Literature DB >> 31105971

Tissue window, not the time window, will guide acute stroke treatment.

David Wang1,2, Yongjun Wang3,4.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Keywords:  penumbra; reperfusion; stroke; tissue window

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31105971      PMCID: PMC6475083          DOI: 10.1136/svn-2018-000211

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stroke Vasc Neurol        ISSN: 2059-8696


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Since the approval of intravenous (IV) tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) to treat patients with acute ischaemic stroke (AIS) within 3 hours of onset in 1996, it took 12 years to expand the treatment time window to 4.5 hours by the European Cooperative Acute Stroke Trial II (ECASS III).1 It took another 10 years to expand the treatment time window to 6 hours with the bridging of  IV tPA and intra-arterial (IA) thrombectomy.2 In 2018, 22 years later after the approval of  IV tPA and less than 3 years from the approval of IA thrombectomy, we have learnt that IA thrombectomy was effective in treating patients with AIS  from large vessel occlusion (LVO) type of stroke up to 24 hours.3 This continued expansion of the treatment time window has brought hope to many patients with stroke who will present to the emergency room at a later time. It has also shattered our belief that poststroke ischaemic penumbra would only exist for a very brief time. The evidence lies in the multimodal imaging studies that  can detect a penumbra ‘live’ during a stroke, especially late in its course, and therefore, giving us a tissue window. Three trials implied CT perfusion to look for the presence of a penumbra in patients presented between 6 and 24 hours of onset. If a mismatch was present and an LVO identified, IA thrombectomy was effective. ‘Time is Brain’ still reminds us that stroke is an emergency. However, tissue window has taught us that the treatment time window still exists in late presenters and we should not give up easily. While the time window is based on the witnessed time of a stroke that takes place, tissue window is the biological timing of an evolving ischaemia. Brain ischaemia is a dynamic process. Each patient may tolerate the ischaemia differently because of the difference in cerebral reserve, collateral circulation, size and completeness of an infarction. Study of ischaemia in rat middle cerebral artery occlusion model showed that even reperfusing the brain 14 days later, rats still had reasonable functional recovery.4 With the advent of new CT and MRI technology, we are now capable of accurately assessing such process. In fact, tissue window can not only identify opportunity for late presenters, but also guide us on treating early presenters. In clinical practice, we often see stroke patients with sizeable hypodense area on the initial CT of head although the witnessed time of onset was well within 3 hours. Alberta stroke program early CT (ASPECT)score was often used to decide if the risk of haemorrhagic transformation with reperfusion was high if ASPECT score was low, an indication of no penumbra was preset. Now, with the new imaging technology that can provide a tissue window, clinicians can make better judgement on treatment options for late presenters.5-7 Recently two published clinical trials have used MRI mismatch rather than CT perfusion mismatch to guide the use of IV tPA up to patients with AIS between 6 and 12 hours of onset and the outcome was positive. Both MRI-Guided Thrombolysis for Stroke with Unknown Time of Onset (WAKE-UP) and IV alteplase in MR-selected patients with stroke of unknown onset (MR WITNESS) trials used MRI diffusion weighted image/Fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (DWI/FLAIR) to look for the mismatch rather than a perfusion scan.8 9 In this issue of SVN, two centres in China reported their clinical experience on treating patients with AIS beyond 4.5 hours of time window. Both reports confirmed the findings from WAKE-UP and MR WITNESS trials. With a combined 600 patients treated from both trials, over 100 patients were actually treated beyond 12 hours. Furthermore, one centre actually used MRI DWI/T2-weighted image (T2WI) to look for the mismatch and reported to be successful. MRI DWI/T2W imaging was faster than FLAIR to acquire. If MRI DWI/T2WI is as good as DWI/PWI, the significance is that many small hospitals may not need to install software to interpret perfusion scans. Treatment with IV tPA can be offered faster. In the near future, artificial intelligence may help assess the presence of a penumbra faster and with more precision. Furthermore, a perfusion scan or MRI/T2WI should be done regardless of the time of onset, be it within 3 hours or great than 24 hours onset, so that every patient with a stroke will have an accurate assessment of the tissue window, regardless of the time window.
  9 in total

1.  Thrombectomy for Stroke at 6 to 16 Hours with Selection by Perfusion Imaging.

Authors:  Gregory W Albers; Michael P Marks; Stephanie Kemp; Soren Christensen; Jenny P Tsai; Santiago Ortega-Gutierrez; Ryan A McTaggart; Michel T Torbey; May Kim-Tenser; Thabele Leslie-Mazwi; Amrou Sarraj; Scott E Kasner; Sameer A Ansari; Sharon D Yeatts; Scott Hamilton; Michael Mlynash; Jeremy J Heit; Greg Zaharchuk; Sun Kim; Janice Carrozzella; Yuko Y Palesch; Andrew M Demchuk; Roland Bammer; Philip W Lavori; Joseph P Broderick; Maarten G Lansberg
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2018-01-24       Impact factor: 91.245

Review 2.  2018 Guidelines for the Early Management of Patients With Acute Ischemic Stroke: A Guideline for Healthcare Professionals From the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association.

Authors:  William J Powers; Alejandro A Rabinstein; Teri Ackerson; Opeolu M Adeoye; Nicholas C Bambakidis; Kyra Becker; José Biller; Michael Brown; Bart M Demaerschalk; Brian Hoh; Edward C Jauch; Chelsea S Kidwell; Thabele M Leslie-Mazwi; Bruce Ovbiagele; Phillip A Scott; Kevin N Sheth; Andrew M Southerland; Deborah V Summers; David L Tirschwell
Journal:  Stroke       Date:  2018-01-24       Impact factor: 7.914

3.  Thrombectomy 6 to 24 Hours after Stroke with a Mismatch between Deficit and Infarct.

Authors:  Raul G Nogueira; Ashutosh P Jadhav; Diogo C Haussen; Alain Bonafe; Ronald F Budzik; Parita Bhuva; Dileep R Yavagal; Marc Ribo; Christophe Cognard; Ricardo A Hanel; Cathy A Sila; Ameer E Hassan; Monica Millan; Elad I Levy; Peter Mitchell; Michael Chen; Joey D English; Qaisar A Shah; Frank L Silver; Vitor M Pereira; Brijesh P Mehta; Blaise W Baxter; Michael G Abraham; Pedro Cardona; Erol Veznedaroglu; Frank R Hellinger; Lei Feng; Jawad F Kirmani; Demetrius K Lopes; Brian T Jankowitz; Michael R Frankel; Vincent Costalat; Nirav A Vora; Albert J Yoo; Amer M Malik; Anthony J Furlan; Marta Rubiera; Amin Aghaebrahim; Jean-Marc Olivot; Wondwossen G Tekle; Ryan Shields; Todd Graves; Roger J Lewis; Wade S Smith; David S Liebeskind; Jeffrey L Saver; Tudor G Jovin
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2017-11-11       Impact factor: 91.245

4.  Computed tomographic perfusion to Predict Response to Recanalization in ischemic stroke.

Authors:  Maarten G Lansberg; Soren Christensen; Stephanie Kemp; Michael Mlynash; Nishant Mishra; Christian Federau; Jenny P Tsai; Sun Kim; Raul G Nogueria; Tudor Jovin; Thomas G Devlin; Naveed Akhtar; Dileep R Yavagal; Diogo Haussen; Seena Dehkharghani; Roland Bammer; Matus Straka; Greg Zaharchuk; Michael P Marks; Gregory W Albers
Journal:  Ann Neurol       Date:  2017-06-09       Impact factor: 10.422

5.  Intravenous thrombolysis in unwitnessed stroke onset: MR WITNESS trial results.

Authors:  Lee H Schwamm; Ona Wu; Shlee S Song; Lawrence L Latour; Andria L Ford; Amie W Hsia; Alona Muzikansky; Rebecca A Betensky; Albert J Yoo; Michael H Lev; Gregoire Boulouis; Arne Lauer; Pedro Cougo; William A Copen; Gordon J Harris; Steven Warach
Journal:  Ann Neurol       Date:  2018-04-27       Impact factor: 10.422

6.  Endovascular thrombectomy after large-vessel ischaemic stroke: a meta-analysis of individual patient data from five randomised trials.

Authors:  Mayank Goyal; Bijoy K Menon; Wim H van Zwam; Diederik W J Dippel; Peter J Mitchell; Andrew M Demchuk; Antoni Dávalos; Charles B L M Majoie; Aad van der Lugt; Maria A de Miquel; Geoffrey A Donnan; Yvo B W E M Roos; Alain Bonafe; Reza Jahan; Hans-Christoph Diener; Lucie A van den Berg; Elad I Levy; Olvert A Berkhemer; Vitor M Pereira; Jeremy Rempel; Mònica Millán; Stephen M Davis; Daniel Roy; John Thornton; Luis San Román; Marc Ribó; Debbie Beumer; Bruce Stouch; Scott Brown; Bruce C V Campbell; Robert J van Oostenbrugge; Jeffrey L Saver; Michael D Hill; Tudor G Jovin
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2016-02-18       Impact factor: 79.321

7.  Delayed Recanalization Promotes Functional Recovery in Rats Following Permanent Middle Cerebral Artery Occlusion.

Authors:  Devin William McBride; Guangyong Wu; Derek Nowrangi; Jerry J Flores; Liang Hui; Paul R Krafft; John H Zhang
Journal:  Transl Stroke Res       Date:  2018-01-21       Impact factor: 6.829

8.  Thrombolysis with alteplase 3 to 4.5 hours after acute ischemic stroke.

Authors:  Werner Hacke; Markku Kaste; Erich Bluhmki; Miroslav Brozman; Antoni Dávalos; Donata Guidetti; Vincent Larrue; Kennedy R Lees; Zakaria Medeghri; Thomas Machnig; Dietmar Schneider; Rüdiger von Kummer; Nils Wahlgren; Danilo Toni
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2008-09-25       Impact factor: 91.245

9.  MRI-Guided Thrombolysis for Stroke with Unknown Time of Onset.

Authors:  Götz Thomalla; Claus Z Simonsen; Florent Boutitie; Grethe Andersen; Yves Berthezene; Bastian Cheng; Bharath Cheripelli; Tae-Hee Cho; Franz Fazekas; Jens Fiehler; Ian Ford; Ivana Galinovic; Susanne Gellissen; Amir Golsari; Johannes Gregori; Matthias Günther; Jorge Guibernau; Karl Georg Häusler; Michael Hennerici; André Kemmling; Jacob Marstrand; Boris Modrau; Lars Neeb; Natalia Perez de la Ossa; Josep Puig; Peter Ringleb; Pascal Roy; Enno Scheel; Wouter Schonewille; Joaquin Serena; Stefan Sunaert; Kersten Villringer; Anke Wouters; Vincent Thijs; Martin Ebinger; Matthias Endres; Jochen B Fiebach; Robin Lemmens; Keith W Muir; Norbert Nighoghossian; Salvador Pedraza; Christian Gerloff
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2018-05-16       Impact factor: 91.245

  9 in total
  5 in total

1.  Accuracy of time to treatment estimates in the CRASH-3 clinical trial: impact on the trial results.

Authors:  Raoul Mansukhani; Lauren Frimley; Haleema Shakur-Still; Linda Sharples; Ian Roberts
Journal:  Trials       Date:  2020-07-25       Impact factor: 2.279

Review 2.  Silver Jubilee of Stroke Thrombolysis With Alteplase: Evolution of the Therapeutic Window.

Authors:  Yuanmei Pan; Guowen Shi
Journal:  Front Neurol       Date:  2021-03-01       Impact factor: 4.003

Review 3.  Endovascular Intervention in Acute Ischemic Stroke: History and Evolution.

Authors:  Junaid Ansari; Rachel Triay; Sandeep Kandregula; Nimer Adeeb; Hugo Cuellar; Pankaj Sharma
Journal:  Biomedicines       Date:  2022-02-10

4.  Localized prediction of tissue outcome in acute ischemic stroke patients using diffusion- and perfusion-weighted MRI datasets.

Authors:  Malte Grosser; Susanne Gellißen; Patrick Borchert; Jan Sedlacik; Jawed Nawabi; Jens Fiehler; Nils D Forkert
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2020-11-05       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Systematic review protocol to assess artificial intelligence diagnostic accuracy performance in detecting acute ischaemic stroke and large-vessel occlusions on CT and MR medical imaging.

Authors:  Srinivasa Rao Kundeti; Manikanda Krishnan Vaidyanathan; Bharath Shivashankar; Sankar Prasad Gorthi
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2021-03-10       Impact factor: 2.692

  5 in total

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