Cardiology cathlab-based management of thrombotic carotid stenoses in acute ischaemic stroke: tools, techniques, local stroke unit collaboration, challenges and patient outcomes
Abstract Background Shortage of endovascular operators able to deliver thrombectomy in acute ischemic stroke (AIS) on a 24/7/365 basis is a main challenge in health care settings around the world. Another fundamental barrier is getting multispecialy teams to work collaboratively with each other in A...
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Veröffentlicht in: | European heart journal 2021-10, Vol.42 (Supplement_1) |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Abstract
Background
Shortage of endovascular operators able to deliver thrombectomy in acute ischemic stroke (AIS) on a 24/7/365 basis is a main challenge in health care settings around the world. Another fundamental barrier is getting multispecialy teams to work collaboratively with each other in AIS as is already done (albeit on an elective rather than acute basis) in managing stroke mechanistic pathologies such as AFib (pharmacology/ablation) or PFO (diagnosis/closure).
Purpose
To present accumulating experience en route to a full interventional stroke service on the basis of a cardiac cathlab and local multi-specialty collaboration.
Methods
Withn the PARADIGM-EXTEND (symptomatic and increased-stroke-risk asymptomatic carotid stenosis) all-comer study we have treated, on an emergent basis, 21 patients (15 men, age 58–83 years, median 68 years) with AIS caused by severe carotid artery stenoses. All cases were performed as part of our pathway towards a full 24/7 thrombectomy stroke service.
Results
All lesions (100%) were thrombotic (mobile thrombus - 29%; one was a thrombotic total occusion). Proximal neuroprotection (flow reversal using a CCA±ECA balloon) with thrombus aspiration was used in 19/21 patients (90.5%; in ICA total thrombotic occlusion TigerTrieverXL was used). In 2 patients proximal system use was unfeasible. All cases were done under ACT control and using, consistent with the PARADIGM-EXTEND protocol, the MicroNET-covered embolic prevention stent system (CGuard) that was routinely optimized with large balloons/high pressures.
There were no procedure- or device-related complications. TIMI/TICI-3 was achieved in all cases. Embolism-to-infarct territory was 0% and embolism-to-new territory was 0%. Vascular access closure device use was 76%. A 30-day good clinical outcome (mRS of 0–2) rate was 95.2%. One patient with thrombotic near-occlusion, in whom crescendo stroke episodes superimposing the baseline late presentation event necessitated treatment, had a haemorrhagic stroke transformation on day 2 that finally led to death. By 30 days no new stroke, stent thrombosis, myocardial infarction or other SAE occurred.
Conclusion
Cardiologists skilled in carotid interventions are naturally positioned to deliver AIS treatment. 24/7 interventional services and networks for AMI have long been established and, as demonstrated in our centre, the services and skills can be translated -in collaboration with a local stroke unit/neurology- to AIS. Breaking a |
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ISSN: | 0195-668X 1522-9645 |
DOI: | 10.1093/eurheartj/ehab724.2031 |