Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04611178 |
Other study ID # |
RECHMPL20_0596 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
January 30, 2011 |
Est. completion date |
January 1, 2019 |
Study information
Verified date |
October 2020 |
Source |
University Hospital, Montpellier |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Preprocedural predictors of outcome in patients with acute basilar artery occlusion (ABAO)
who underwent endovascular treatment (EVT) remain controversial. Our aim was to analyze if
pre-EVT diffusion-weighted images cerebellar infarct volume (CIV) was a predictor of 90-day
outcomes.
Description:
Acute basilar artery occlusion (ABAO) is a rare and devastating type of stroke. Endovascular
treatment (EVT) is routinely performed in real-world practice, encouraged by guidelines from
learned societies, and the recent result of the basilar artery international cooperation
study (BASICS), a randomized controlled study.
ABAO may result in infarcts in the brainstem, cerebellar lobes, thalamus and subthalamic
area, or occipitotemporal lobes. Previously, studies using the DWI Posterior-circulation
Alberta Stroke Program Early CT (Pc-ASPECT) Score or brainstem score, for predicting outcome
in patients with ABAO showed conflicting results. The rational for the brainstem scoring
system was based on the anatomic architecture and the regional eloquence of brainstem, which
may negatively influence functional outcome.
Nevertheless, one of the most significant and immediate dreaded complication, in patients
with ABAO and cerebellar infarcts, is the development of a space-occupying edema. Due to the
small volume of posterior fossa, cerebellar infarct with mass effect (CIMASS) contribute to a
risk of catastrophic herniation with direct brainstem compression, hydrocephalus due to
blockage of the fourth ventricle, or both. Up to 25% of patients with CIMASS deteriorate
clinically resulting in morbidity and in mortality in 85% of patients without intervention.
This potential risk of CIMASS, lead clinicians to strengthen clinical and radiological
monitoring and modify therapeutic management with the recourse of live-saving suboccipital
decompressive craniectomy (SDC), as recommended by learned societies.
Until now, little is known about predicting factors of outcomes in patients with ABAO treated
by EVT and associated cerebellar infarct. In fact, there are no focusing research to assess
if baseline cerebellar infarct volume (CIV) may correlate with 90-day clinical outcome and
mortality, nor if such lesions would affect a reperfusion decision.
Using data of our prospective registry, the investigators analyzed consecutive MRI selected,
endovascularly treated ABAO patients within the first 24h after symptom-onset. Using the
initial Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), baseline CIV was calculated in mL, on an apparent
diffusion-coefficient map reconstruction (Olea sphere software).
CIV was analyzed in univariate and multivariable models as a predictor of 90-day functional
independence (modified Rankin Scale [mRS] 0-2) and mortality. According to received operating
characteristic (ROC) analysis, the optimal cut-off was determined by maximizing the youden
index, to evaluate the prognostic value of CIV.
Our aim was to evaluate the frequency, the clinical, and radiological characteristics of
cerebellar infarct, in a large cohort of ABAO selected by MRI prior to EVT, and to
investigate the baseline CIV as a predictor of 90-day functional outcome and mortality.