Comparison of Perfusion Imaging Definitions of the No‐Reflow Phenomenon after Thrombectomy—What Is the Best Perfusion Imaging Definition?

Author:

Mutimer Chloe A.1ORCID,Mujanovic Adnan2ORCID,Kaesmacher Johannes2,Churilov Leonid1,Kleinig Timothy J.3,Parsons Mark W.4,Mitchell Peter J.15,Campbell Bruce C.V.1ORCID,Ng Felix16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine and Neurology Melbourne Brain Centre at the Royal Melbourne Hospital, University of Melbourne Parkville Australia

2. Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Neuroradiology University Hospital Bern, Inselspital, University of Bern Bern Switzerland

3. Department of Neurology Royal Adelaide Hospital Adelaide Australia

4. University of New South Wales, Liverpool Hospital Sydney Australia

5. Department of Radiology Royal Melbourne Hospital Parkville Australia

6. Department of Neurology Austin Health Parkville Australia

Abstract

The no‐reflow phenomenon is a potential contributor to poor outcome despite successful thrombectomy. There are multiple proposed imaging‐based definitions of no‐reflow leading to wide variations in reported prevalence. We investigated the agreement between existing imaging definitions and compared the characteristics and outcomes of patients identified as having no‐reflow.MethodsWe performed an external validation of 4 existing published definitions of no‐reflow in thrombectomy patients with extended Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction scale 2c to 3 (eTICI2c‐3) angiographic reperfusion who underwent 24‐hour perfusion imaging from 2 international randomized controlled trials (EXTEND‐IA TNK part‐1 and 2) and a multicenter prospective observational study. Receiver‐operating‐characteristic and Bayesian‐information‐criterion (BIC) analyses were performed with the outcome variable being dependent‐or‐dead at 90‐days (modified Rankin Score [mRS] ≥3).ResultsOf 131 patients analyzed, the prevalence of no‐reflow significantly varied between definitions (0.8–22.1%; p < 0.001). There was poor agreement between definitions (kappa 5/6 comparisons <0.212). Among patients with no‐reflow according to at least 1 definition, there were significant differences between definitions in the intralesional interside differences in cerebral blood flow (CBF) (p = 0.006), cerebral blood volume (CBV) (p < 0.001), and mean‐transit‐time (MTT) (p = 0.005). No‐reflow defined by 3 definitions was associated with mRS ≥3 at 90 days. The definition of >15% CBV or CBF asymmetry was the only definition that improved model fit on BIC analysis (ΔBIC = −8.105) and demonstrated an association between no‐reflow and clinical outcome among patients with eTICI3 reperfusion.ConclusionsExisting imaging definitions of no‐reflow varied significantly in prevalence and post‐treatment perfusion imaging profile, potentially explaining the variable prevalence of no‐reflow reported in literature. The definition of >15% CBV or CBF asymmetry best discriminated for functional outcome at 90 days, including patients with eTICI3 reperfusion. ANN NEUROL 2024

Funder

Bethlehem Griffiths Research Foundation

National Heart Foundation of Australia

National Health and Medical Research Council

Royal Melbourne Hospital Neuroscience Foundation

Austin Medical Research Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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