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Time to treatment with endovascular thrombectomy and outcomes from ischemic stroke: Ameta-analysis

  • HERMES collaborators
  • David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA
  • University of Calgary
  • Erasmus MC
  • Amsterdam University Medical Centers
  • University of Melbourne
  • Emory University
  • Vall d'Hebron Hospital Universitari
  • Hospital Universitari Bellvitge (L'Hospitalet de Llobregat)
  • University of Tennessee, Chattanooga
  • Swedish Medical Center
  • University Hospital Frankfurt
  • University of Pittsburgh
  • State University of New York at Buffalo
  • Maastricht University Medical Center
  • Hospital Universitari Germans Trias i Pujol
  • Erlanger Health System
  • Servicio de Nefrología, Hospital Clínic
  • University Health Network and Mount Sinai Hospital
  • Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health
  • University of Alberta
  • Altair Biostatistics LLC
  • Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1902 Scopus citations

Abstract

IMPORTANCE Endovascular thrombectomy with second-generation devices is beneficial for patients with ischemic stroke due to intracranial large-vessel occlusions. Delineation of the association of treatment time with outcomes would help to guide implementation. OBJECTIVE To characterize the period in which endovascular thrombectomy is associated with benefit, and the extent to which treatment delay is related to functional outcomes, mortality, and symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PATIENTS Demographic, clinical, and brain imaging data aswell as functional and radiologic outcomes were pooled from randomized phase 3 trials involving stent retrievers or other second-generation devices in a peer-reviewed publication (by July 1, 2016). The identified 5 trials enrolled patients at 89 international sites. EXPOSURES Endovascular thrombectomy plus medical therapy vs medical therapy alone; time to treatment. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The primary outcomewas degree of disability (MRS range, 0-6; lower scores indicating less disability) at 3 months, analyzed with the common odds ratio (cOR) to detect ordinal shift in the distribution of disability over the range of the MRS; secondary outcomes included functional independence at 3 months, mortality by 3 months, and symptomatic hemorrhagic transformation. RESULTS Among all 1287 patients (endovascular thrombectomy + medical therapy [n = 634]; medical therapy alone [n = 653]) enrolled in the 5 trials (mean age, 66.5 years [SD, 13.1];women, 47.0%), time from symptom onset to randomizationwas 196 minutes (IQR, 142 to 267). Among the endovascular group, symptom onset to arterial puncturewas 238 minutes (IQR, 180 to 302) and symptom onset to reperfusionwas 286 minutes (IQR, 215 to 363). At 90 days, the mean MRS scorewas 2.9 (95%CI, 2.7 to 3.1) in the endovascular group and 3.6 (95%CI, 3.5 to 3.8) in the medical therapy group. The odds of better disability outcomes at 90 days (MRS scale distribution) with the endovascular group declined with longer time from symptom onset to arterial puncture: cOR at 3 hours, 2.79 (95%CI, 1.96 to 3.98), absolute risk difference (ARD) for lower disability scores, 39.2%; cOR at 6 hours, 1.98 (95%CI, 1.30 to 3.00), ARD, 30.2%; cOR at 8 hours,1.57 (95%CI, 0.86 to 2.88), ARD, 15.7%; retaining statistical significance through 7 hours and 18 minutes. Among 390 patients who achieved substantial reperfusion with endovascular thrombectomy, each 1-hour delay to reperfusionwas associated with a less favorable degree of disability (cOR, 0.84 [95%CI, 0.76 to 0.93]; ARD, -6.7%) and less functional independence (OR, 0.81 [95%CI, 0.71 to 0.92], ARD, -5.2%[95%CI, -8.3%to -2.1%]), but no change in mortality (OR, 1.12 [95%CI, 0.93 to 1.34]; ARD, 1.5%[95%CI, -0.9%to 4.2%]). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE In this individual patient data meta-analysis of patients with large-vessel ischemic stroke, earlier treatment with endovascular thrombectomy + medical therapy compared with medical therapy alone was associated with lower degrees of disability at 3 months. Benefit became nonsignificant after 7.3 hours.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1279-1288
Number of pages10
JournalJAMA - Journal of the American Medical Association
Volume316
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - 27 Sep 2016
Externally publishedYes

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