| Literature DB >> 31853171 |
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Central retinal artery occlusion is an ophthalmic emergency which typically causes acute, painless visual loss. Several conservative treatment options are practiced with little benefit. Thrombolysis as a therapeutic option has gathered interest as well as controversy. This paper aims at reviewing the relevant literature to assess the efficacy and safety of intra-arterial thrombolysis for acute central retinal artery occlusion.Entities:
Keywords: central retinal artery occlusion; fibrinolysis; intra-arterial; thrombolysis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31853171 PMCID: PMC6916701 DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S232560
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Ophthalmol ISSN: 1177-5467
Figure 1Widefield imaging showing classical features of CRAO: pale retina with a cherry-red spot in the right eye.
Figure 2OCT image showing hyperreflectivity and increased thickness of the inner retina in CRAO.
A Summary of Current Conservative Treatment Options and Their Mechanism of Action.4,6,30
| Conservative Treatment Options for CRAO | |
|---|---|
| Treatment Option | Possible Mechanism of Action |
| Sublingual isosorbide dinitrate | Dilation of retinal vasculature thus increased perfusion into the retinal artery |
| Carbogen inhalation | Inhalation of this mixture of 95% oxygen and 5% carbon dioxide to increase blood carbon dioxide concentration preventing oxygen-induced vasoconstriction thus allowing increased perfusion to retinal tissue |
| Hyperbaric oxygen | Inhalation of hyperbaric oxygen to increase oxygen tension and oxygen delivery to ischaemic retinal tissue |
| Ocular massage | Digital compression of the globe to mechanically dislodge the embolus allowing it to pass through the retinal circulation |
| Anterior chamber paracentesis | Withdrawal of 0.1–0.2 mL of aqueous fluid to reduce intra-ocular pressure (IOP) and allow an increase in perfusion pressure |
| IV acetazolamide | IV infusion to reduce intra-ocular pressure (IOP) to allow an increase in perfusion pressure |
| IV mannitol | |
| Pentoxifylline | Reduction of red blood cell rigidity allowing them to pass through capillaries with greater ease and a reduction of blood viscosity |
| Systemic steroids | Reduction in vascular endothelial oedema |
| Enhanced external counter pulsation | Sequential inflation of pneumatic cuffs around the lower extremities at diastole to increase venous return and at the onset of systole to decrease systolic pressure causing increased blood flow |
| Neodymium-doped yttrium aluminium garnet (Nd:YAG) laser embolectomy | Nd:YAG laser to dislodge embolus |
Case Reports of IAT in CRAO
| Case Reports | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author | Initial Vision (VA) | Rx Time (Hours) | Pre-Procedure Angiogram | Thrombolytic | Technique | Post-Procedure Imaging | Final Visual Outcome (VA) |
| Padolecchia et al | Not reported | 6.5 | Not reported | rTPA 70 mg over 1.5 hrs. Heparin 3000 units and 1 week LMWH | Microcatheter (Tracker-18, Target Therapeutics) in the origin of the OA | Improvement of retinal flow during ophthalmic examination during procedure, confirmed by FFA | Partial recovery of vision |
| Not reported | 4.5 | Not reported | rTPA 60mg over 80 min. Heparin 3000 units and 1 week LMWH | Microcatheter (Tracker-18, Target Therapeutics) placed in the proximal section of left OA | Increased blood flow observed on ophthalmic testing. FFA post procedure showed almost complete retinal recanalization and 2-day post-procedure was normal | VA and VF normal | |
| Not reported | 4.5 | Not reported | rTPA 40mg over 45 min. Heparin 3000 units and 1 week LMWH | Microcatheter (Tracker-18, Target Therapeutics) placed in MMA | Recanalization on FFA | VA and VF normal | |
| Wirostko et al | CF | 4 | Subtle choroidal blush | Urokinase 900,000 units. Systemic heparinisation stopped for 12h | OA catheterisation | Blood column in retinal vasculature re-established and cherry-red spot fading | 20/20 |
| Hwang et al | LP | <12 | No atherosclerotic lesion in distal carotid and proximal cervical ICA. No occlusion of left OA up to distal segment | Urokinase 400,000 units and abciximab 4mg | Microcatheter (Excelsior SL-10, Stryker) in proximal segment of OA | Angiography did not show any definite changes. FFA 1-day post procedure showed normalised retinal arterial filling. Severe macular oedema on OCT. No further improvement in vision | HM and 20/100 using temporal VF |
| VA 20/70 | <12 | No stenosis or occlusion or remarkable lesion in carotid. Selective angiogram of OA showed choroidal blush and no occlusion of its branches | Urokinase 300,000 units | Microcatheter placed at origin of OA | FFA 1-day post procedure showed normal retinal perfusion | 20/25 | |
| Cohen et al | Not reported | 13.5 | Absence of OA from the ICA. Selective angiogram of the ECA performed showing meningo-OA from left MMA | Urokinase 250,000 units over 30 mins. Systemic heparin | Microcatheter (Prowler 10, Codman Neuro) navigated through distal MMA and placed at meningo-ophthalmic artery | Angiogram showed improvement in angiographic visualisation of choroidal blush. FFA day 2 showed recanalization | Normal VA and VFs |
| Song et al | HM | No definite thrombus or steno-occlusive lesion within OA | Urokinase 500,000 units | OA infused – details not given | 7 hrs later, no improvement in FFA. | HM | |
| Kim et al | LP | >12 | Normal choroidal blush with patent right OA. Aneurysm at origin of OA. ECA angiography revealed visualisation of distal parts of OA via MMA | Urokinase 200,000 units and 100g of tirofiban | MMA infused – details not given | Day 1 post procedure FFA showed normal arteriovenous transit time and full peripheral perfusion. Atrophy of inner retina on OCT | HM |
| Vaitheeswaran et al | NPL | <24 | Not reported | Urokinase 40,000 units | U-shaped 30-gauge catheter to cannulate OA | Post-operative perfusion confirmed using FFA. Disc pallor and healed macular oedema with pigment mottling. Retinal vessels and flow normal | 6/9. Significant restriction with preservation of central fields. |
| Kovach et al | VA 1/200 (previously 20/50) | <12 | Not reported | Infusion of verapamil followed by alteplase | MMA infused – details not given | One year later central foveal thickness reduced from 277 to 232 microns and macular volume decreased from 8.53 to 6.98 mm | 20/70 |
| Wilkins et al | HM | 10 | Not reported | Not reported | IAT via OA – details not given | OCT showed reduced thickness of RNFL at 1 week | HM |
Abbreviations: Rx, treatment; rTPA, recombinant tissue plasminogen activator; LMWH, low molecular weight heparin; MMA, middle meningeal artery; OA, ophthalmic artery; ECA, external carotid artery; FFA, fluorescein fundus angiography; VA, visual acuity; VF, visual fields; logMAR, logarithm of the minimal angle of resolution; HM, hand movements; CF, counting fingers; PL, light perception; NPL, nil perception of light.
Post-Procedure Case Reports of IAT in CRAO
| Post-Procedure Case Reports | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author | Procedure | Initial Vision (VA) | Rx Time (Hours) | Pre-Procedure Angiogram | Thrombolytic | Technique | Post-Procedure Imaging | Final Visual Outcome (VA) |
| Thompson et al | Carotid artery stent placement | LP | <0.5 | Chronically occluded right OA at the ICA origin. Mid-orbital OA filled from ECA collaterals with choroidal blushing | rTPA 10 mg | Common carotid artery infused near origin of ECA – details not given | CF | |
| Jeon et al | Atrial septal defect closure | LP | <3 | ICA patent with no occlusion of OA. No choroidal blush in ethmoidal and lacrimal branches of ECA | Urokinase 500,000 units over 75 min | Microcatheter (Excelsior SL-10, Stryker) | Angiogram showed restoration of posterior ciliary and muscular arteries | 20/30 with a left VF defect at inferonasal quadrant |
| Yoo et al | Coil embolization of paraclinoid aneurysm | Not reported | Immediate | No choroidal blush | Urokinase 100,000 and 500 mcg of tirofiban | Microcatheter (Excelsior SL-10, Stryker) placed in proximal segment of OA | Improved visualisation of choroidal blush | CF |
| Park et al | Stent-assisted coil embolization of OA | Not reported | Not reported | No retinal choroidal blush via OA and retrograde flow from the ECA | Urokinase 200,000 units into common carotid and 100,000 units into OA. Systemic heparinisation. Post-operative IV argatroban and dual antiplatelet therapy | Microcatheter (Excelsior SL-10, Stryker) placed in the right CCA close to the OA | Retinochoroidal blush with anterograde OA flow. At 4 months, fundus photography showed improved oedema and reconstructed retinal artery | VA returned to normal |
Abbreviations: Rx, treatment; rTPA, recombinant tissue plasminogen activator; LMWH, low molecular weight heparin; MMA, middle meningeal artery; OA, ophthalmic artery; ECA, external carotid artery; FFA, fluorescein fundus angiography; VA, visual acuity; VF, visual fields; logMAR, logarithm of the minimal angle of resolution; HM, hand movements; CF, counting fingers; PL, light perception; NPL, nil perception of light.
Case Series of IAT in CRAO
| Retrospective Case Series | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author | Cases | Rx Time | Thrombolytic | Technique | Complications | Study Findings | Comments on Study Design |
| Schumacher et al | 23 | 34.6 | Urokinase 847,000 units mean dose. rTPA 52 mg mean dose. Systemic heparinisation 20,000–25,000 units for 2–3 days | Coaxial catheter system with microcatheter (Tracker 18, Target Therapeutics) in proximal section of OA | 1 local haemorrhage, 1 orbital pain | “Marked” improvement in VA from initial VA in 6/23 (26%) patients and “definite” improvement in 11/23 (49%) | Retrospective Non-randomised No control group Small sample size No definition of VA improvement |
| Richard et al | 53 | 14 | rTPA of 10–40 mg over 3 hrs. Heparin 5000 units bolus and 1000 units per hour afterwards | Microcatheter (Tracker 18, Target Therapeutics) positioned at OA | 2 transient paralytic symptoms, 1 hypertensive crisis | Significant increase in total VA compared to preoperative values (p < 0.0001) VA improvement in 35/53 (66%): 25/53 (47%) showed more than 2 lines; 10/53 (19%) showed between 1 and 2 lines; 18/53 (34%) patients no change or worsening No statistical difference between occlusion time and visual outcome (p > 0.22 for VA in IAT <20 hrs vs IAT >20 hrs) | Retrospective Non-randomised No control group Small sample size |
| Butz et al | 22 | 7.6 | In 7 cases, urokinase 642,000 units mean dose between 60 to 120 min. In 15 cases, rTPA 27 mg mean dose between 90 and 120 min. Systemic heparin 10,000 units followed by 700–1500 units per hour for 2–3 days | Coaxial technique with microcatheter placed at origin of OA. In 1 case maxillary-ophthalmic anastomosis used | 2 reversible neurologic symptoms, 1 intracerebral bleeding, 1 major stroke | 1/22 (5%) complete recovery; 6/22 (27%) showed 20/800 to 20/32; 2/22 (1%) were HM; 13/22 (59%) no change VA No significant difference in time delay between patients who had improvement and who did not (p = 0.22) Better visual outcome with IAT compared to ST depending on duration of occlusion | Retrospective Non-randomised No control group Small sample size |
| Petterson et al | 13 | 9.7 | rTPA 15.8 mg mean dose over 30–75 min | Microcatheter in proximal OA | No complications | 6/13 (46%) improved VA by 1 or more Snellen lines however not considered meaningful as final VA worse than 20/300. 2/13 (15.3%) did not attend follow-up but had no improvement at 24 hrs All patients had residual monocular VF defects consistent with retinal ischaemic injury | Possible treatment bias: 6 had AC paracentesis, 1 case had ocular massage Non-randomised. No control group. Small sample size |
| Zhang et al | 49 | <6 | Urokinase 626,000 units mean dose. Systemic heparin during procedure. Antiplatelet post-procedure | Microcatheter advanced into OA | 1 TIA, 2 fundus haemorrhage, 2 urine infection | 18/49 (37%) patients recovered VA > 0.6; 25/49 (51%) patients between 0.01 and 0.05; 24/49 (49%) patients between 0 and 0.01. Immediate recanalization in 35/49 (71%) VF defect <30% in 22/49 of patients at 6 months Residual vision before thrombolysis related to vision at 6 months (p < 0.05) All patients with collaterals recovered vision over 0.6 Recanalization produced greater recovery of VA at 6 months after IAT VA was different at 2 days, 28 days and 6 months | Retrospective Non-randomised No control group Small sample size |
| Mercier et al | 14 | 8 | rtPA 35 mg mean dose over 40 min | Microcatheter positioned OA ostium | No complications | 6/14 (43%) showed “significant improvement” in VA No correlation between VA improvement and rTPA dose (p = 0.791) Significant improvement of the angiographic aspect of proximal OA (p = 0.0498) but this did not correlate with improvement in VA (p = 1.000) Time delay within 24 hrs not correlated with better VA recovery (p = 0.399) | No significant interobserver variability between observers (p = 0.125) 3 patients had cilioretinal arteries but did not reach fovea Retrospective. Non-randomised. No control group. Small sample size |
Abbreviations: Rx, treatment; rTPA, recombinant tissue plasminogen activator; LMWH, low molecular weight heparin; MMA, middle meningeal artery; OA, ophthalmic artery; ECA, external carotid artery; FFA, fluorescein fundus angiography; VA, visual acuity; VF, visual fields; logMAR, logarithm of the minimal angle of resolution; HM, hand movements; CF, counting fingers; PL, light perception; NPL, nil perception of light.
Case-Control Studies of IAT in CRAO
| Retrospective Case-Control Studies | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author | Cases | Rx Time | Thrombolytic | Technique | Complications | Study Findings | Comments on Study Design |
| Weber et al | 17 of 32 | 4.2 | Urokinase 594,000 units mean dose over 10–90 min. Systemic heparinisation with unfractionated heparin | Microcatheter (Tracker-18, Target Therapeutics) in proximal segment of OA | 2 patients TIA. No permanent disability | Visual outcome in IAT significantly better than in ST (p = 0.01) 3/17 (18%) had full recovery; 2/17 (12%) showed “marked” improvement to 20/30; 6/17 (35%) patients had “slight” improvement with VA of LP, HM or CF; 6/17 (35%) patients no improvement. Control group 10/15 (67%) had same or worse VA; 5/15 (33%) showed minimal improvement Conventional therapy better than no treatment among ST (p = 0.005) Better initial VA did not have better visual outcome in IAT (p = 0.564) or ST (p = 0.618) No statistical difference between time within 4 hrs to treatment and visual outcome | No significant difference between clinical characteristics in both groups No difference in initial VA between control and IAT group (p = 0.44) No significant delay to treatment between groups Possible treatment bias as 6/17 of IAT group vs 1/15 control group had AC paracentesis |
| Schmidt et al | 62 of 178 | 10.8 | Urokinase 200,000–1,300,000 units or rTPA 40–80 mg. Systemic heparin for at least 2 days and aspirin or phenprocoumon | Microcatheter (Tracker-18, Target Therapeutics) into proximal part of OA or other artery if occluded vessel/variable anatomy | 1 transient aphasia, 1 hemiparesis. Complete resolution both | Initial VA significant to final visual outcome (p = 0.0001) “Distinct” and “partial” VA improvement in CRAO of IAT <6 hrs and between 6 and 14 hrs: 77% vs 53% Significantly better outcomes of IAT vs conservative measures | No significant difference in treatment time both groups (p = 0.5) No definition of VA improvement Patients with cilioretinal artery excluded Patients in ST had different conservative management options Difference in age between groups (p – 0.0032) |
| Arnold et al | 37 of 56 | 4 | Urokinase 677,000 units mean dose over 10–90 min. 21 patients also received systemic heparin, 16 were given aspirin 250–500 mg | Microcatheter (Tracker-18, Target Therapeutics) placed in proximal segment of OA | 2 patients TIA, 1 patient stroke. No permanent disability | 8/37 (22%) regained VA of >0.6 compared with 0/19 (0%) in control group (p = 0.04) Improvement of vision more likely with IAT (p = 0.01). No different between time delay within 6 hrs and final visual outcome Acetazolamide more likely to improve vision in ST (p = 0.008) Younger patients more likely to regain vision in IAT (p = 0.012) and ST (p = 0.026) Time delay to treatment did not significantly influence clinical improvement within 6 hrs of symptom onset | No significant difference between clinical characteristics in both groups No significant difference in treatment time and initial VA in both groups Possible treatment bias: More patients in IAT group had acetazolamide and/or AC paracentesis before IAT than control group |
| Aldrich et al | 21 of 42 | 9.3 | rTPA 11.25 mg mean dose in 3mg aliquots. Heparin 3000 units and infusion | Microcatheter (Excelsior 1018, Stryker) placed in origin of OA | 2 groin haematomas | 16/21 (76%) experienced at least one-line improvement in VA compared to 7/21 (33%) in the control group (p = 0.018) Patients who had IAT were 22 times more likely to experience VA improvement and 86% less likely to have worsening of VA (p = 0.0003) | Significantly different mean time to presentation No significantly different baseline characteristics No significant difference in initial VA between groups |
| Ahn et al | 57 of 101 | 22.7 | Urokinase up to 500,000. Mean dose not given. | Microcatheter (Excelsior SL-10, Stryker) | 8 asymptomatic embolic infarction, 1 symptomatic neurological deterioration, 2 puncture site haematomas, 1 headache, 1 tinnitus, 1 hyperaesthesia, 2 raised IOP | No difference in clinically significant visual improvement between groups (p = 0.056) Mean visual improvement at final visit in IAT vs ST was 1.08 vs 0.08 (p < 0.001) VA at final visit of equal or better than 20/200 was significantly greater in the IAT group vs ST group: 19.3% vs 4.5% (p = 0.026) CRAO stage significantly associated with 1 month BCVA (p < 0.001) | Inclusion criteria for IAT and ST minimising selection bias No significant differences in patient characteristics Possible treatment bias: time between treatment in subtotal CRAO IAT group and ST group statistically different (p = 0.011) Small sample size |
Abbreviations: Rx, treatment; rTPA, recombinant tissue plasminogen activator; LMWH, low molecular weight heparin; MMA, middle meningeal artery; OA, ophthalmic artery; ECA, external carotid artery; FFA, fluorescein fundus angiography; VA, visual acuity; VF, visual fields; logMAR, logarithm of the minimal angle of resolution; HM, hand movements; CF, counting fingers; PL, light perception; NPL, nil perception of light.
Summary of Papers with Level of Evidence64 and Patients Achieving an Improvement of ≥0.3 logMAR
| Level of Evidence | Paper | VA ≥0.3 logMAR with IAT | VA ≥0.3 logMAR in Controls |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1a: Systematic reviews (with homogeneity) of randomized controlled trials | – | – | – |
| 1b: Individual randomized controlled trials (with narrow confidence interval) | – | – | – |
| 1c: All or none randomized controlled trials | Schumacher et al (2010) | 24/40 | 24/42 |
| 2a: Systematic reviews (with homogeneity) of cohort studies | – | – | – |
| 2b: Individual cohort study or low quality randomized controlled trials (eg <80% follow-up) | – | – | – |
| 2c: “Outcomes” Research; ecological studies | – | – | – |
| 3a: Systematic review (with homogeneity) of case-control studies | – | – | – |
| 3b: Individual case-control study | Weber et al (1998) | 5/17 | 0/15 |
| Schmidt et al (2002) | Not given | Not given | |
| Arnold et al (2005) | 8/37 | 0/19 | |
| Aldrich et al (2008) | 7/21 | Not given | |
| Ahn et al (2013) | 21/57 | 10/44 | |
| 4: Case series (and poor-quality cohort and case-control studies) | Schumacher et al (1993) | 4/23 | – |
| Richard et al (1999) | 11/53 | – | |
| Butz et al (2003) | 2/22 | – | |
| Petterson et al (2005) | 0/9 | – | |
| Zhang et al (2009) | 18/49 (initial VA not given) | – | |
| Mercier et al (2015) | 4/14 | – | |
| 5: Expert opinion | Padolecchia et al (1999) | Not given | – |
| Wirostko et al (1997) | 1/1 | – | |
| Hwang et al (2010) | 1/2 | – | |
| Cohen et al (2012) | Not given | – | |
| Song et al (2012) | 0/1 | – | |
| Kim et al (2013) | 0/1 | – | |
| Vaitheeswaran et al (2014) | 1/1 | – | |
| Kovach et al (2015) | 0/1 | – | |
| Wilkins et al (2018) | 0/1 | – |