| Literature DB >> 25161646 |
Anke Wouters1, Robin Lemmens2, Patrick Dupont3, Vincent Thijs2.
Abstract
Patients, who wake up with an ischemic stroke, account for a large number of the total stroke population, due to circadian morning predominance of stroke. Currently, this subset of patients is excluded from revascularization-therapy since no exact time of onset is known. A large group of these patients might be eligible for therapy. In this review, we assessed the current literature about the hypothesis that wake-up-strokes occur just prior on awakening and if this subgroup differs in characteristics compared to the overall stroke population. We looked at the safety and efficacy of thrombolysis and interventional techniques in the group of patients with unknown stroke-onset. We performed a meta-analysis of the diagnostic accuracy of the diffusion-FLAIR mismatch in identifying stroke within 3 and 4.5 h. The different imaging-selection criteria that can be used to treat these patients are discussed. Additional research on imaging findings associated with recent stroke and penumbral imaging will eventually lead to a shift from a rigid time-frame based therapy to a tissue-based individualized treatment approach.Entities:
Keywords: circadian rhythm; thrombectomy; thrombolysis; unknown-onset stroke; wake-up-stroke
Year: 2014 PMID: 25161646 PMCID: PMC4129498 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2014.00153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Morning changes in cardiovascular factors contributing to a higher risk of stroke in the morning hours. Adapted from Ref. (23).
Clinical characteristic of patients with unknown-onset stroke.
| Differences between patients with known and unknown stroke | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Authors | Total number of patients ( | Study set up and limitations | Wake-up (%) + unknown onset (%) | Clinical characteristics | Outcome | Imaging characteristics |
| Koton et al. ( | 4408 | Prospective, consecutive, hospital based | 19 | N.s.d. (age, gender, TOAST, NIHSS) | N.s.d. | Not specified |
| Fink et al. ( | 364 | Prospective, consecutive, hospital based | 27 | N.s.d. (age, gender, TOAST, NIHSS) | Not specified | DWI/PWI mismatch ( |
| Silva et al. ( | 676 | Prospective, hospital based ( | 20 + 18 | N.s.d. (age, gender, TOAST, NIHSS); Unknown-onset patients were older ( | Not specified | CT perfusion CBF/CBV mismatch: n.s.d. |
| Serena et al. ( | 654 | Retrospective, hospital based ( | 24 | Nsd. (age, gender, TOAST, NIHSS, aHT) | Not specified | Early signs of ischemia: n.s.d ( |
| Todo et al. ( | 81 | Retrospective, consecutive, hospital based, only cardioemboligenic strokes, readers not specified | 21 + 22 | N.s.d (age, gender, TOAST, NIHSS) | Not specified | CT: more hypodens zones in unknown-onset group ( |
| Nadeau et al. ( | 2585 | Prospective, consecutive, population based, informed consent, also inclusion of hemorrhagic strokes | 13 | More smokers ( | Worse outcome: SIS seven points lower ( | Not specified |
| Jimenez et al. ( | 813 | Prospective, consecutive, hospital based | 16 | More obesity ( | Tendency to worse outcome ( | Not specified |
| Mackey et al. ( | 1854 | Retrospective, hospital based ( | 14.3 | N.s.d. (age, gender, TOAST, NIHSS) | N.s.d. | Not specified |
N.s.d = no significant difference, TOAST = trial of org 10172 in acute stroke treatment, aHT = arterial hypertension, SIS = stroke impact scale.
Off-label treatment of patients with unknown-onset stroke.
| Authors | Design | Number of patients with wake up or unknown-onset stroke control-group | Mean NIHSS | Mean age (years) | Door to needle time (min) | Type of stroke + time from symptom recognition till treatment | Imaging criteria | Treatment | sICH (%) | mRs 0–1 (%) | mRs 0–2 (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iosif et al. ( | Case-report | 2 | – | – | – | Wake-up | DWI/PWI and DWI/FLAIR mismatch | Intra-arterial tPa, thrombectomy | |||
| Cho et al. ( | Retrospective, observational three centers | 32 223 (known onset) | 14.5 | 67.5 | 154 | Wake-up/unknown onset + 3–6 h | DWI/PWI –and DWI/FLAIR mismatch + DWI <1/2 ACM | IV tPa, IV tPa, and intra-arterial urokinase, intra-arterial urokinase | 6.3 | 37.5 | 50 |
| Adams et al. ( | Randomized clinical trial, >20 centers | 22 (treatment) 21 (placebo) 758 (known onset) | 10 | 68.6 | ? | Wake-up + <3 h | NCCT, CT < 1/2 ACM | Abciximab | 13.6 | 10 | 32 |
| Barreto et al. ( | Retrospective, observational, 1 center | 46 (treatment) 34 (no treatment) 174 (known onset) | 16 (treatment) 10 (no treatment) | 62.0 | 144 | Wake-up + no further time specification | NCCT, CT > 1/3 ACM | IV tPa, IV tPa, and intra-arterial urokinase, intra-arterial urokinase | 4.3 | 14 | 28 |
| Breuer et al. ( | Prospective, 1 center | 10 (treatment) 35 (no treatment) | 10.5 (treatment) 6 (no treatment) | 68 | 80 | Wake-up + <6 h | MRI visual PWI/DWI mismatch, no FLAIR hyperintensity, no DWI > 1/3 MCA | IV tPa (0.9 mg/kg) | 0 | 31 | 60 |
| Kim et al. ( | Retrospective, 1 center | 29 (treatment) 49 (no treatment) | 13 | 66.9 | ? | Wake-up/unknown onset, <3 h | NCCT, CT < 1/3 ACM + Consecutive PWI before intra-arterial tPa | IV tPa, IV tPa, and intra-arterial urokinase, intra-arterial urokinase | 10.3 | 37.6 | 44.8 |
| Aoki et al. ( | Prospective, 1 center | 10 | 14 | 84 | ? | Wake-up/unknown onset, <3 h | DWI/FLAIR mismatch | IV tPa (0.6 mg/kg) | 0 | 30 | 40 |
| Ebinger et al. ( | Observational substudy, 1 center | 17 131 (known onset) | 13 | 81 | 86 | Wake-up/unknown onset + <24 h | MRI, DWI < 1/3 ACM | IV tPa (0.9 mg/kg) | 0 | 29.4 | 41.2 |
| Kang et al. ( | Prospective, 6 centers | 83 (treatment) 156 (no treatment) | 14 | 67.5 | 155 | Wake-up/unknown onset + <6 h | DWI/PWI and DWI/FLAIR mismatch DWI < 1/3 ACM | IV tPa, IV tPa, and intra-arterial urokinase, intra-arterial urokinase | 3.6 | 28.9 | 44.6 |
| Michel et al. ( | Single-center, prospective, randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled, phase II study | 6 (treatment) 6 (no treatment) | 16 | 59 | 122 | Wake-up/unknown onset + <2 h | CT perfusion (MTT and CBV) | IV tPa (0.9 mg/kg) | 0 | ? | 4 (66.6) |
| Manawadu et al. ( | Retrospective, case control, 1 center | 68 326 (known onset) | 12 | 74 | 73 | Wake-up + >4.5 h, <12 h | NCCT, CT < 1/3 ACM | IV tPa (0.9 mg/kg) | 2.9 | 16 | 37 |
| Bai et al. ( | Prispective, single center | 48 138 (known onset) | 11 | 61 | ? | Wake up + <12 h | MRI: DWI/FLAIR or T2 mismatch. | IV tPa | 2 | 55 | ? |
| Natarajan et al. ( | Retrospective, 1 center | 30 (wake-up not specified) | 13 | 72 | 210 | Wake-up/known onset + 8–23 h | CT perfusion, >30% CBV CT <1/3 ACM | Intra-arterial thrombolysis, mechanical thrombectomy, balloon anioplasty, intra-arterial thrombolysis + mechanical thrombectomy, eptifibatide | 33.3 | ? | 20 |
| Burkart et al. ( | Retrospective, 1 center | 40 (five unknown onset) | 18 | 75.4 | 151 | Wake-up/unknown onset/known onset + timing not further specified | Exclusion if MTT > 50% or NCCT > 1/3 ACM | Mechanical thrombectomy (sometimes with intra-arterial tPa or IV tPa) | 10 | ? | 50 |
| Stampfl et al ( | Retrospective, observational, 1 center | 19 | 17 | 73.7 | – | Wake-up + timing not further specified | 1. DWI/PWI > 50%, 2. CBV/TTP > 50%, + <1/3 MCA | Mechanical thrombectomy by stent-retriever-devices (sometimes with intra-arterial tPa pr IVtPa) | 21.1 | 10 | 10 |
| Jung et al. ( | Prospective, 1 center | 55 (wake-up) –, 22 (unknown onset) 782 (known onset) | 15 (wake up) 18 (unknown onset) | 61.9 (WUS), 63.5 (UOS) | Wake-up/unknown onset/known onset + <24 h | No stringent criteria, individual decision, PWI/DWI mismatch was assessed | Intra-arterial urokinase, mechanical thrombectomy, and intra-arterial urokinase, mechanical thrombectomy | 3.7, 9.1 | 16.7, 23.8 | 37, 38.1 |
sICH = symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage, WUS = wake-up-stroke, UOS = unknown onset, NCCT = Non-contrast enhanced CT, mRs = modified ranking score, sICH = symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage.
Barreto et al. (.
Characteristics of the proposed imaging-modalities.
| Advantages | Disadvantages | |
|---|---|---|
| CT perfusion | • Widely available at ER | • Additional radiation dose |
| MRI perfusion | • High sensitivity and high predictive value for ischemia | • Duration of scan |
| DWI/FLAIR mismatch | • Imaging marker for timing of stroke-onset based on pathophysiologic tissue changes in the evolution of acute stroke | • Relative high interrater- and intrarater-variability |
Figure 2The different imaging techniques used to select stroke-patients who would benefit from therapy. Patient 1 exhibits no FLAIR-lesion (A) and a clear DWI-lesion (B), the so-called DWI-FLAIR mismatch pattern. Patient 2 has a PWI/DWI mismatch on imaging, with (C) representing the lesion on Tmax, and (D) the corresponding diffusion lesion.
Figure 3Meta-analysis (. (A) shows the sensitivity and specificity for predicting stroke-onset before 3 h and (B) shows these values for stroke-onset before 4.5 h. *To predict stroke onset before 4.5 h the “liberal” method of DWI/FLAIR mismatch was used in the study of Petkova et al. (49).