Correlation Between Computed Tomography-Based Tissue Net Water Uptake and Volumetric Measures of Cerebral Edema After Reperfusion Therapy
Cerebral edema after large hemispheric infarction is associated with poor functional outcome and mortality. Net water uptake (NWU) quantifies the degree of hypoattenuation on unenhanced-computed tomography (CT) and is increasingly used to measure cerebral edema in stroke research. Hemorrhagic transf...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Stroke (1970) 2022-08, Vol.53 (8), p.2628-2636 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Cerebral edema after large hemispheric infarction is associated with poor functional outcome and mortality. Net water uptake (NWU) quantifies the degree of hypoattenuation on unenhanced-computed tomography (CT) and is increasingly used to measure cerebral edema in stroke research. Hemorrhagic transformation and parenchymal contrast staining after thrombectomy may confound NWU measurements. We investigated the correlation of NWU measured postthrombectomy with volumetric markers of cerebral edema and association with functional outcomes.
In a pooled individual patient level analysis of patients presenting with anterior circulation large hemispheric infarction (core 80-300 mL or Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score ≤5) in the HERMES (Highly Effective Reperfusion Evaluated in Multiple Endovascular Stroke trials) data set, cerebral edema was defined as the volumetric expansion of the ischemic hemisphere expressed as a ratio to the contralateral hemisphere(rHV). NWU and midline-shift were compared with rHV as the reference standard on 24-hour follow-up CT, adjusted for hemorrhagic transformation and the use of thrombectomy. Association between edema markers and day 90 functional outcomes (modified Rankin Scale) was assessed using ordinal logistic regression.
Overall (n=144), there was no correlation between NWU and rHV (r
=0.055,
=0.51). In sub-group analyses, a weak correlation between NWU with rHV was observed after excluding patients with any degree of hemorrhagic transformation (r
=0.211,
=0.015), which further improved after excluding thrombectomy patients (r
=0.453,
=0.001). Midline-shift correlated strongly with rHV in all sub-group analyses (r
>0.753,
=0.001). Functional outcome at 90 days was negatively associated with rHV (adjusted common odds ratio, 0.46 [95% CI, 0.32-0.65]; |
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ISSN: | 0039-2499 1524-4628 |
DOI: | 10.1161/STROKEAHA.121.037073 |