Late Lesion Growth following Endovascular Therapy: Is 24 h Too Early to Assess Acute Infarct Size Including the Effects of Secondary Injury?

Author:

Luby Marie,Hsia Amie W.,Lomahan Carolyn A.,Uche Victoria,Davis Rachel,Kim Yongwoo,Somani Sana,Burton Shannon,Cabatbat Rainier,Craft Veronica,De Vis Jill B.,Adil Malik M.,Afzal Mariam M.,Thomas Leila C.,Gandler William,McCreedy Evan S.,Lynch John K.,Latour Lawrence L.

Abstract

<b><i>Introduction:</i></b> Stroke lesion volume on MRI or CT provides objective evidence of tissue injury as a consequence of ischemic stroke. Measurement of “final” lesion volume at 24-h following endovascular therapy (post-EVT) has been used in multiple studies as a surrogate for clinical outcome. However, despite successful recanalization, a significant proportion of patients do not experience favorable clinical outcome. The goals of this study were to quantify lesion growth during the first week after treatment, identify early predictors, and explore the association with clinical outcome. <b><i>Methods:</i></b> This is a prospective study of stroke patients at two centers who met the following criteria: (i) anterior large vessel occlusion acute ischemic stroke, (ii) attempted EVT, and (iii) had 3T MRI post-EVT at 24-h and 5-day. We defined “early” and “late” lesion growth as ≥10 mL lesion growth between baseline and 24-h diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) and between 24-h DWI and 5-day fluid attenuated inversion recovery imaging, respectively. Complete reperfusion was defined as &gt;90% reduction of the volume of tissue with perfusion delay (T<sub>max</sub>&gt;6 s) between pre-EVT and 24-h post-EVT. Favorable clinical outcome was defined as modified Rankin scale (mRS) of 0–2 at 30 or 90 days. <b><i>Results:</i></b> One hundred twelve patients met study criteria with median age 67 years, 56% female, median admit NIHSS 19, 54% received IV or IA thrombolysis, 66% with M1 occlusion, and median baseline DWI volume 21.2 mL. Successful recanalization was achieved in 87%, and 68% had complete reperfusion, with an overall favorable clinical outcome rate of 53%. Nearly two-thirds (65%) of the patients did not have late lesion growth with a median volume change of −0.3 mL between 24-h and 5-day and an associated high rate of favorable clinical outcome (64%). However, ∼1/3 of patients (35%) did have significant late lesion growth despite successful recanalization (87%: 46% mTICI 2b/41% mTICI 3). Late lesion growth patients had a 27.4 mL change in late lesion volume and 30.1 mL change in early lesion volume. These patients had an increased hemorrhagic transformation (HT) rate of 68% with only 1 in 3 patients having favorable clinical outcome. Late lesion growth was independently associated with incomplete reperfusion, HT, and unfavorable outcome. <b><i>Conclusion:</i></b> Approximately 1 out of 3 patients had late lesion growth following EVT, with a favorable clinical outcome occurring in only 1 out of 3 of these patients. Most patients with no early lesion growth had no late lesion growth. Identification of patients with late lesion growth could be critical to guide clinical management and inform prognosis post-EVT. Additionally, it can serve as an imaging biomarker for the development of adjunctive therapies to mitigate reperfusion injury.

Publisher

S. Karger AG

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