Benchmarking the Extent and Speed of Reperfusion: First Pass TICI 2c-3 Is a Preferred Endovascular Reperfusion Endpoint.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
May 2021
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Yoo, Albert J | |
Soomro, Jazba | |
Andersson, Tommy | |
Saver, Jeffrey L | |
Ribo, Marc | |
Bozorgchami, Hormozd | |
Dabus, Guilherme | |
Liebeskind, David S | |
Jadhav, Ashutosh | |
Zaidat, Osama O |
Subject(s)
Series
Frontiers in neurology
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1664-2295
Publisher
Frontiers Media S.A.
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
34046008
Uncontrolled Keywords
Description
Background and Purpose: End-of-procedure substantial reperfusion [modified Treatment in Cerebral Ischemia (mTICI) 2b-3], the leading endpoint for thrombectomy studies, has several limitations including a ceiling effect, with recent achieved rates of ~90%. We aimed to identify a more optimal definition of angiographic success along two dimensions: (1) the extent of tissue reperfusion, and (2) the speed of revascularization. Methods: Core-lab adjudicated TICI scores for the first three passes of EmboTrap and the final all-procedures result were analyzed in the ARISE II multicenter study. The clinical impact of extent of reperfusion and speed of reperfusion (first-pass vs. later-pass) were evaluated. Clinical outcomes included 90-day functional independence [modified Rankin Scale (mRS) 0-2], 90-day freedom-from-disability (mRS 0-1), and dramatic early improvement [24-h National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) improvement ≥ 8 points]. Results: Among 161 ARISE II subjects with ICA or MCA M1 occlusions, reperfusion results at procedure end showed substantial reperfusion in 149 (92.5%), excellent reperfusion in 121 (75.2%), and complete reperfusion in 79 (49.1%). Reperfusion rates on first pass were substantial in 81 (50.3%), excellent reperfusion in 62 (38.5%), and complete reperfusion in 44 (27.3%). First-pass excellent reperfusion (first-pass TICI 2c-3) had the greatest nominal predictive value for 90-day mRS 0-2 (sensitivity 58.5%, specificity 68.6%). There was a progressive worsening of outcomes with each additional pass required to achieve TICI 2c-3. Conclusions: First-pass excellent reperfusion (TICI 2c-3), reflecting rapid achievement of extensive reperfusion, is the technical revascularization endpoint that best predicted functional independence in this international multicenter trial and is an attractive candidate for a lead angiographic endpoint for future trials. Clinical Trial Registration: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov, identifier NCT02488915.
File(s)
| File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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| Yoo__2021__Benchmarking_the_extent_and_speed_of_reperfusion.pdf | Adobe PDF | 1.12 MB | Attribution (CC BY 4.0) | published |