Influence of Penumbral Reperfusion on Clinical Outcome Depends on Baseline Ischemic Core Volume
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Abstract
Background and Purpose—In
alteplase-treated patients with acute ischemic stroke, we investigated
the relationship between penumbral reperfusion at 24 hours and clinical
outcomes, with and without adjustment for baseline ischemic core volume.
Methods—Data
were collected from consecutive acute ischemic stroke patients with
baseline and follow-up perfusion imaging presenting to hospital within
4.5 hours of symptom onset at 7 hospitals. Logistic regression models
were used for predicting the effect of the reperfused penumbral volume
on the dichotomized modified Rankin Scale (mRS) at 90 days and
improvement of National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale at 24 hours,
both adjusted for baseline ischemic core volume.
Results—This
study included 1507 patients. Reperfused penumbral volume had moderate
ability to predict 90-day mRS 0 to 1 (area under the curve, 0.77; R2, 0.28; P<0.0001).
However, after adjusting for baseline ischemic core volume, the
reperfused penumbral volume was a strong predictor of good functional
outcome (area under the curve, 0.946; R2, 0.55; P<0.0001).
For every 1% increase in penumbral reperfusion, the odds of achieving
mRS 0 to 1 at day 90 increased by 7.4%. Improvement in acute 24-hour
National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale was also significantly
related to the degree of reperfused penumbra (R2, 0.31; P<0.0001). This association was again stronger after adjustment for baseline ischemic core volume (R2, 0.41; P<0.0001).
For each 1% of penumbra that was reperfused, the 24-hour National
Institutes of Health Stroke Scale decreased by 0.069 compared with
baseline.
Conclusions—In
patients treated with alteplase, the extent of the penumbra that is
reperfused is a powerful predictor of early and late clinical outcomes,
particularly when baseline ischemic core is taken into account.
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