Multimodal CT-Assisted Thrombolysis in Patients With Acute Stroke

Author:

Obach Víctor1,Oleaga Laura1,Urra Xabier1,Macho Juan1,Amaro Sergio1,Capurro Sebastian1,Gomez-Choco Manuel1,San Román Luís1,Cervera Alvaro1,Blasco Jordi1,Vargas Martha1,Torres Ferrán1,Chamorro Ángel1

Affiliation:

1. From the Unit of Cerebrovascular Diseases (V.O., L.O., X.U., J.M., S.A., S.C., M.G.C., L.S.R., A.C., J.B., M.V., A.C.) and Statistics & Methodology Support Unit (F.T.), Hospital Clinic of Barcelona, Spain.

Abstract

Background and Purpose— The value of multimodal CT to assist thrombolysis has received little attention in stroke. Methods— We assessed prospectively the impact derived from the routine application of CT perfusion and CTA in patients with acute stroke treated consecutively with alteplase. The safety and efficacy of thrombolytic therapy were compared in 106 patients assisted with CT/CTA/CT perfusion (multimodal CT group) and 262 patients assisted without full multimodal brain imaging (control group) during a 5-year period (2005–2009). Results— Good outcome (modified Rankin scale score ≤2) at 3 months was increased in the multimodal group compared with controls (adjusted OR, 2.88; 95% CI, 1.50–5.52). Multimodal-assisted thrombolysis yielded superior benefits in patients treated beyond 3 hours (adjusted OR, 4.48; 95% CI, 1.68–11.98) than treated within 3 hours (adjusted OR, 1.31; 95% CI, 0.80–2.16; interaction test P =0.043). Mortality (14% and 15%) and symptomatic hemorrhage (5% and 7%) were similar in both groups. Conclusions— Multimodal CT use in routine clinical practice may heighten the overall efficacy of thrombolytic therapy in acute ischemic stroke. The benefits seem greater in patients treated >3 hours after stroke onset, but further randomized clinical trials are needed to confirm these findings.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

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