Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
International Intracranial Artery Dissection Study
Cervicocerebral artery dissection is a major cause for stroke in young adults. While
knowledge of cervical artery dissection (CeAD) has increased thanks to a number of high
quality studies, knowledge on intracranial artery dissection (IAD) is limited. Due to
treatment and publication bias little is known about the natural history of IAD. Overall, IAD
is assumed to have a more severe course than CeAD, with a more ominous outcome in patients
with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). Furthermore, little information is available on the risk
of recurrent IAD as well as on the risk of recurrent ischemic and haemorrhagic events in
non-Asian patients. Radiological diagnosis of IAD can be challenging given the small size of
intracranial arteries, and the subtle and non-specific radiological signs which tend to
evolve over time. The optimal treatment of IAD is unknown. There are no randomised trials and
only observational studies with relatively small sample sizes are available, thus providing a
very low level of evidence.
Finding the factors that are decisive for outcome and recurrence after intracranial artery
dissection is key to an improved management of this potentially severe disease predominantly
affecting young patients. By using standardised protocols for diagnosis, imaging and
follow-up, the investigators intend to obtain large representative patient samples in order
to fill the gap of evidence.
Cervicocephalic artery dissection corresponds to a hematoma in the wall of a cervical or an
intracranial artery and is an important cause of stroke in children and young and middle-aged
adults. While extracranial cervical artery dissection (CeAD) has been extensively studied and
described, less information is available on pure intracranial artery dissection (IAD) not
involving the cervical portion of the artery. Early reports were based exclusively on autopsy
series, hence biased towards the most severe cases. The incidence of IAD is unknown, but is
probably lower than the incidence of symptomatic CeAD in populations of European origin. The
proportion of IAD among all cervicocephalic dissections varies substantially between ethnic
and age groups, and depending on study recruitment strategies and ascertainment methods.
Indeed, recruitments through departments of neurology are biased towards CeAD and IAD
presenting with local symptoms and/or ischaemic stroke while recruitments through departments
of neurosurgery or interventional neuroradiology are biased towards IAD presenting with
subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH).Therefore, patients with IAD are managed not only by
neurologists, but also by neurosurgeons, and interventional neuroradiologists, each having an
incomplete picture of the disease.
The vast majority of reported series of IAD patients come from Asian countries and IAD
affects the posterior circulation more frequently than the anterior circulation in these
series. This contrasts with CeAD and saccular intracranial aneurysms, which most commonly
affect the anterior circulation. Due to treatment and publication bias little is known about
the natural history of IAD. Overall, IAD is assumed to have a more severe course than CeAD,
with a more ominous outcome in patients with SAH IAD than in patients with non-SAH IAD.
Furthermore, little information is available on the risk of recurrent IAD as well as risk for
recurrent ischaemic and haemorrhagic events. Radiological diagnosis of IAD can be challenging
given the small size of intracranial arteries, and the subtle and non-specific radiological
signs which tend to evolve with time.
The optimal treatment of IAD is unknown. There are no randomised trials and only
observational studies with relatively small sample sizes are available, thus providing a very
low level of evidence. Patients with SAH IAD are usually treated by surgery or endovascular
procedures because up to 40% of the patients experience re-bleeding within the first days
after the event. Various surgical and endovascular treatment methods have been proposed for
intracranial dissecting aneurysms. When patients are in poor clinical condition or treatment
has an unacceptably high complication risk, it can be decided to withhold from surgical or
endovascular treatment. In addition, Most non-SAH IAD patients have been treated medically,
but the choice of antithrombotic therapy (anticoagulants or antiplatelet agents) has been
evaluated neither in randomised trials nor in systematic reviews and meta-analyses of
observational data. As a consequence, there is currently no consensus on optimal treatment of
IAD.
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