Abstract 52: Results of DEFUSE 2: Imaging Endpoints

Author:

Albers Gregory W1,Straka Matus1,Kemp Stephanie1,Mlynash Michael1,Jovin Tudor G2,Wechsler Lawrence R2,Wilder Michael J3,Lutsep Helmi J4,Keogh Bart P5,Bernstein Richard A6,Chang Cherylee W7,Warach Steven8,Fazekas Franz9,Thai Demi1,Inoue Manabu1,Tipirneni Aaryani1,Hamilton Scott1,Zaharchuk Greg1,Marks Michael P1,Bammer Roland1,Lansberg Maarten G1,

Affiliation:

1. Stanford Stroke Cntr, Stanford Univ Sch of Medicine, Palo Alto, CA

2. UPMC Stroke Institute, Univ of Pittsburgh Med Sch, Pittsburgh, PA

3. Dept of Neurology, Univ of Utah Sch of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT

4. Oregon Stroke Cntr, Oregon Health&Science Univ, Portland, OR

5. Swedish Neuroscience Institute, Swedish Med Cntr, Seattle, WA

6. Dept of Neurology, Northwestern Univ Feinberg Sch of Medicine, Chicago, IL

7. The Queen's Med Cntr, Univ of Hawaii John A. Burns Sch of Medicine, Honolulu, HI

8. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Bethesda, MD

9. Dept of Neurology, Graz Univ Sch of Medicine, Graz, Austria

Abstract

Background: The aim of DEFUSE 2 is to determine if predefined MRI profiles predict clinical and imaging outcomes following endovascular reperfusion therapy. Methods: This prospective, NIH funded, multi-center study enrolled consecutive acute stroke patients in whom an MRI scan could be obtained immediately prior to intra-arterial therapy. A follow-up MRI was performed within 12 hrs of completion of the procedure and again at 5 days. PWI and DWI lesion volumes were determined using a fully automated software program (RAPID). Lesion growth (infarct volume on 5 day FLAIR - baseline DWI volume) was compared for patients with and without the Target mismatch profile based on whether early reperfusion occurred. The Target mismatch profile was defined as PWI(Tmax>6s) / DWI >1.8, DWI <70 mL and PWI(Tmax>10s) <100 mL. Early reperfusion was defined as a >50% reduction in PWI volume following the procedure. The incidence and extent of DWI reversal was assessed and the fate of PWI lesions that were not reperfused was determined. Favorable clinical response was defined as an improvement in NIHSS ≥8 or 0-1 at 30 days. Results: This abstract represents a preliminary analysis of 71 of 101 patients who were treated with endovascular therapy (final results to be presented). Among the 54 patients with Target mismatch, early reperfusion was achieved in 70% and was associated with less infarct growth (relative median growth 210% vs. 450%, p=0.01) and a higher rate of favorable clinical response (OR=5.4; 95%CI 1.5-19.2). In patients without the Target mismatch profile (N= 13) early reperfusion was not associated with a reduction in infarct growth (relative median growth was 220% in both reperfusers and non-reperfusers; p=0.94) or an increased rate of favorable clinical response (OR=0.1; 95%CI 0.004-2.2). 96% of all voxels that were DWI positive at baseline were incorporated into the final infarct (assessed on the co-registered 5 day FLAIR); only 3 of 71 patients had FLAIR volumes that were smaller than the baseline DWI lesion (mean difference 3 mL). 80% of the voxels that had a PWI lesion (Tmax>6s) on the post-procedure scan were incorporated into the final infarct. The correlation between the union of the baseline DWI + early follow-up PWI lesion and the 5 day FLAIR volume was high (r=0.84; p< 0.0001). In 82% of the patients, the day 5 FLAIR volume was as at least as large as the union of the baseline DWI + early follow-up PWI lesion. Conclusion: Patients with the Target mismatch profile who achieve early reperfusion following intra-arterial therapy have less infarct growth and more favorable clinical outcomes. In contrast, no benefit of reperfusion was evident for non-Target mismatch patients. Baseline DWI lesions are virtually always fully incorporated into the final infarct volume, regardless of reperfusion. Tissue that remains hypoperfused (Tmax >6s) following endovascular therapy reliably progresses to infarction.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

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

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