2014 and 2020 and underwent MT. The ischemic core was defined as fully automatized based on the acute computed tomography perfusion with cerebral blood volume data using outlier detection and clustering algorithms. Normative whole-brain structural connectivity data were used to infer whether the corticospinal tract was affected by the ischemic core or preserved. Ordinal logistic regression models were used to correlate this information with the modified Rankin Scale after 90 days.RESULTS:The preservation of the corticospinal tract was associated with a reduced risk of a worse functional outcome in large vessel occlusion-stroke patients undergoing MT, with an odds ratio of 0.28 (95% CI, 0.15-0.53). This association was still significant after adjusting for multiple confounding covariables, such as age, lesion load, initial symptom severity, sex, stroke side, and recanalization status.CONCLUSIONS:A preinterventional computed tomography perfusion-based surrogate of corticospinal tract preservation or disconnectivity is strongly associated with functional outcomes after MT. If validated in independent samples this concept could serve as a novel tool to improve current outcome models to better understand intersubject variability after MT in large vessel occlusion stroke.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1161/STROKEAHA.123.044221
Web of Science ID

WOS:001113807400025

Author(s)
Koch, Philipp J.
Rudolf, Linda F.
Schramm, Peter
Frontzkowski, Lukas
Marburg, Maria
Matthis, Christine
Schacht, Hannes
Fiehler, Jens
Thomalla, Goetz
Hummel, Friedhelm Christoph  
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Date Issued

2023-12-01

Publisher

Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

Published in
Stroke
Volume

54

Issue

12

Start page

3081

End page

3089

Subjects

Life Sciences & Biomedicine

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Algorithms

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Perfusion

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Pyramidal Tract

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Stroke

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Thrombectomy

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Treatment Outcome

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPHUMMEL  
FunderGrant Number

Walter Benjamin Program of the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft)

469959208

Clinician Scientist Program of the University of Luebeck

CS07-2022

Else-Kroener Exzellenzstipendium from the Else-Kroener-Frisenius-Stiftung

2020_EKES.16

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Available on Infoscience
February 20, 2024
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/204698
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