Aortic and supra-aortic arterial tortuosity and access technique: Impact on time to device deployment in stroke thrombectomy

Author:

Rosa Joao Alves1ORCID,Roberts Rachel1ORCID,Wareham James1,Crossley Robert1,Cox Anthony1,Mortimer Alex1

Affiliation:

1. Neuroradiology Department, Southmead Hospital, North Bristol NHS Trust, Bristol, UK

Abstract

Background Longer intervals to reperfusion in patients treated with mechanical thrombectomy (MT) for emergent large vessel occlusion (ELVO) stroke are associated with worse outcomes and influenced by the operator’s ability to navigate individual anatomy. Our aims were to assess the impact of time from puncture to first deployment of the MT device (DT) on technical and clinical outcomes, develop an Anatomical A ssessment for Mechanical Thrombectomy Score (ASMETS) that could predict DT and assess how different methods of intracranial access (coaxial-direct or exchange) influence this. Methods Retrospective review of a prospective database of patients treated with MT for ELVO between November 2015 and August 2018. CTAs were assessed for ASMETS. Intracranial access technique was at the discretion of the operator. Technical and clinical outcomes and complications were recorded. Linear and logistic regression analysis was performed. Results 92 patients were included. The impact of DT on clinical outcomes was significant. An unfavourable ASMET score is significantly associated with longer DT (p = 0.002) and linear regression showed DT time can be predicted by ASMETS – F(1,90) = 6.182, p = 0.015. No difference was demonstrated between different access techniques. Conclusion CTA-based ASMETS can predict time between arterial puncture and deployment of the mechanical thrombectomy device in stroke patients, irrespective of the technique used to catheterise the target ICA. This could inform the operator in preparing appropriate strategies to overcome challenging vascular anatomy in patients undergoing MT.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Immunology

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