167 results on '"Andrew, Bivard"'
Search Results
2. Cost-effectiveness of tenecteplase versus alteplase for stroke thrombolysis evaluation trial in the ambulance
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Lan Gao, Mark Parsons, Leonid Churilov, Henry Zhao, Bruce CV Campbell, Bernard Yan, Peter Mitchell, Skye Coote, Francesca Langenberg, Karen Smith, David Anderson, Michael Stephenson, Stephen M Davis, Geoffrey Donnan, Damien Easton, and Andrew Bivard
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Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Background: Tenecteplase administered to patients with ischaemic stroke in a mobile stroke unit (MSU) has been shown to reduce the perfusion lesion volumes and result in ultra-early recovery. We now seek to assess the cost-effectiveness of tenecteplase in the MSU. Methods: A within-trial (TASTE-A) economic analysis and a model-based long-term cost-effectiveness analysis were performed. This post hoc within-trial economic analysis utilised the patient-level data (intention to treat, ITT) prospectively collected over the trial to calculate the difference in both healthcare costs and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs, estimated from modified Rankin scale score). A Markov microsimulation model was developed to simulate the long-term costs and benefits. Results: In total, there were 104 patients with ischaemic stroke randomised to tenecteplase ( n = 55) or alteplase ( n = 49) treatment groups, respectively in the TASTE-A trial. The ITT-based analysis showed that treatment with tenecteplase was associated with non-signficantly lower costs (A$28,903 vs A$40,150 ( p = 0.056)) and greater benefits (0.171 vs 0.158 ( p = 0.457)) than that for the alteplase group over the first 90 days post the index stroke. The long-term model showed that tenecteplase led to greater savings in costs (−A$18,610) and more health benefits (0.47 QALY or 0.31 LY gains). Tenecteplase-treated patients had reduced costs for rehospitalisation (−A$1464), nursing home care (−A$16,767) and nonmedical care (−A$620) per patient. Conclusions: Treatment of ischaemic stroke patients with tenecteplase appeared to be cost-effective and improve QALYs in the MSU setting based on Phase II data. The reduced total cost from tenecteplase was driven by savings from acute hospitalisation and reduce need for nursing home care.
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- 2023
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3. European Stroke Organisation (ESO) expedited recommendation on tenecteplase for acute ischaemic stroke
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Sonia Alamowitch, Guillaume Turc, Lina Palaiodimou, Andrew Bivard, Alan Cameron, Gian Marco De Marchis, Annette Fromm, Janika Kõrv, Melinda B Roaldsen, Aristeidis H Katsanos, and Georgios Tsivgoulis
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Neurology (clinical) ,Guidelines ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Within the last year, four randomised-controlled clinical trials (RCTs) have been published comparing intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) with tenecteplase and alteplase in acute ischaemic stroke (AIS) patients with a non-inferiority design for three of them. An expedited recommendation process was initiated by the European Stroke Organisation (ESO) and conducted according to ESO standard operating procedure based on the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations (GRADE) framework. We identified three relevant Population, Intervention, Comparator, Outcome (PICO) questions, performed systematic reviews of the literature and meta-analyses, assessed the quality of the available evidence, and wrote evidence-based recommendations. Expert consensus statements were provided if insufficient evidence was available to provide recommendations based on the GRADE approach. For patients with AIS of
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- 2023
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4. Ultra-Long Transfers for Endovascular Thrombectomy—Mission Impossible?: The Australia-New Zealand Experience
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Carlos Garcia-Esperon, Teddy Y. Wu, Vinicius Carraro do Nascimento, Bernard Yan, Craig Kurunawai, Tim Kleinig, Gregory Selkirk, David Blacker, P. Alan Barber, Annemarei Ranta, Alvaro Cervera, Andrew Wong, Peter Mitchell, Claire Muller, Hal Rice, Laetitia De Villiers, Jim Jannes, Jae Beom Hong, Peter Bailey, Helen Brown, Bruce C.V. Campbell, Duncan Wilson, John Fink, Timothy Ang, Christopher Bladin, Tim Phillips, Md Golam Hasnain, Kenneth Butcher, Ferdinand Miteff, Christopher R. Levi, Neil J. Spratt, Mark W. Parsons, Beng Lim Alvin Chew, Mary Morgan, Wayne Collecutt, Martin Krauss, Aaron Tan, Joshua Mahadevan, Matthew Willcourt, and Andrew Bivard
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Stroke ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Treatment Outcome ,Endovascular Procedures ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,Middle Aged ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Brain Ischemia ,Retrospective Studies ,New Zealand ,Thrombectomy - Abstract
Background: Endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) access in remote areas is limited. Preliminary data suggest that long distance transfers for EVT may be beneficial; however, the magnitude and best imaging strategy at the referring center remains uncertain. We hypothesized that patients transferred >300 miles would benefit from EVT, achieving rates of functional independence (modified Rankin Scale [mRS] score of 0–2) at 3 months similar to those patients treated at the comprehensive stroke center in the randomized EVT extended window trials and that the selection of patients with computed tomography perfusion (CTP) at the referring site would be associated with ordinal shift toward better outcomes on the mRS. Methods: This is a retrospective analysis of patients transferred from 31 referring hospitals >300 miles (measured by the most direct road distance) to 9 comprehensive stroke centers in Australia and New Zealand for EVT consideration (April 2016 through May 2021). Results: There were 131 patients; the median age was 64 [53–74] years and the median baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score was 16 [12–22]. At baseline, 79 patients (60.3%) had noncontrast CT+CT angiography, 52 (39.7%) also had CTP. At the comprehensive stroke center, 114 (87%) patients underwent cerebral angiography, and 96 (73.3%) proceeded to EVT. At 3 months, 62 patients (48.4%) had an mRS score of 0 to 2 and 81 (63.3%) mRS score of 0 to 3. CTP selection at the referring site was not associated with better ordinal scores on the mRS at 3 months (mRS median of 2 [1–3] versus 3 [1–6] in the patients selected with noncontrast CT+CT angiography, P =0.1). Nevertheless, patients selected with CTP were less likely to have an mRS score of 5 to 6 (odds ratio 0.03 [0.01–0.19]; P Conclusions: In selected patients transferred >300 miles, there was a benefit for EVT, with outcomes similar to those treated in the comprehensive stroke center in the EVT extended window trials. Remote hospital CTP selection was not associated with ordinal mRS improvement, but was associated with fewer very poor 3-month outcomes.
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- 2023
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5. Comparison of Computed Tomography Perfusion and Multiphase Computed Tomography Angiogram in Predicting Clinical Outcomes in Endovascular Thrombectomy
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Zefeng Tan, Mark Parsons, Andrew Bivard, Gagan Sharma, Peter Mitchell, Richard Dowling, Steven Bush, Leonid Churilov, Anding Xu, and Bernard Yan
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Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Brain Ischemia ,Cerebral Angiography ,Perfusion ,Stroke ,Treatment Outcome ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Aged ,Ischemic Stroke ,Retrospective Studies ,Thrombectomy - Abstract
Background: In patients with acute stroke who undergo endovascular thrombectomy, the relative prognostic power of computed tomography perfusion (CTP) parameters compared with multiphase CT angiogram (mCTA) is unknown. We aimed to compare the predictive accuracy of mCTA and CTP parameters on clinical outcomes. Methods: We included patients with acute ischemic stroke who had anterior circulation large vessel occlusion within 24 hours of onset in Melbourne Brain Centre at the Royal Melbourne Hospital. All patients underwent CTP for endovascular thrombectomy, and the mCTA collateral score was determined using CTP-reconstructed mCTA images. The primary outcome was 90-day functional outcomes defined by modified Rankin Scale. Multivariable logistic regression models analyzed associations between mCTA and CTP parameters and 90-day functional outcomes. The ability to discriminate 90 days-functional outcomes was compared between mCTA collateral score and CTP parameters using receiver operating curve analysis and C statistics. Results: One hundred and twenty patients were included. The median age was 69 years (interquartile range, 60–79), the median baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score was 14 (interquartile range, 9–19). The baseline ischemic core volume, defined by CTP-based relative cerebral blood flow P =0.015) and poor functional outcome (modified Rankin Scale score 5–6; odds ratio, 1.032 [1.007–1.056]; P =0.010) at 90 days in the analysis of multivariable regression. There was no significant association between the mCTA score and excellent functional outcome ( P =0.58) or poor functional outcome ( P =0.155). The relative cerebral blood flow Conclusions: The CTP-based ischemic core volume may provide better discrimination for 90-day functional outcomes for patients with acute stroke undergoing endovascular thrombectomy than the mCTA collateral score.
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- 2022
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6. Association of Endovascular Thrombectomy With Functional Outcome in Patients With Acute Stroke With a Large Ischemic Core
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Carlos, Garcia-Esperon, Andrew, Bivard, Hannah, Johns, Chushuang, Chen, Leonid, Churilov, Longting, Lin, Kenneth, Butcher, Timothy J, Kleinig, Philip M C, Choi, Xin, Cheng, Qiang, Dong, Richard I, Aviv, Ferdinand, Miteff, Neil J, Spratt, Christopher R, Levi, and Mark W, Parsons
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Stroke ,Treatment Outcome ,Cytidine Triphosphate ,Endovascular Procedures ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,Brain Ischemia ,Retrospective Studies ,Thrombectomy - Abstract
Background and ObjectivesEndovascular thrombectomy (EVT) is effective for patients with large vessel occlusion (LVO) stroke with smaller volumes of CT perfusion (CTP)-defined ischemic core. However, the benefit of EVT is unclear in those with a core volume >70 mL. We aimed to compare outcomes of EVT and non-EVT patients with an ischemic core volume ≥70 mL, hypothesizing that there would be a benefit from EVT for fair outcome (3-month modified Rankin scale [mRS] 0–3) after stroke.MethodsA retrospective analysis of patients enrolled into a multicenter (Australia, China, and Canada) registry (2012–2020) who underwent CTP within 24 hours of stroke onset and had a baseline ischemic core volume ≥70 mL was performed. The primary outcome was the estimation of the association of EVT in patients with core volume ≥70 mL and within 70–100 and ≥100 mL subgroups with fair outcome.ResultsOf the 3,283 patients in the registry, 299 had CTP core volume ≥70 mL and 269 complete data (135 had core volume between 70 and 100 mL and 134 had core volume ≥100 mL). EVT was performed in 121 (45%) patients. EVT-treated patients were younger (median 69 vs 75 years; p = 0.011), had lower prestroke mRS, and smaller median core volumes (92 [79–116.5] mL vs 105.5 [85.75–138] mL, p = 0.004). EVT-treated patients had higher odds of achieving fair outcome in adjusted analysis (30% vs 13.9% in the non-EVT group; adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 2.1, 95% CI 1–4.2, p = 0.038). The benefit was seen predominantly in those with 70–100 mL core volume (71/135 [52.6%] EVT-treated), with 54.3% in the EVT-treated vs 21% in the non-EVT group achieving a fair outcome (aOR 2.5, 95% CI 1–6.2, p = 0.005). Of those with a core volume ≥100 mL, 50 of the 134 (37.3%) underwent EVT. Proportions of fair outcome were very low in both groups (8.1% vs 8.7%; p = 0.908).DiscussionWe found a positive association of EVT with the 3-month outcome after stroke in patients with a baseline CTP ischemic core volume 70–100 mL but not in those with core volume ≥100 mL. Randomized data to confirm these findings are required.Classification of EvidenceThis study provides Class III evidence that EVT is associated with better motor outcomes 3 months after CTP-defined ischemic stroke with a core volume of 70–100 mL.
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- 2022
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7. Ischemic Lesion Growth in Patients with a Persistent Target Mismatch After Large Vessel Occlusion
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Shinya Tomari, Thomas Lillicrap, Carlos Garcia-Esperon, Yumi Tomari Kashida, Andrew Bivard, Longting Lin, Christopher R. Levi, and Neil J. Spratt
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Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Background Failure to reperfuse a cerebral occlusion resulting in a persistent penumbral pattern has not been fully described. Methods We retrospectively reviewed patients with anterior large vessel occlusion who did not receive reperfusion, and underwent repeated perfusion imaging, with baseline imaging 1.2, and mismatch volume > 10 mL on follow-up imaging. Patients were divided into PTM or non-PTM groups. Ischemic core and penumbral volumes were compared between baseline and follow-up imaging between the two groups, and collateral flow status assessed using CT perfusion collateral index. Results A total of 25 patients (14 PTM and 11 non-PTM) were enrolled in the study. Median core volumes increased slightly in the PTM group, from 22 to 36 ml. There was a much greater increase in the non-PTM group, from 57 to 190 ml. Penumbral volumes were stable in the PTM group from a median of 79 ml at baseline to 88 ml at follow-up, whereas penumbra was reduced in the non-PTM group, from 120 to 0 ml. Collateral flow status was also better in the PTM group and the median collateral index was 33% compared with 44% in the non-PTM group (p = 0.043). Conclusion Multiple patients were identified with limited core growth and large penumbra (persistent target mismatch) > 16 h after stroke onset, likely due to more favorable collateral flow.
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- 2022
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8. Endovascular thrombectomy versus standard bridging thrombolytic with endovascular thrombectomy within 4·5 h of stroke onset: an open-label, blinded-endpoint, randomised non-inferiority trial
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Peter J Mitchell, Bernard Yan, Leonid Churilov, Richard J Dowling, Steven J Bush, Andrew Bivard, Xiao Chuan Huo, Guoqing Wang, Shi Yong Zhang, Mai Duy Ton, Dennis J Cordato, Timothy J Kleinig, Henry Ma, Ronil V Chandra, Helen Brown, Bruce C V Campbell, Andrew K Cheung, Brendan Steinfort, Rebecca Scroop, Kendal Redmond, Ferdinand Miteff, Yan Liu, Dang Phuc Duc, Hal Rice, Mark W Parsons, Teddy Y Wu, Huy-Thang Nguyen, Geoffrey A Donnan, Zhong Rong Miao, Stephen M Davis, Patricia Desmond, Nawaf Yassi, Henry Zhao, Cameron Williams, Fana Alemseged, Felix C Ng, Vignan Yogendrakumar, Peter Bailey, Laetitia De Villiers, Thanh Phan, Tharani Thirugnanachandran, Winston Chong, Hamed Asadi, Lee Anne Slater, Nathan Manning, Jason Wenderoth, Alan McDougall, Cecilia Cappelen-Smith, Justin Whitley, Leon Edwards, Carlos Garcia Esperon, Neil Spratt, Elizabeth Pepper, Chris Levi, Ken Faulder, Timothy Harrington, Martin Krause, Michael Waters, John Fink, Gaoting Ma, Xiangpeng Shen, Xiangkong Song, Yonglei Gao, Nam Guangxian, Zaiyu Guo, Heliang Zhang, Hongxing Han, Hao Wang, Geng Liao, Zhenyu Zhang, Chaomao Li, Zhi Yang, Chuwei Cai, Chuming Huang, and Yifan Hong
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Adult ,Stroke ,Treatment Outcome ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Endovascular Procedures ,Australia ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,General Medicine ,Brain Ischemia ,Thrombectomy - Abstract
The benefit of combined treatment with intravenous thrombolysis before endovascular thrombectomy in patients with acute ischaemic stroke caused by large vessel occlusion remains unclear. We hypothesised that the clinical outcomes of patients with stroke with large vessel occlusion treated with direct endovascular thrombectomy within 4·5 h would be non-inferior compared with the outcomes of those treated with standard bridging therapy (intravenous thrombolysis before endovascular thrombectomy).DIRECT-SAFE was an international, multicentre, prospective, randomised, open-label, blinded-endpoint trial. Adult patients with stroke and large vessel occlusion in the intracranial internal carotid artery, middle cerebral artery (M1 or M2), or basilar artery, confirmed by non-contrast CT and vascular imaging, and who presented within 4·5 h of stroke onset were recruited from 25 acute-care hospitals in Australia, New Zealand, China, and Vietnam. Eligible patients were randomly assigned (1:1) via a web-based, computer-generated randomisation procedure stratified by site of baseline arterial occlusion and by geographic region to direct endovascular thrombectomy or bridging therapy. Patients assigned to bridging therapy received intravenous thrombolytic (alteplase or tenecteplase) as per standard care at each site; endovascular thrombectomy was also per standard of care, using the Trevo device (Stryker Neurovascular, Fremont, CA, USA) as first-line intervention. Personnel assessing outcomes were masked to group allocation; patients and treating physicians were not. The primary efficacy endpoint was functional independence defined as modified Rankin Scale score 0-2 or return to baseline at 90 days, with a non-inferiority margin of -0·1, analysed by intention to treat (including all randomly assigned and consenting patients) and per protocol. The intention-to-treat population was included in the safety analyses. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03494920, and is closed to new participants.Between June 2, 2018, and July 8, 2021, 295 patients were randomly assigned to direct endovascular thrombectomy (n=148) or bridging therapy (n=147). Functional independence occurred in 80 (55%) of 146 patients in the direct thrombectomy group and 89 (61%) of 147 patients in the bridging therapy group (intention-to-treat risk difference -0·051, two-sided 95% CI -0·160 to 0·059; per-protocol risk difference -0·062, two-sided 95% CI -0·173 to 0·049). Safety outcomes were similar between groups, with symptomatic intracerebral haemorrhage occurring in two (1%) of 146 patients in the direct group and one (1%) of 147 patients in the bridging group (adjusted odds ratio 1·70, 95% CI 0·22-13·04) and death in 22 (15%) of 146 patients in the direct group and 24 (16%) of 147 patients in the bridging group (adjusted odds ratio 0·92, 95% CI 0·46-1·84).We did not show non-inferiority of direct endovascular thrombectomy compared with bridging therapy. The additional information from our study should inform guidelines to recommend bridging therapy as standard treatment.Australian National Health and Medical Research Council and Stryker USA.
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- 2022
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9. Automated CT Perfusion Detection of the Acute Infarct Core in Ischemic Stroke: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
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Nicholas E. Lim, Benjamin Chia, Max K. Bulsara, Mark Parsons, Graeme J. Hankey, and Andrew Bivard
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Introduction: In patients with acute ischemic stroke, the location and volume of an irreversible infarct core determine prognosis and treatment. We aimed to determine if automated CT perfusion (CTP) is non-inferior to diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) or fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) in predicting the acute infarct core. Methods: In this systematic review and meta-analysis, we searched MEDLINE and EMBASE from 1960 to December 2020. Five outcome measures were examined: volumetric difference, volumetric correlation, sensitivity and specificity at the patient level, Dice coefficient, and sensitivity and specificity at the voxel level. A random-effects meta-analysis was performed for volumetric difference and correlation. Results: From 3,986 studies retrieved, 48 studies met our inclusion criteria with 46 studies on anterior circulation, one study on posterior circulation, and one study on lacunar infarct strokes. In anterior circulation stroke, there were no significant mean volumetric differences between CTP and acute DWI (cerebral blood flow [CBF] 0.52 mL, 95% CI [−0.07, 1.11], I2 0.0%; relative CBF [rCBF] 3.01 mL, 95% CI [−0.46, 6.48], I2 82.6%; relative cerebral blood volume [rCBV] −12.84 mL, 95% CI [−38.56, 12.88], I2 96.2%) and between CTP and delayed DWI or FLAIR (rCBF −1.29 mL, 95% CI [−6.49, 3.92], I2 91.8%; rCBV −5.80 mL, 95% CI [−16.20, 4.60], I2 84.2%). Mean correlation between CTP and acute DWI was 0.90 (95% CI [0.80, 0.95], I2 60.0%) for rCBF and 0.84 (95% CI [0.58, 0.94], I2 93.5%) for rCBV. Mean correlation between CTP and delayed DWI or FLAIR was 0.74 (95% CI [0.57, 0.85], I2 94.6%) for rCBF and 0.90 (95% CI [0.69, 0.97], I2 93.1%) for rCBV. Sensitivity and specificity at the patient level were reported by three studies and Dice coefficient by four studies. Statistical analysis could not be performed for sensitivity and specificity at the voxel level. Limited evidence was available for posterior circulation or lacunar infarct strokes. Conclusion: Due to significant heterogeneity and insufficient high-quality studies reporting each outcome, there is insufficient evidence to reliably determine the accuracy of CTP prediction of the infarct core compared to DWI or FLAIR.
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- 2022
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10. Comparison of tenecteplase with alteplase for the early treatment of ischaemic stroke in the Melbourne Mobile Stroke Unit (TASTE-A): a phase 2, randomised, open-label trial
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Andrew Bivard, Henry Zhao, Leonid Churilov, Bruce C V Campbell, Skye Coote, Nawaf Yassi, Bernard Yan, Michael Valente, Angelos Sharobeam, Anna H Balabanski, Angela Dos Santos, Jo Lyn Ng, Vignan Yogendrakumar, Felix Ng, Francesca Langenberg, Damien Easton, Alex Warwick, Elizabeth Mackey, Amy MacDonald, Gagan Sharma, Michael Stephenson, Karen Smith, David Anderson, Philip Choi, Vincent Thijs, Henry Ma, Geoffrey C Cloud, Tissa Wijeratne, Liudmyla Olenko, Dominic Italiano, Stephen M Davis, Geoffrey A Donnan, and Mark W Parsons
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Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Adolescent ,Middle Aged ,Brain Ischemia ,Stroke ,Treatment Outcome ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Taste ,Tissue Plasminogen Activator ,Tenecteplase ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,Aged ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,Ischemic Stroke - Abstract
Mobile stroke units (MSUs) equipped with a CT scanner reduce time to thrombolytic treatment and improve patient outcomes. We tested the hypothesis that tenecteplase administered in an MSU would result in superior reperfusion at hospital arrival, when compared with alteplase.The TASTE-A trial is a phase 2, randomised, open-label trial at the Melbourne MSU and five tertiary hospitals in Melbourne, VIC, Australia. Patients (aged ≥18 years) with ischaemic stroke who were eligible for thrombolytic treatment were randomly allocated in the MSU to receive, within 4·5 h of symptom onset, either standard-of-care alteplase (0·9 mg/kg [maximum 90 mg], administered intravenously with 10% as a bolus over 1 min and 90% as an infusion over 1 h), or the investigational product tenecteplase (0·25 mg/kg [maximum 25 mg], administered as an intravenous bolus over 10 s), before being transported to hospital for ongoing care. The primary outcome was the volume of the perfusion lesion on arrival at hospital, assessed by CT-perfusion imaging. Secondary safety outcomes were modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score of 5 or 6 at 90 days, symptomatic intracerebral haemorrhage and any haemorrhage within 36 h, and death at 90 days. Assessors were masked to treatment allocation. Analysis was by intention-to-treat. The trial was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04071613, and is completed.Between June 20, 2019, and Nov 16, 2021, 104 patients were enrolled and randomly allocated to receive either tenecteplase (n=55) or alteplase (n=49). The median age of patients was 73 years (IQR 61-83), and the median NIHSS at baseline was 8 (5-14). On arrival at the hospital, the perfusion lesion volume was significantly smaller with tenecteplase (median 12 mL [IQR 3-28]) than with alteplase (35 mL [18-76]; adjusted incidence rate ratio 0·55, 95% CI 0·37-0·81; p=0·0030). At 90 days, an mRS of 5 or 6 was reported in eight (15%) patients allocated to tenecteplase and ten (20%) patients allocated to alteplase (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 0·70, 95% CI 0·23-2·16; p=0·54). Five (9%) patients allocated to tenecteplase and five (10%) patients allocated to alteplase died from any cause at 90 days (aOR 1·12, 95% CI 0·26-4·90; p=0·88). No cases of symptomatic intracerebral haemorrhage were reported within 36 h with either treatment. Up to day 90, 13 serious adverse events were noted: five (5%) in patients treated with tenecteplase, and eight (8%) in patients treated with alteplase.Treatment with tenecteplase on the MSU in Melbourne resulted in a superior rate of early reperfusion compared with alteplase, and no safety concerns were noted. This trial provides evidence to support the use of tenecteplase and MSUs in an optimal model of stroke care.Melbourne Academic Centre for Health.
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- 2022
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11. The Mobile Stroke Unit Nurse: An International Exploration of Their Scope of Practice, Education, and Training
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Skye Coote, Elizabeth Mackey, Anne W. Alexandrov, Dominique A. Cadilhac, Andrei V. Alexandrov, Damien Easton, Henry Zhao, Francesca Langenberg, Andrew Bivard, Michael Stephenson, Mark W. Parsons, Bruce C.V. Campbell, Geoffrey A. Donnan, Stephen M. Davis, and Sandy Middleton
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Medical–Surgical Nursing ,Endocrine and Autonomic Systems ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2022
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12. Endovascular Thrombectomy Versus Medical Management in Isolated <scp>M2</scp> Occlusions: Pooled <scp>Patient‐Level</scp> Analysis from the <scp>EXTEND‐IA</scp> Trials, <scp>INSPIRE</scp> , and <scp>SELECT</scp> Studies
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Chushuang Chen, Stephen Davis, Christopher Levi, Philip Choi, Gregory Albers, Andrew Bivard, and Vincent Thijs
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2022
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13. Machine learning segmentation of core and penumbra from acute stroke CT perfusion data
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Freda Werdiger, Mark W. Parsons, Milanka Visser, Christopher Levi, Neil Spratt, Tim Kleinig, Longting Lin, and Andrew Bivard
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
IntroductionComputed tomography perfusion (CTP) imaging is widely used in cases of suspected acute ischemic stroke to positively identify ischemia and assess suitability for treatment through identification of reversible and irreversible tissue injury. Traditionally, this has been done via setting single perfusion thresholds on two or four CTP parameter maps. We present an alternative model for the estimation of tissue fate using multiple perfusion measures simultaneously.MethodsWe used machine learning (ML) models based on four different algorithms, combining four CTP measures (cerebral blood flow, cerebral blood volume, mean transit time and delay time) plus 3D-neighborhood (patch) analysis to predict the acute ischemic core and perfusion lesion volumes. The model was developed using 86 patient images, and then tested further on 22 images.ResultsXGBoost was the highest-performing algorithm. With standard threshold-based core and penumbra measures as the reference, the model demonstrated moderate agreement in segmenting core and penumbra on test images. Dice similarity coefficients for core and penumbra were 0.38 ± 0.26 and 0.50 ± 0.21, respectively, demonstrating moderate agreement. Skull-related image artefacts contributed to lower accuracy.DiscussionFurther development may enable us to move beyond the current overly simplistic core and penumbra definitions using single thresholds where a single error or artefact may lead to substantial error.
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- 2023
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14. Optimal CT perfusion thresholds for core and penumbra in acute posterior circulation infarction
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Leon Stephen Edwards, Cecilia Cappelen-Smith, Dennis Cordato, Andrew Bivard, Leonid Churilov, Longting Lin, Chushuang Chen, Carlos Garcia-Esperon, Kenneth Butcher, Tim Kleinig, Phillip M. C. Choi, Xin Cheng, Qiang Dong, Richard I. Aviv, and Mark William Parsons
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
BackgroundAt least 20% of strokes involve the posterior circulation (PC). Compared to the anterior circulation, posterior circulation infarction (POCI) are frequently misdiagnosed. CT perfusion (CTP) has advanced stroke care by improving diagnostic accuracy and expanding eligibility for acute therapies. Clinical decisions are predicated upon precise estimates of the ischaemic penumbra and infarct core. Current thresholds for defining core and penumbra are based upon studies of anterior circulation stroke. We aimed to define the optimal CTP thresholds for core and penumbra in POCI.MethodsData were analyzed from 331-patients diagnosed with acute POCI enrolled in the International-stroke-perfusion-registry (INSPIRE). Thirty-nine patients with baseline multimodal-CT with occlusion of a large PC-artery and follow up diffusion weighted MRI at 24–48 h were included. Patients were divided into two-groups based on artery-recanalization on follow-up imaging. Patients with no or complete recanalisation were used for penumbral and infarct-core analysis, respectively. A Receiver operating curve (ROC) analysis was used for voxel-based analysis. Optimality was defined as the CTP parameter and threshold which maximized the area-under-the-curve. Linear regression was used for volume based analysis determining the CTP threshold which resulted in the smallest mean volume difference between the acute perfusion lesion and follow up MRI. Subanalysis of PC-regions was performed.ResultsMean transit time (MTT) and delay time (DT) were the best CTP parameters to characterize ischaemic penumbra (AUC = 0.73). Optimal thresholds for penumbra were a DT >1 s and MTT>145%. Delay time (DT) best estimated the infarct core (AUC = 0.74). The optimal core threshold was a DT >1.5 s. The voxel-based analyses indicated CTP was most accurate in the calcarine (Penumbra-AUC = 0.75, Core-AUC = 0.79) and cerebellar regions (Penumbra-AUC = 0.65, Core-AUC = 0.79). For the volume-based analyses, MTT >160% demonstrated best correlation and smallest mean-volume difference between the penumbral estimate and follow-up MRI (R2 = 0.71). MTT >170% resulted in the smallest mean-volume difference between the core estimate and follow-up MRI, but with poor correlation (R2 = 0.11).ConclusionCTP has promising diagnostic utility in POCI. Accuracy of CTP varies by brain region. Optimal thresholds to define penumbra were DT >1 s and MTT >145%. The optimal threshold for core was a DT >1.5 s. However, CTP core volume estimates should be interpreted with caution.
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- 2023
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15. 'Are we there yet?' expectations and experiences with lower limb robotic exoskeletons: a qualitative evaluation of the therapist perspective
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Nicola Postol, Julia Barton, Luke Wakely, Andrew Bivard, Neil J. Spratt, and Jodie Marquez
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Rehabilitation - Abstract
Lower limb robotic exoskeletons can assist movement, however, clinical uptake in neurorehabilitation is limited. The views and experiences of clinicians are pivotal to the successful clinical implementation of emerging technologies. This study investigates therapist perspectives of the clinical use and future role of this technology in neurorehabilitation. Australian and New Zealand-based therapists with lower limb exoskeleton experience were recruited to complete an online survey and semi-structured interview. Survey data were transposed into tables and interviews transcribed verbatim. Qualitative data collection and analysis were guided by qualitative content analysis and interview data were thematically analysed. Five participants revealed that the use of exoskeletons to deliver therapy involves the interplay of human elements – experiences and perspectives of use, and mechanical elements – the device itself. Two overarching themes emerged: the “journey”, with subthemes of clinical reasoning and user experience; and the “vehicle” with design features and cost as subthemes, to explore the question “Are we there yet?” Therapists expressed positive and negative perspectives from their experiences with exoskeletons, giving suggestions for design features, marketing input, and cost to enhance future use. Therapists are optimistic that this journey will see lower limb exoskeletons integral to rehabilitation service delivery. Further innovation of design features, marketing, and cost are needed to enhance ongoing development and integration.Routine clinical implementation of lower limb exoskeletons is unlikely at this time in Australia and New Zealand.Therapists do expect lower limb exoskeletons to have an ongoing role in future rehabilitation. Further innovation of design features, marketing, and cost are needed to enhance ongoing development and integration. Routine clinical implementation of lower limb exoskeletons is unlikely at this time in Australia and New Zealand. Therapists do expect lower limb exoskeletons to have an ongoing role in future rehabilitation.
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- 2023
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16. Stroke Patients With Faster Core Growth Have Greater Benefit From Endovascular Therapy
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Longting Lin, Hao Zhang, Chushuang Chen, Andrew Bivard, Kenneth Butcher, Carlos Garcia-Esperon, Neil J. Spratt, Christopher R. Levi, Mark W. Parsons, Gang Li, Ferdinand Miteff, Philip M. C. Choi, Timothy Kleining, Billy O’Brien, Min Lou, Jianhong Yang, Congguo Yin, Peng Wang, Yu Geng, Xu Zhang, Xuezhi Yang, Weiwen Qiu, Qi Fang, Yi Sui, Wenhuo Chen, Xin Cheng, and Qiang Dong
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Stroke patient ,Perfusion scanning ,Endovascular therapy ,Cohort Studies ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,medicine ,Humans ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,Aged ,Ischemic Stroke ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Core (anatomy) ,business.industry ,Endovascular Procedures ,Retrospective cohort study ,Middle Aged ,Treatment Outcome ,Ischemic stroke ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background and Purpose: This study aimed to explore whether the therapeutic benefit of endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) was mediated by core growth rate. Methods: This retrospective cohort study identified acute ischemic stroke patients with large vessel occlusion and receiving reperfusion treatment, either EVT or intravenous thrombolysis (IVT), within 4.5 hours of stroke onset. Patients were divided into 2 groups: EVT versus IVT only patients (who had no access to EVT). Core growth rate was estimated by the acute core volume on perfusion computed tomography divided by the time from stroke onset to perfusion computed tomography. The primary clinical outcome was good outcome defined by 3-month modified Rankin Scale score of 0–2. Tissue outcome was the final infarction volume. Results: A total of 806 patients were included, 429 in the EVT group (recanalization rate of 61.6%) and 377 in the IVT only group (recanalization rate of 44.7%). The treatment effect of EVT versus IVT only was mediated by core growth rate, showing a significant interaction between EVT treatment and core growth rate in predicting good clinical outcome (interaction odds ratio=1.03 [1.01–1.05], P =0.007) and final infarct volume (interaction odds ratio=−0.44 [−0.87 to −0.01], P =0.047). For patients with fast core growth of >25 mL/h, EVT treatment (compared with IVT only) increased the odds of good clinical outcome (adjusted odds ratio=3.62 [1.21–10.76], P =0.021) and resulted in smaller final infarction volume (37.5 versus 73.9 mL, P =0.012). For patients with slow core growth of P =0.070) or final infarction volume (22.6 versus 21.9 mL, P =0.551). Conclusions: Fast core growth was associated with greater benefit from EVT compared with IVT in the early
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- 2021
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17. Does variability in automated perfusion software outputs for acute ischemic stroke matter? Reanalysis of EXTEND perfusion imaging
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Chushuang Chen, Nawaf Yassi, Mark W Parsons, Gagan Sharma, Atte Meretoja, Bruce C.V. Campbell, Extend investigators, Andrew Bivard, Bernard Yan, Stephen M. Davis, Leonid Churilov, Henry Zhao, Christopher R Levi, Henry Ma, Geoffrey A. Donnan, Clinicum, Neurologian yksikkö, and HUS Neurocenter
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Perfusion Imaging ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Perfusion scanning ,Placebo ,3124 Neurology and psychiatry ,Lesion ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Modified Rankin Scale ,target mismatch ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,ischemic stroke ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Aged ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,THROMBOLYSIS ,Pharmacology ,business.industry ,3112 Neurosciences ,COMPUTED-TOMOGRAPHY PERFUSION ,Original Articles ,Odds ratio ,Thrombolysis ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Tissue Plasminogen Activator ,INFARCT ,Cohort ,CT perfusion ,CEREBRAL-BLOOD-FLOW ,Cardiology ,Original Article ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Perfusion ,Software - Abstract
Aims We reprocessed the Extending the time for Thrombolysis in Emergency Neurological Deficits (EXTEND) perfusion imaging with a different automated software with the aim of comparing mismatch eligibility and outcomes. Methods EXTEND baseline perfusion imaging data were reprocessed using autoMIStar software to identify patients who were eligible based on the same target mismatch criteria as per the original trial. Results From the 225 patients fulfilling RAPID‐based mismatch criteria randomized in the EXTEND study, 196 (87%) patients met the revised mismatch criteria. Most common reasons for not meeting revised criteria were core >70 ml (n = 9), and no perfusion lesion/lack of penumbral tissue (n = 20). The revised perfusion lesion volumes were significantly smaller compared to the original RAPID volumes (median 68 ml IQR 34–102 ml vs. 42 ml 16–92 ml, p = 0.036). Of the patients who met the revised mismatch criteria, 40% receiving alteplase had modified Rankin Scale (mRS) 0–1 at 3‐month compared to 28% with placebo (Adjusted Odds Ratio (OR) = 2.23, CI 1.08–4.58, p = 0.028). In contrast, in the original mismatch cohort, 35% receiving alteplase had mRS 0–1 at 3‐month compared to 30% with placebo (adjusted OR = 1.88, p = 0.056). Conclusions These data reinforce the benefit of alteplase in the later time window, and suggest that differences in automated perfusion imaging software outputs may be clinically relevant., From the 225 patients fulfilling RAPID‐based mismatch criteria randomized in EXTEND, 196 patients met revised mismatch criteria. Of the patients who met revised mismatch criteria, the alteplase group has a higher chance of achieving an excellent outcome than the placebo. Our study reinforces the benefit of alteplase in the later time window in patients selected with perfusion imaging and indicates that differences in automated perfusion imaging software outputs may be clinically relevant.
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- 2021
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18. Whole blood viscosity is associated with baseline cerebral perfusion in acute ischemic stroke
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Christopher R Levi, Mark W Parsons, Shinya Tomari, Prajwal Gyawali, Carlos Garcia-Esperon, Andrew Bivard, Neil J. Spratt, Elizabeth G. Holliday, and Thomas Lillicrap
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hemodynamics ,Perfusion scanning ,Dermatology ,Brain Ischemia ,Microcirculation ,Internal medicine ,Occlusion ,medicine ,Humans ,Cerebral perfusion pressure ,Stroke ,Ischemic Stroke ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Blood Viscosity ,medicine.disease ,Perfusion ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Angiography ,Cardiology ,Neurology (clinical) ,business - Abstract
Whole blood viscosity (WBV) is the intrinsic resistance to flow developed due to the frictional force between adjacent layers of flowing blood. Elevated WBV is an independent risk factor for stroke. Poor microcirculation due to elevated WBV can prevent adequate perfusion of the brain and might act as an important secondary factor for hypoperfusion in acute ischaemic stroke. In the present study, we examined the association of WBV with basal cerebral perfusion assessed by CT perfusion in acute ischaemic stroke. Confirmed acute ischemic stroke patients (n = 82) presenting in hours were recruited from the single centre. Patients underwent baseline multimodal CT (non-contrast CT, CT angiography and CT perfusion). Where clinically warranted, patients also underwent follow-up DWI. WBV was measured in duplicate within 2 h after sampling from 5-mL EDTA blood sample. WBV was significantly correlated with CT perfusion parameters such as perfusion lesion volume, ischemic core volume and mismatch ratio; DWI volume and baseline NIHSS. In a multivariate linear regression model, WBV significantly predicted acute perfusion lesion volume, core volume and mismatch ratio after adjusting for the effect of occlusion site and collateral status. Association of WBV with hypoperfusion (increased perfusion lesion volume, ischaemic core volume and mismatch ratio) suggest the role of erythrocyte rheology in cerebral haemodynamic of acute ischemic stroke. The present findings open new possibilities for therapeutic strategies targeting erythrocyte rheology to improve cerebral microcirculation in stroke.
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- 2021
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19. Poor collateral flow with severe hypoperfusion explains worse outcome in acute stroke patients with atrial fibrillation
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Jianhong Yang, Yuefei Wu, Xiang Gao, Qing Shang, Yao Xu, Qing Han, Jichuan Li, Chushuang Chen, Andrew Bivard, Mark W Parsons, and Longting Lin
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Neurology - Abstract
Background: Atrial fibrillation (AF) is associated with poorer functional outcomes in acute stroke patients. It has been hypothesized that this is due to poor collateral recruitment. Aims: This study aimed to investigate the relationship between AF and collaterals with outcome in thrombectomy patients. Methods: This retrospective cohort study identified 1036 acute ischemic patients from the INternational Stroke Perfusion Imaging REgistry. The cohort was divided into two groups: 432 with AF and 604 without AF. Patients were stratified by collateral grades as good, moderate, and poor. Within each collateral grade, the prediction of AF versus No AF for good outcome (3-month modified Rankin Scale of 0–2) was determined. Then, within each collateral grade, perfusion was compared between those with and without AF. Results: AF was negatively associated with good outcome in patients with poor collaterals (26.7% vs 51.2% for AF vs No AF, odds ratio = 0.32 (95% confidence interval = 0.22–0.50), p Conclusions: AF-related stroke is associated with more severe hypoperfusion and worse outcome in those with poor collaterals.
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- 2022
20. Safety and efficacy of tenecteplase in patients with wake-up stroke assessed by non-contrast CT (TWIST): a multicentre, open-label, randomised controlled trial
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Melinda B Roaldsen, Agnethe Eltoft, Tom Wilsgaard, Hanne Christensen, Stefan T Engelter, Bent Indredavik, Dalius Jatužis, Guntis Karelis, Janika Kõrv, Erik Lundström, Jesper Petersson, Jukka Putaala, Mary-Helen Søyland, Arnstein Tveiten, Andrew Bivard, Stein Harald Johnsen, Michael V Mazya, David J Werring, Teddy Y Wu, Gian Marco De Marchis, Thompson G Robinson, Ellisiv B Mathiesen, M Parson, M Valente, A Chen, A Sharobeam, L Edwards, C Blair, L Christensen, K Ægidius, T Pihl, C Fassel-Larsen, L Wassvik, M Folke, S Rosenbaum, S S Gharehbagh, A Hansen, N Preisler, K Antsov, S Mallene, M Lill, M Herodes, R Vibo, A Rakitin, J Saarinen, M Tiainen, O Tumpula, T Noppari, S Raty, G Sibolt, J Nieminen, J Niederhauser, I Haritoncenko, J Puustinen, T-M Haula, J Sipilä, B Viesulaite, S Taroza, D Rastenyte, V Matijosaitis, A Vilionskis, R Masiliunas, A Ekkert, P Chmeliauskas, V Lukosaitis, A Reichenbach, T T Moss, H Y Nilsen, R Hammer-Berntzen, L M Nordby, T A Weiby, K Nordengen, H Ihle-Hansen, M Stankiewiecz, O Grotle, M Nes, K Thiemann, I M Særvold, M Fraas, S Størdahl, J W Horn, H Hildrum, C Myrstad, H Tobro, J-A Tunvold, O Jacobsen, N Aamodt, H Baisa, V N Malmberg, G Rohweder, H Ellekjær, F Ildstad, E Egstad, B H Helleberg, H H Berg, J Jørgensen, E Tronvik, M Shirzadi, R Solhoff, R Van Lessen, A Vatne, K Forselv, H Frøyshov, M S Fjeldstad, L Tangen, S Matapour, K Kindberg, C Johannessen, M Rist, I Mathisen, T Nyrnes, A Haavik, G Toverud, K Aakvik, M Larsson, K Ytrehus, S Ingebrigtsen, T Stokmo, C Helander, I C Larsen, T O Solberg, Y M Seljeseth, S Maini, I Bersås, J Mathé, E Rooth, A-C Laska, A-S Rudberg, M Esbjörnsson, F Andler, A Ericsson, O Wickberg, J-E Karlsson, P Redfors, K Jood, F Buchwald, K Mansson, O Gråhamn, K Sjölin, E Lindvall, Å Cidh, A Tolf, O Fasth, B Hedström, J Fladt, T D Dittrich, L Kriemler, N Hannon, E Amis, S Finlay, J Mitchell-Douglas, J McGee, R Davies, V Johnson, A Nair, M Robinson, J Greig, O Halse, P Wilding, S Mashate, K Chatterjee, M Martin, S Leason, J Roberts, D Dutta, D Ward, R Rayessa, E Clarkson, J Teo, C Ho, S Conway, M Aissa, V Papavasileiou, S Fry, D Waugh, J Britton, A Hassan, L Manning, S Khan, A Asaipillai, C Fornolles, M L Tate, S Chenna, T Anjum, D Karunatilake, J Foot, L VanPelt, A Shetty, G Wilkes, A Buck, B Jackson, L Fleming, M Carpenter, L Jackson, A Needle, T Zahoor, T Duraisami, K Northcott, J Kubie, A Bowring, S Keenan, D Mackle, T England, B Rushton, A Hedstrom, S Amlani, R Evans, G Muddegowda, A Remegoso, P Ferdinand, R Varquez, M Davis, E Elkin, R Seal, M Fawcett, C Gradwell, C Travers, B Atkinson, S Woodward, L Giraldo, J Byers, B Cheripelli, S Lee, R Marigold, S Smith, L Zhang, R Ghatala, C H Sim, U Ghani, K Yates, S Obarey, M Willmot, K Ahlquist, M Bates, K Rashed, S Board, G Andsberg, S Sundayi, M Garside, M-J Macleod, A Manoj, O Hopper, B Cederin, T Toomsoo, K Gross-Paju, T Tapiola, J Kestutis, K-F Amthor, B Heermann, V Ottesen, T A Melum, M Kurz, and M Parsons
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Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Current evidence supports the use of intravenous thrombolysis with alteplase in patients with wake-up stroke selected with MRI or perfusion imaging and is recommended in clinical guidelines. However, access to advanced imaging techniques is often scarce. We aimed to determine whether thrombolytic treatment with intravenous tenecteplase given within 4·5 h of awakening improves functional outcome in patients with ischaemic wake-up stroke selected using non-contrast CT.TWIST was an investigator-initiated, multicentre, open-label, randomised controlled trial with blinded endpoint assessment, conducted at 77 hospitals in ten countries. We included patients aged 18 years or older with acute ischaemic stroke symptoms upon awakening, limb weakness, a National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score of 3 or higher or aphasia, a non-contrast CT examination of the head, and the ability to receive tenecteplase within 4·5 h of awakening. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to either a single intravenous bolus of tenecteplase 0·25 mg per kg of bodyweight (maximum 25 mg) or control (no thrombolysis) using a central, web-based, computer-generated randomisation schedule. Trained research personnel, who conducted telephone interviews at 90 days (follow-up), were masked to treatment allocation. Clinical assessments were performed on day 1 (at baseline) and day 7 of hospital admission (or at discharge, whichever occurred first). The primary outcome was functional outcome assessed by the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) at 90 days and analysed using ordinal logistic regression in the intention-to-treat population. This trial is registered with EudraCT (2014-000096-80), ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03181360), and ISRCTN (10601890).From June 12, 2017, to Sept 30, 2021, 578 of the required 600 patients were enrolled (288 randomly assigned to the tenecteplase group and 290 to the control group [intention-to-treat population]). The median age of participants was 73·7 years (IQR 65·9-81·1). 332 (57%) of 578 participants were male and 246 (43%) were female. Treatment with tenecteplase was not associated with better functional outcome, according to mRS score at 90 days (adjusted OR 1·18, 95% CI 0·88-1·58; p=0·27). Mortality at 90 days did not significantly differ between treatment groups (28 [10%] patients in the tenecteplase group and 23 [8%] in the control group; adjusted HR 1·29, 95% CI 0·74-2·26; p=0·37). Symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage occurred in six (2%) patients in the tenecteplase group versus three (1%) in the control group (adjusted OR 2·17, 95% CI 0·53-8·87; p=0·28), whereas any intracranial haemorrhage occurred in 33 (11%) versus 30 (10%) patients (adjusted OR 1·14, 0·67-1·94; p=0·64).In patients with wake-up stroke selected with non-contrast CT, treatment with tenecteplase was not associated with better functional outcome at 90 days. The number of symptomatic haemorrhages and any intracranial haemorrhages in both treatment groups was similar to findings from previous trials of wake-up stroke patients selected using advanced imaging. Current evidence does not support treatment with tenecteplase in patients selected with non-contrast CT.Norwegian Clinical Research Therapy in the Specialist Health Services Programme, the Swiss Heart Foundation, the British Heart Foundation, and the Norwegian National Association for Public Health.
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- 2022
21. Automated occlusion detection for the diagnosis of acute ischemic stroke: A detailed performance review
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Freda Werdiger, Sunay Gotla, Milanka Visser, James Kolacz, Vignan Yogendrakumar, James Beharry, Michael Valente, Angelos Sharobeam, Mark W. Parsons, and Andrew Bivard
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Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,General Medicine - Published
- 2023
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22. Automated estimation of ischemic core prior to thrombectomy: comparison of two current algorithms
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Bernard Yan, Gagan Sharma, Andrew Bivard, Lakshini Gunasekera, Peter Mitchell, Mark W Parsons, and Leonid Churilov
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Concordance ,Perfusion scanning ,Brain Ischemia ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Medical imaging ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,Lead (electronics) ,Stroke ,Retrospective Studies ,Thrombectomy ,Neuroradiology ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,Gold standard (test) ,medicine.disease ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Algorithm ,Algorithms ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) improves clinical outcomes in ischemic stroke with large vessel occlusion. Clinical benefits are inversely proportional to size of the pre-treatment ischemic core. This study compared estimated ischemic core volumes by two different CT perfusion (CTP) automated algorithms to the gold standard follow-up infarct volume using diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) to assess for congruence, and thus eligibility for EVT. Retrospective, single-center cohort study of 102 patients presenting to a comprehensive stroke center between 2012 and 2018. Inclusion criteria were CT perfusion prior to EVT, successful EVT with mTIBI 2b-3 reperfusion, and DWI post-EVT. CTP data were retrospectively processed by two algorithms: “delay and dispersion insensitive deconvolution” (DISD, RAPID software) versus “delay and dispersion corrected single value decomposition” (ddSVD, Mistar software), using commercially available software. Core volumes were compared to follow up DWI using independent software (MRIcron). Agreement between each algorithm and DWI was estimated using Lin’s concordance coefficient and analyzed using reduced major axis regression. We included 102 patients. Both algorithms had excellent agreement with DWI (Lin’s concordance coefficients: DISD 0.8 (95% CI: 0.73; 0.87), ddSVD 0.92 (95% CI: 0.89; 0.95). Compared to ddSVD (reduced major axis slope = 0.95), DISD exhibited a larger extent of proportional bias (slope = 1.12). The ddSVD algorithm better correlates with DWI follow-up infarct volume than DISD processing. The DISD algorithm overestimated larger ischemic cores which may lead to patient exclusion from thrombectomy based on selection by core volume.
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- 2021
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23. Role of Computed Tomography Perfusion in Identification of Acute Lacunar Stroke Syndromes
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Carlos Garcia-Esperon, Andrew Bivard, Thomas Lillicrap, Christopher Levi, Milanka M. Visser, Mark W Parsons, Neil J. Spratt, Ferdinand Miteff, and Leonid Churilov
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lacunar stroke ,Computed tomography perfusion ,Perfusion Imaging ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Diagnosis, Differential ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Predictive Value of Tests ,medicine ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Cerebral Cortex ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Brain Mapping ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Syndrome ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,ROC Curve ,Stroke, Lacunar ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Tomography ,Radiology ,Triage ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Perfusion ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background and Purpose: Lacunar syndromes correlate with a lacunar stroke on imaging in 50% to 60% of cases. Computed tomography perfusion (CTP) is becoming the preferred imaging modality for acute stroke triage. We aimed to estimate the sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values for noncontrast computed tomography and CTP in lacunar syndromes, and for cortical, subcortical, and posterior fossa regions. Methods: A retrospective analysis of confirmed ischemic stroke patients who underwent acute CTP and follow-up magnetic resonance imaging between 2010 and 2018 was performed. Brain noncontrast computed tomography and CTP were assessed independently by 2 stroke neurologists. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis was performed to estimate sensitivity, specificity, and area under the curve (AUC) for the detection of strokes in patients with lacunar syndromes using different CTP maps. Results: We found 106 clinical lacunar syndromes, but on diffusion-weighted imaging, these consisted of 59 lacunar, 33 cortical, and 14 posterior fossa strokes. The discrimination of ischemia identification was very poor using noncontrast computed tomography in all 3 regions, but good for cortical (AUC, 0.82) and poor for subcortical and posterior regions (AUCs, 0.55 and 0.66) using automated core-penumbra maps. The addition of delay time and mean transient time maps substantially increased subcortical (AUC, 0.80) and slightly posterior stroke detection (AUC, 0.69). Conclusions: Analysis of mean transient time and delay time maps in combination with core-penumbra maps improves detection of subcortical and posterior strokes.
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- 2021
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24. Association of Collateral Status and Ischemic Core Growth in Patients With Acute Ischemic Stroke
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Longting, Lin, Jianhong, Yang, Chushuang, Chen, Huiqiao, Tian, Andrew, Bivard, Neil J, Spratt, Christopher R, Levi, Mark W, Parsons, and Gang, Li
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Collateral ,Collateral Circulation ,Perfusion scanning ,Brain Ischemia ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Interquartile range ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Derivation ,Aged ,Ischemic Stroke ,Aged, 80 and over ,Core (anatomy) ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,Confidence interval ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Cohort ,Cardiology ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Perfusion ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
ObjectiveTo test the hypothesis that patients with acute ischemic stroke with poorer collaterals would have faster ischemic core growth, we included 2 cohorts in the study: cohort 1 of 342 patients for derivation and cohort 2 of 414 patients for validation.MethodsPatients with acute ischemic stroke with large vessel occlusion were included. Core growth rate was calculated by the following equation: core growth rate = acute core volume on CT perfusion (CTP)/time from stroke onset to CTP. Collateral status was assessed by the ratio of severe hypoperfusion volume within the hypoperfusion region of CTP. The CTP collateral index was categorized in tertiles; for each tertile, core growth rate was summarized as median and interquartile range. Simple linear regressions were then performed to measure the predictive power of CTP collateral index in core growth rate.ResultsFor patients allocated to good collateral on CTP (tertile 1 of collateral index), moderate collateral (tertile 2), and poor collateral (tertile 3), the median core growth rate was 2.93 mL/h (1.10–7.94), 8.65 mL/h (4.53–18.13), and 25.41 mL/h (12.83–45.07), respectively. Increments in the collateral index by 1% resulted in an increase of core growth by 0.57 mL/h (coefficient 0.57, 95% confidence interval [0.46, 0.68], p < 0.001). The relationship of core growth and CTP collateral index was validated in cohort 2. An increment in collateral index by 1% resulted in an increase of core growth by 0.59 mL/h (coefficient 0.59 [0.48–0.71], p < 0.001) in cohort 2.ConclusionCollateral status is a major determinant of ischemic core growth.
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- 2020
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25. Intraarterial Versus Intravenous Tirofiban as an Adjunct to Endovascular Thrombectomy for Acute Ischemic Stroke
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Jianhong Yang, Yuefei Wu, Xiang Gao, Andrew Bivard, Christopher R. Levi, Mark W. Parsons, Longting Lin, Neil Spratt, Carlos Garcia Esperon, Ferdinand Miteff, Philip M.C. Choi, Timothy Kleining, Billy O’Brien, Kenneth Butcher, Qiang Dong, Xin Cheng, Min Lou, Congguo Yin, Peng Wang, Yu Geng, Xu Zhang, Xuezhi Yang, Weiwen Qiu, Qi Fang, Yi Sui, Wenhuo Chen, and Gang Li
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Male ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Brain Ischemia ,Brain ischemia ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,medicine ,Humans ,Infusions, Intra-Arterial ,Registries ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Acute ischemic stroke ,Stroke ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Thrombectomy ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,business.industry ,Endovascular Procedures ,Retrospective cohort study ,Tirofiban ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Treatment Outcome ,Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors ,Anesthesia ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Perfusion ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Fibrinolytic agent ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background and Purpose: This study aimed to evaluate the treatment effect of intraarterial versus intravenous tirofiban during endovascular thrombectomy in acute ischemic stroke. Methods: This study retrospectively examined 503 patients with acute ischemic stroke with large vessel occlusion who received endovascular thrombectomy within 24 hours of stroke onset. Patients were divided into 3 groups: no tirofiban (n=354), intraarterial tirofiban (n=79), and intravenous tirofiban (n=70). The 3 groups were compared in terms of recanalization rate, symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage, in-hospital death rate, 3-month death, and 3-month outcomes measured by modified Rankin Scale score (good clinical outcome of 0–2, poor outcome of 5–6). The comparison was statistically assessed by propensity score matching, followed by Freidman rank-sum test and pairwise Wilcoxon signed-rank test with Bonferroni correction. Results: The propensity score matching resulted in 92 matched triplets. Compared with the no-tirofiban group, the intravenous tirofiban group showed significantly increased recanalization (96.7% versus 64.1%, P P =0.034), and a lower rate of 3-month poor outcome (12.2% versus 41.4%, P P =1.000). However, symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage was significantly increased in the intraarterial-tirofiban group compared with the no-tirofiban group (19.1% versus 0%, P P P =0.021). The intraarterial-tirofiban and no-tirofiban group showed no significant difference in recanalization rate (66.3% versus 64.1%, P =1.000). Conclusions: As an adjunct to endovascular thrombectomy, intravenous tirofiban is associated with high recanalization rate and good outcome, whereas intraarterial tirofiban is associated with high hemorrhagic rate and death rate.
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- 2020
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26. Advances in Intracranial Perfusion Imaging for Thrombectomy Patient Selection
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Richard I. Aviv, Amanda Murphy, Mark W Parsons, and Andrew Bivard
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Medicine ,Perfusion scanning ,General Medicine ,Radiology ,business ,medicine.disease ,Stroke ,Selection (genetic algorithm) - Published
- 2020
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27. Permeability Measures Predict Hemorrhagic Transformation after Ischemic Stroke
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Qiang Dong, Christopher Levi, Kenneth Butcher, Philip M.C. Choi, Timothy Kleinig, Leonid Churilov, Richard I. Aviv, Mark W Parsons, Chushuang Chen, Longting Lin, Andrew Bivard, Neil J. Spratt, and Xin Cheng
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Perfusion Imaging ,Neuroimaging ,Perfusion scanning ,Capillary Permeability ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,medicine ,Humans ,Stroke ,Research Articles ,Aged ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,Ischemic Stroke ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,Penumbra ,Area under the curve ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,030104 developmental biology ,Neurology ,Cohort ,Cardiology ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Perfusion ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Research Article - Abstract
OBJECTIVE We sought to examine the diagnostic utility of existing predictors of any hemorrhagic transformation (HT) and compare them with new perfusion imaging permeability measures in ischemic stroke patients receiving alteplase only. METHODS A pixel-based analysis of pretreatment CT perfusion (CTP) was undertaken to define the optimal CTP permeability thresholds to predict the likelihood of HT. We then compared previously proposed predictors of HT using regression analyses and receiver operating characteristic curve analysis to produce an area under the curve (AUC). We compared AUCs using χ2 analysis. RESULTS From 5 centers, 1,407 patients were included in this study; of these, 282 had HT. The cohort was split into a derivation cohort (1,025, 70% patients) and a validation cohort (382 patients or 30%). The extraction fraction (E) permeability map at a threshold of 30% relative to contralateral had the highest AUC at predicting any HT (derivation AUC 0.85, 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.79-0.91; validation AUC 0.84, 95% CI 0.77-0.91). The AUC improved when permeability was assessed within the acute perfusion lesion for the E maps at a threshold of 30% (derivation AUC 0.91, 95% CI 0.86-0.95; validation AUC 0.89, 95% CI 0.86-0.95). Previously proposed associations with HT and parenchymal hematoma showed lower AUC values than the permeability measure. INTERPRETATION In this large multicenter study, we have validated a highly accurate measure of HT prediction. This measure might be useful in clinical practice to predict hemorrhagic transformation in ischemic stroke patients before receiving alteplase alone. ANN NEUROL 2020;88:466-476.
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- 2020
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28. CT vascular territory mapping: a novel method to identify large vessel occlusion collateral
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Michael Valente, Andrew Bivard, Andrew Cheung, Nathan W. Manning, and Mark W. Parsons
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Stroke ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Humans ,Brain ,Collateral Circulation ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Brain Ischemia ,Ischemic Stroke ,Cerebral Angiography - Abstract
Introduction This descriptive study explores typical patterns of vascular territory mapping (VTM) in ischaemic stroke patients with proximal vessel occlusion. VTM is a novel process using CT perfusion that can identify the source and extent of collateral blood flow in patients with vessel occlusion. It functions by determining which vessel provides dominant blood flow to a brain voxel. Methods A total of 167 consecutive patients were analysed from INSPIRE (International Stroke Perfusion Imaging Registry) with their CT perfusion reprocessed through VTM software. We explored the typical territory maps generated by this software relating to common large vessel occlusion location sites (ACA/MCA/PCA). Results/Conclusion In the presence of occlusion, VTM demonstrated a reciprocal increase in collateral vessel territories.
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- 2022
29. Benchmark dataset for clot detection in ischemic stroke vessel-based imaging: CODEC-IV
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Freda Werdiger, Milanka Visser, Andrew Bivard, Xingjuan Li, Sunay Gotla, Angelos Sharobeam, Michael Valente, James Beharry, Vignan Yogendrakumar, and Mark W. Parsons
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Neurology ,Cognitive Neuroscience - Published
- 2023
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30. Modelling the Long-Term Health Outcome and Costs of Thrombectomy in Treating Stroke Patients with Large Ischaemic Core: Comparison between Clinical Trials and Real-World Data
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Lan Gao, Marj Moodie, Christopher Levi, Longting Lin, Xin Cheng, Timothy Kleinig, Ken Butcher, Bernard Yan, Andrew Bivard, and Mark Parsons
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Introduction: We aimed to assess the long-term health outcomes and costs of endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) using clinical trials and real-world evidence in patients with large ischaemic core. Methods: Both clinical trials and the INternational Stroke Perfusion Imaging REgistry (INSPIRE) were used. Patients with acute computed tomography perfusion scan with an ischaemic core of ≥70 mL were included. A Markov model was constructed to simulate the long-term costs and health outcomes (quality-adjusted life year) post-index stroke. Effectiveness of EVT (modified Rankin scale score at 3 months) was derived from the trials and INSPIRE registry (compared to matched patients not treated with EVT), respectively. Results: Based on the trial and real-world data, the overall results revealed varied health benefits and costs due to EVT, with reduced health benefits and increased costs from EVT treatment in everyday practice. The long-term simulation estimated that offering EVT to large vessel occlusion stroke patients with large ischaemic core was associated with greater benefits (1.12 vs. 0.25 quality-adjusted life year gains) and lower (−A$19,320) or higher costs (A$11,278), using trial and real-world data, respectively. The incremental cost of the EVT procedure (i.e., A$14,356) could be primarily offset to a different extent by the reduction in costs related to the nursing home care (−$31,986 vs. −A$1,874) in the clinical trial and real-world practice. Conclusions: Our results highlight the potential gaps when implementing an effective intervention in the real world and the importance of the rigorous selection of large infarct core patients for EVT.
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- 2022
31. The Mobile Stroke Unit Nurse: An International Exploration of Their Scope of Practice, Education, and Training
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Skye, Coote, Elizabeth, Mackey, Anne W, Alexandrov, Dominique A, Cadilhac, Andrei V, Alexandrov, Damien, Easton, Henry, Zhao, Francesca, Langenberg, Andrew, Bivard, Michael, Stephenson, Mark W, Parsons, Bruce C V, Campbell, Geoffrey A, Donnan, Stephen M, Davis, and Sandy, Middleton
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Stroke ,Scope of Practice ,Australia ,Humans ,Nurse Practitioners ,Nurse's Role ,Tennessee ,Mobile Health Units ,Telemedicine - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mobile stroke units (MSUs) are ambulance-based prehospital stroke care services. Through immediate roadside assessment and onboard brain imaging, MSUs provide faster stroke management with improved patient outcomes. Mobile stroke units have enabled the development of expanded scope of practice for stroke nurses; however, there is limited published evidence about these evolving prehospital acute nursing roles. AIMS: The aim of this study was to explore the expanded scope of practice of nurses working on MSUs by identifying MSUs with onboard nurses; describing the roles and responsibilities, training, and experience of MSU nurses, through a search of the literature; and describing 2 international MSU services incorporating nurses from Memphis, Tennessee, and Melbourne, Australia. METHODS: We searched PubMed, CINAHL, and the Joanna Briggs Institute Evidence-Based Practice database using the terms "mobile stroke unit" and "nurse." Existing MSUs were identified through the PRE-hospital Stroke Treatment Organization to determine models that involved nurses. We describe 2 MSUs involving nurses: one in Memphis and one in Melbourne, led by 2 of our authors. RESULTS: Ninety articles were found describing 15 MSUs; however, staffing details were lacking, and it is unknown how many employ nurses. Nine articles described the role of the nurse, but role specifics, training, and expertise were largely undocumented. The MSU in Memphis, the only unit to be staffed exclusively by onboard nurse practitioners, is supported by a neurologist who consults via telephone. The Melbourne MSU plans to trial a nurse-led telemedicine model in the near future. CONCLUSION: We lack information on how many MSUs employ nurses, and the nurses' scope of practice, training, and expertise. Expert stroke nurse practitioners can safely perform many of the tasks undertaken by the onboard neurologist, making a nurse-led telemedicine model an effective and potentially cost-effective model that should be considered for all MSUs.
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- 2022
32. Abstract 129: Electromagnetic Portable Brain Imaging For Stroke
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Angela Dos Santos, Anna Balabanski, David Cook, Stuart Crozier, Konstanty Bialkowski, Francesca Langenberg, Andrew Bivard, Lara Bishop, Damien Easton, Geoffrey A Donnan, and Stephen Davis
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Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Background: Electromagnetic imaging (EMI) is an emerging technology that transmits low energy electromagnetic waves from a ring of transceivers around the head, modified as they pass through abnormal tissue, providing unique signatures for brain pathology. It promises to provide portable, non-ionizing, rapid neuroimaging for prehospital and bedside evaluation of stroke, based on the dielectric properties of the tissue. We aimed to assess the clinical utility of EMI in stroke diagnosis in a pilot study. Methods: In a prospective, observational, open, non-interventional pilot study, patients with imaging-proven ischemic (IS) or haemorrhagic stroke (ICH) within the preceding 48 hours were recruited. Using the EMVision scanner, EMI was performed within 1-24 hours of diagnostic CT or MRI. Images were obtained by processing signals from encircling transceiver antennae contained in an instrumented 18 kg helmet which emit and detect low energy non-ionising signals in the microwave frequency spectrum (0.5-2.0 GHz). Localisation was assessed by determining whether fusion images resulted in target detection in the same quadrant as comparable CT or MRI. Electromagnetic (EM) images were reconstructed by creating maps of the EM wave scattering arising from contrast in electrical parameters between IS or ICH lesions and normal brain. A blinded clinician assessed agreement between regional abnormalities on EMI and CT or MRI scans. Algorithms for distinction between IS and ICH were based on differences in EM transmission, reflection and scattering through brain tissue. Results: Thirty patients were studied, 21 IS and 9 ICH. Mean age was 66.7 years (range 37-87), 57% were female. Mean NIHSS at presentation was 5. Mean time to routine imaging was 5.5 hrs (range 1-48) and to EMI 24 hrs (range 6-60). Nineteen patients (63%) had only CT performed; 11 (37%) had both CT and MRI. EMI differentiated ICH from IS with 93% accuracy and localised the stroke to the correct brain quadrant with 87% accuracy. Conclusion: In this early validation pilot study we show the ability to distinguish between IS and ICH and stroke location within a given brain quadrant. Further developments may produce a valuable imaging tool to assist in prehospital and bedside stroke diagnosis and management.
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- 2022
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33. Endovascular Thrombectomy Versus Medical Management in Isolated M2 Occlusions: Pooled Patient-Level Analysis from the EXTEND-IA Trials, INSPIRE, and SELECT Studies
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Amrou, Sarraj, Mark, Parsons, Andrew, Bivard, Ameer E, Hassan, Michael G, Abraham, Teddy, Wu, Timothy, Kleinig, Longting, Lin, Chushuang, Chen, Christopher, Levi, Qiang, Dong, Xin, Cheng, Ken S, Butcher, Philip, Choi, Nawaf, Yassi, Darshan, Shah, Gagan, Sharma, Deep, Pujara, Faris, Shaker, Spiros, Blackburn, Helen, Dewey, Vincent, Thijs, Clark W, Sitton, Geoffrey A, Donnan, Peter J, Mitchell, Bernard, Yan, James G, Grotta, Gregory W, Albers, Stephen M, Davis, and Bruce, Campbell
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Stroke ,Treatment Outcome ,Perfusion Imaging ,Endovascular Procedures ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Brain Ischemia ,Thrombectomy - Abstract
The objective of this study was to evaluate functional and safety outcomes of endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) versus medical management (MM) in patients with M2 occlusion and examine their association with perfusion imaging mismatch and stroke severity.In a pooled, patient-level analysis of 3 randomized controlled trials (EXTEND-IA, EXTEND-and IA-TNK parts 1 and 2) and 2 prospective nonrandomized studies (INSPIRE and SELECT), we evaluated EVT association with 90-day functional independence (modified Rankin Scale [mRS] = 0-2) in isolated M2 occlusions as compared to medical management overall and in subgroups by mismatch profile status and stroke severity.We included 517 patients (EVT = 195 and MM = 322), baseline median (interquartile range [IQR]) National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) was 13 (8-19) in EVT versus 10 (6-15) in MM, p 0.001. Pretreatment ischemic core did not differ (EVT = 10 [0-24] ml vs MM = 9 [3-21] ml, p = 0.59). Compared to MM, EVT was more frequently associated with functional independence (68.3 vs 61.6%, adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 2.42, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.25-4.67, p = 0.008, inverse probability of treatment weights [IPTW]-OR = 1.75, 95% CI = 1.00-3.75, p = 0.05) with a shift toward better mRS outcomes (adjusted cOR = 2.02, 95% CI:1.23-3.29, p = 0.005), and lower mortality (5 vs 10%, aOR = 0.32, 95% CI = 0.12-0.87, p = 0.025). EVT was associated with higher functional independence in patients with a perfusion mismatch profile (EVT = 70.7% vs MM = 61.3%, aOR = 2.29, 95% CI = 1.09-4.79, p = 0.029, IPTW-OR = 2.02, 1.08-3.78, p = 0.029), whereas no difference was found in those without mismatch (EVT = 43.8% vs MM = 62.7%, p = 0.17, IPTW-OR: 0.71, 95% CI = 0.18-2.78, p = 0.62). Functional independence was more frequent with EVT in patients with moderate or severe strokes, as defined by baseline NIHSS above any thresholds from 6 to 10, whereas there was no difference between groups with milder strokes below these thresholds.In patients with M2 occlusion, EVT was associated with improved clinical outcomes when compared to MM. This association was primarily observed in patients with a mismatch profile and those with higher stroke severity. ANN NEUROL 2022;91:629-639.
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- 2022
34. Computed Tomography-Based Evaluation of Cerebrovascular Disease
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Imanuel Dzialowski, Volker Puetz, Mark Parsons, Andrew Bivard, and Rüdiger von Kummer
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- 2022
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35. Artificial Intelligence in Acute Ischemic Stroke
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Freda Werdiger, Andrew Bivard, and Mark Parsons
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- 2022
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36. Prior anticoagulation and bridging thrombolysis improve outcomes in patients with atrial fibrillation undergoing endovascular thrombectomy for anterior circulation stroke
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Longting Lin, Christopher Blair, James Fu, Dennis Cordato, Cecilia Cappelen-Smith, Andrew Cheung, Nathan W Manning, Jason Wenderoth, Chushuang Chen, Andrew Bivard, Kenneth Butcher, Timothy J Kleinig, Philip Choi, Christopher R Levi, and Mark Parsons
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Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine - Abstract
BackgroundWhere stroke occurs with pre-existing atrial fibrillation (AF)studies validating the safety and efficacy of bridging thrombolysis, and the use of endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) in the setting of prior anticoagulation, are limited to single-center reports.MethodsIn a retrospective analysis, AF patients undergoing EVT for anterior circulation large vessel occlusion stroke enrolled in a prospectively-maintained, international multicenter database (International Stroke Perfusion Imaging Registry (INSPIRE)) between 2016 and 2019 were studied. Patients were categorized by anticoagulation status: anticoagulated (warfarin/non-vitamin K oral anticoagulants) versus not anticoagulated. Patients not anticoagulated were further divided into intravenous thrombolysis versus no thrombolysis. Outcomes compared between groups included 90-day modified Rankin Scale, 90-day mortality, rates of symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage (sICH), and good reperfusion (modified Thrombolysis In Cerebral Infarction (mTICI) 2b-3).ResultsOf 563 AF patients, 118 (21%) were on anticoagulation. AF patients on anticoagulation showed improved 90-day functional outcomes (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) 1.68, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 1.00 to 2.82). Mortality (26.3% vs 23.8%), sICH (4.5% vs 3.9%), and rates of good reperfusion (91.3% vs 88.0%) were similar between those anticoagulated and those not anticoagulated. Thrombolysis before EVT in AF patients was independently associated with improved 90-day functional outcomes (aOR 1.81, 95% CI 1.18 to 2.79) and reduced mortality (aOR 0.51, 95% CI 0.31 to 0.84), with similar sICH rates (3.4% vs 4.5%).ConclusionsAnticoagulated patients with AF who underwent EVT had improved 90-day functional outcomes and similar sICH rates. Thrombolysis before EVT in AF patients was associated with improved 90-day functional outcomes and reduced mortality.
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- 2023
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37. Tenecteplase versus alteplase for stroke thrombolysis evaluation (TASTE): A multicentre, prospective, randomized, open-label, blinded-endpoint, controlled phase III non-inferiority trial protocol
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Andrew Bivard, Carlos Garcia-Esperon, Leonid Churilov, Neil Spratt, Michelle Russell, Bruce CV Campbell, Philip Choi, Timothy Kleinig, Henry Ma, Hugh Markus, Carlos Molina, Chung Hsu, Chon-Haw Tsai, Atte Meretoja, Daniel Strbian, Kenneth Butcher, Teddy Wu, Stephen Davis, Geoffrey Donnan, Christopher Levi, and Mark Parsons
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Neurology - Abstract
Rationale: Alteplase is the only approved thrombolytic agent for acute stroke. An alternative plasminogen activator, tenecteplase, has been previously shown to increase early biological effectiveness (reperfusion) resulting in early clinical recovery in acute stroke patients with target mismatch on perfusion imaging; however, phase III data are lacking. Aim and hypothesis: In this study, we assess the efficacy and safety of tenecteplase compared to alteplase in acute stroke patients with target mismatch on perfusion imaging. Methods and Design: Tenecteplase (0.25 mg/kg) versus alteplase (0.9 mg/kg) for Stroke Thrombolysis Evaluation (TASTE) is a multicentre, prospective, randomized, open-label, blinded-endpoint (PROBE), controlled phase III non-inferiority trial (2 arms with 1:1 randomization) with an adaptive sample size re-estimation in patients with acute ischemic stroke meeting target mismatch criteria on perfusion imaging. Sample size estimates: Recruiting 728 patients (1:1 tenecteplase vs alteplase) would yield 90% power (two-sided alpha 0.05) to detect a treatment effect of 8% (26% modified Rankin scale (mRS) 0–1 in alteplase arm and 34% mRS 0–1 in tenecteplase arm), with an absolute non-inferiority margin of 3%. Following the pre-planned “promising zone” adaptive sample size re-estimation, the final sample size was set at 832 patients. Study outcomes: The primary outcome measure is the proportion of patients with an mRS score of 0–1 at 3 months. Secondary outcomes include the categorical shift in mRS at 3 months; the proportion of patients with: mRS 0–2, 5–6, and 6; reduction of the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) by 8 or more points or reaching 0–1 at 24 h; symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage within 36 h; and death. Discussion: This pivotal trial will provide important data on the role of tenecteplase in acute ischemic stroke, and the use of imaging-based treatment decision-making for stroke thrombolysis. Clinical trial protocol: Trial Registration: ACTRN12613000243718, EudraCT 2015-002657-36
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- 2023
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38. Physiotherapy using a free-standing robotic exoskeleton for patients with spinal cord injury: a feasibility study
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Nicola Postol, Neil J. Spratt, Andrew Bivard, and Jodie Marquez
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Male ,Free-standing ,Research ,Neuro-rehabilitation ,Rehabilitation ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Feasibility ,Health Informatics ,Walking ,Spinal cord injury ,Robotic exoskeleton ,Exoskeleton Device ,Quality of Life ,Feasibility Studies ,Humans ,Female ,Physical Therapy Modalities ,Spinal Cord Injuries ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Background Evidence is emerging for the use of overground lower limb robotic exoskeletons in the rehabilitation of people with spinal cord injury (SCI), with suggested benefits for gait speed, bladder and bowel function, pain management and spasticity. To date, research has focused on devices that require the user to support themselves with a walking aid. This often precludes use by those with severe trunk, postural or upper limb deficits and places the user in a suboptimal, flexed standing position. Free-standing exoskeletons enable people with higher level injuries to exercise in an upright position. This study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of therapy with a free-standing exoskeleton for those with SCI, and to determine the potential health-related benefits of this intervention. Methods This 12-week intervention study with 12-week waitlist control and 12-week follow up, provided people with SCI scoring Results Forty-one potential participants were screened for eligibility. Two females (one ASIA A, one ASIA C) and one male (ASIA B) completed all 24 intervention sessions, and the follow up assessment. One participant showed positive trends in function, fatigue, quality of life and mood during the intervention phase. Grip and quadriceps strength, and lower limb motor function improved in another. Two improved their percentage of lean body mass during the intervention phase. Remaining results were varied across patients, time points and outcomes. The intervention was highly acceptable to all participants. Conclusion With three of 41 potential participants being eligible and completing this study, our results show that there are potential benefits of exercise in a free-standing exoskeleton for people with severe mobility impairment due to SCI, for a small subset of patients. Further research is warranted to determine those most likely to benefit, and the type of benefit depending on the patient characteristics. Trial registration The trial was registered prospectively on 20 April 2018 at www.anzctr.org.au/ (ACTRN12618000626268)
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- 2021
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39. Optimal Tissue Reperfusion Estimation by Computed Tomography Perfusion Post-Thrombectomy in Acute Ischemic Stroke
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Anding Xu, Gagan Sharma, Bernard Yan, Mark W Parsons, Zefeng Tan, Andrew Bivard, Peter Mitchell, Richard Dowling, and Steven Bush
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Computed tomography perfusion ,Perfusion Imaging ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Neuroimaging ,Perfusion scanning ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Acute ischemic stroke ,Ischemic Stroke ,Retrospective Studies ,Thrombectomy ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,business.industry ,Cerebral infarction ,Endovascular Procedures ,Odds ratio ,Thrombolysis ,medicine.disease ,Reperfusion ,Ischemic stroke ,Cardiology ,Neurology (clinical) ,Tomography ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background and Purpose: Modified Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction score (mTICI) ≥2b is defined as successful reperfusion. However, mTICI has rarely been correlated with dynamic perfusion imaging postendovascular therapy for acute stroke. We aimed to study the proportion of tissue optimal reperfusion (TOR) postendovascular therapy across different grades of mTICI. Methods: We conducted a single-center retrospective analysis of patients with acute ischemic strokes who had endovascular therapy between 2018 and 2019. Computer tomography perfusion or magnetic resonance perfusion was performed before and after endovascular therapy. Tmax+6 volume reduction of >90% was defined as TOR. Comparisons of proportions of TOR in different grades of mTICI were performed. In the present study, the requirement for informed consents was waived. Results: Eighty-two patients were included. The difference in the proportion of TOR for TICI categories was statistically significant (mTICI score 0, 0%, mTICI score 2A, 0%, mTICI score 2b, 50.0%, mTICI score 2c, 80.0%, mTICI score 3, 81.3%, χ 2 =14.035, P =0.003). Multivariable logistic regression showed that lower age (odds ratio, 0.932, P =0.017), onset-to-tissue-type plasminogen activator time (odds ratio, 0.980, P =0.005) and TOR (odds ratio, 8.764, P =0.031) were associated with favorable functional outcome. Conclusions: The proportion of TOR achieved by mTICI score of 2b was significantly lower than mTICI score of 2c and mTICI score of 3. TOR was associated with favorable functional outcome, and the degree of reperfusion was more strongly correlated with outcomes than the mTICI scores.
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- 2021
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40. Perfusion Computed Tomography Accurately Quantifies Collateral Flow After Acute Ischemic Stroke
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Christopher R Levi, Neil J. Spratt, Chushuang Chen, Longting Lin, Huiqiao Tian, Andrew Bivard, and Mark W Parsons
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Male ,Correlation coefficient ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Perfusion scanning ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Brain Ischemia ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Stroke ,Acute ischemic stroke ,Aged ,Computed tomography angiography ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Area under the curve ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Cerebral Angiography ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Perfusion ,Blood Flow Velocity ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cerebral angiography - Abstract
Background and Purpose— This study aimed to derive and validate an optimal collateral measurement on computed tomographic perfusion imaging for patients with acute ischemic stroke. Methods— In step 1 analysis of 22 patients, the parasagittal region of the ischemic hemisphere was divided into 6 pial arterial zones to derive the optimal collateral threshold by receiver operating characteristic analysis. The collateral threshold was then used to define the collateral index in step 2. In step 2 analysis of 156 patients, the computed tomographic perfusion collateral index was compared with collateral scores on dynamic computed tomographic angiography in predicting good clinical outcome by simple regression. Results— The optimal collateral threshold was delay time >6 s (sensitivity, 88%; specificity, 92%). The computed tomographic perfusion collateral index, defined by the ratio of delay time >6 s/delay time >2 s volume, showed a significant correlation with dynamic computed tomographic angiography collateral scores (correlation coefficient, 0.62; P P Conclusions— Computed tomographic perfusion can accurately quantify collateral flow after acute ischemic stroke.
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- 2020
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41. Comparing mismatch strategies for patients being considered for ischemic stroke tenecteplase trials
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Mark W Parsons, Xuya Huang, Keith W. Muir, Bruce C.V. Campbell, Geoffrey A. Donnan, Christopher R Levi, Dheeraj Kalladka, Chushuang Chen, Ian Ford, Andrew Bivard, Bharath Kumar Cheripelli, Fiona Moreton, and Stephen M. Davis
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Ischemia ,Tenecteplase ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Tissue plasminogen activator ,Brain Ischemia ,Brain ischemia ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,MULTIPLE VARIATIONS ,Humans ,Stroke ,Ischemic Stroke ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Treatment Outcome ,Neurology ,Tissue Plasminogen Activator ,Ischemic stroke ,Cardiology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Fibrinolytic agent ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Currently there are multiple variations of imaging-based patient selection mismatch methods in ischemic stroke. In the present study, we sought to compare the two most common mismatch methods and identify if there were different effects on the outcome of a randomized clinical trial depending on the mismatch method used. Aims Investigate the effect of clinical and imaging-based mismatch criteria on patient outcomes of a pooled cohort from randomized trials of intravenous tenecteplase versus alteplase. Methods Baseline clinical and imaging scores were used to categorize patients as meeting either the DAWN mismatch (baseline NIHSS ≥ 10, and age cut-offs for ischemic core volume) or DEFUSE 2 mismatch criteria (mismatch volume > 15 mL, mismatch ratio > 1.8 and ischemic core Results From 146 pooled patients, 71 received alteplase and 75 received tenecteplase. The overall pooled group did not show improved patient outcomes when treated with tenecteplase (mRS 0-1 OR 1.77, 95% CI 0.89–3.51, p = 0.102) compared with alteplase. A total of 39 (27%) patients met both clinical and imaging mismatch criteria, 25 (17%) patients met only imaging criteria, 36 (25%) met only clinical mismatch criteria and, finally, 46 (31%) did not meet either of imaging or mismatch criteria. Patients treated with tenecteplase had more favorable outcomes when they met either imaging mismatch (mRS 0–1, OR 2.33, 95% CI 1.13–5.94, p = 0.032) or clinical mismatch criteria (mRS 0–1, OR 2.15, 95% CI 1.142, 8.732, p = 0.027) but with differing proportions. Conclusion Target mismatch selection was more inclusive and exhibited in a larger treatment effect between tenecteplase and alteplase.
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- 2019
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42. Automated CT perfusion imaging for acute ischemic stroke
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Kambiz Nael, Mark W Parsons, Max Wintermark, Pooja Khatri, Andrew Bivard, Aaron W. Grossman, and Achala Vagal
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Perfusion Imaging ,Perfusion scanning ,Automation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Medical imaging ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Cerebral perfusion pressure ,Stroke ,Acute ischemic stroke ,business.industry ,Patient Selection ,Penumbra ,Endovascular Procedures ,Brain ,medicine.disease ,Cerebral blood flow ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Perfusion ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Recent positive trials have thrust acute cerebral perfusion imaging into the routine evaluation of acute ischemic stroke. Updated guidelines state that in patients with anterior circulation large vessel occlusions presenting beyond 6 hours from time last known well, advanced imaging selection including perfusion-based selection is necessary. Centers that receive patients with acute stroke must now have the capability to perform and interpret CT or magnetic resonance perfusion imaging or provide rapid transfer to centers with the capability of selecting patients for a highly impactful endovascular therapy, particularly in delayed time windows. Many stroke centers are quickly incorporating the use of automated perfusion processing software to interpret perfusion raw data. As CT perfusion (CTP) is being assimilated in real-world clinical practice, it is essential to understand the basics of perfusion acquisition, quantification, and interpretation. It is equally important to recognize the common technical and clinical diagnostic challenges of automated CTP including ischemic core and penumbral misclassifications that could result in underestimation or overestimation of the core and penumbra volumes. This review highlights the pitfalls of automated CTP along with practical pearls to address the common challenges. This is particularly tailored to aid the acute stroke clinician who must interpret automated perfusion studies in an emergency setting to make time-dependent treatment decisions for patients with acute ischemic stroke.
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- 2019
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43. Tenecteplase versus alteplase for early treatment of ischaemic stroke – Authors' reply
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Leonid, Churilov, Andrew, Bivard, and Mark W, Parsons
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Stroke ,Treatment Outcome ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Tissue Plasminogen Activator ,Tenecteplase ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,Brain Ischemia ,Ischemic Stroke - Published
- 2022
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44. Altered Functional Connectivity and Cognition Persists 4 Years After a Transient Ischemic Attack or Minor Stroke
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Korinne Nicolas, Peter Goodin, Milanka M. Visser, Patricia T. Michie, Andrew Bivard, Christopher Levi, Mark W. Parsons, and Frini Karayanidis
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Working memory ,business.industry ,functional connectivity ,transient ischaemic attack ,Montreal Cognitive Assessment ,Cognition ,NIH Toolbox ,minor stroke ,Executive functions ,executive function ,Neurology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,cardiovascular diseases ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,Neurology (clinical) ,Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance ,RC346-429 ,Prefrontal cortex ,business ,Default mode network ,Original Research ,cognitive impairment - Abstract
Background and Purpose: Altered executive functions and resting-state functional connectivity (rsFC) are common following a minor stroke or transient ischemic attack (TIA). However, the long-term persistence of these abnormalities is not well-studied. We investigated whether there were cognitive and rsFC differences between (a) controls and minor cerebrovascular event (CVE) patients and (b) between CVE patients with and without an imaging confirmed infarct (i.e., minor stroke and TIA, respectively) at an average of 3.8 years following their event.Methods: Structural and resting-state imaging and cognitive assessments including the Montreal Cognitive Assessment, the Trail Making Task and the National Institute of Health (NIH) Cognition Toolbox were conducted on 42 patients (minor stroke = 17, TIA = 25) and 20 healthy controls (total N = 62).Results: Controls performed better than patients on two measures of executive functioning (both p < 0.046) and had reduced rsFC between the frontoparietal and default mode networks (FPN and DMN, respectively; p = 0.035). No cognitive differences were found between minor stroke and TIA patients, however, rsFC differences were found within the FPN and the DMN (both p < 0.013). Specifically, increased connectivity within the FPN was associated with faster performance in the minor stroke group but not the TIA group (p = 0.047).Conclusions: These findings suggest that transient or relatively minor cerebrovascular events are associated with persistent disruption of functional connectivity of neural networks and cognitive performance. These findings suggest a need for novel interventions beyond secondary prevention to reduce the risk of persistent cognitive deficits.
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- 2021
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45. The Need for Structured Strategies to Improve Stroke Care in a Rural Telestroke Network in Northern New South Wales, Australia: An Observational Study
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Yumi Tomari Kashida, Carlos Garcia-Esperon, Thomas Lillicrap, Ferdinand Miteff, Pablo Garcia-Bermejo, Shyam Gangadharan, Beng Lim Alvin Chew, William O'Brien, James Evans, Khaled Alanati, Andrew Bivard, Mark Parsons, Jennifer Juhl Majersik, Neil James Spratt, Christopher Levi, and The members of Northern NSW Telestroke investigators for this project
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thrombolysis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,telestroke ,Computed tomography ,Stroke care ,lcsh:RC346-429 ,door-to-needle time ,medicine ,multimodal computed tomography ,Stroke ,lcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,Original Research ,Acute stroke ,High turnover ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Thrombolysis ,medicine.disease ,acute stroke care ,Neurology ,thrombectomy ,Emergency medicine ,Ischemic stroke ,Observational study ,Neurology (clinical) ,business - Abstract
Introduction: A telestroke network in Northern New South Wales, Australia has been developed since 2017. We theorized that the telestroke network development would drive a progressive improvement in stroke care metrics over time.Aim: This study aimed to describe changes in acute stroke workflow metrics over time to determine whether they improved with network experience.Methods: We prospectively collected data of patients assessed by telestroke who received multimodal computed tomography (mCT) and were diagnosed with ischemic stroke or transient ischemic attack from January 2017 to July 2019. The period was divided into two phases (phase 1: January 2017 – October 2018 and phase 2: November 2018 – July 2019). We compared median door-to-call, door-to-image, and door-to-decision time between the two phases.Results: We included 433 patients (243 in phase 1 and 190 in phase 2). Each spoke site treated 1.5–5.2 patients per month. There were Door-to-call time (median 39 in phase 1, 35 min in phase 2, p = 0.18), and door-to-decision time (median 81.5 vs. 83 min, p = 0.31) were not improved significantly. Similarly, in the reperfusion therapy subgroup, door-to-call time (median 29 vs. 24.5 min, p = 0.12) and door-to-decision time (median 70.5 vs. 67.5 min, p = 0.75) remained substantially unchanged. Regression analysis showed no association between time in the network and door-to-decision time (coefficient 1.5, p = 0.32).Conclusion: In our telestroke network, acute stroke timing metrics did not improve over time. There is the need for targeted education and training focusing on both stroke reperfusion competencies and the technical aspects of telestroke in areas with limited workforce and high turnover.
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- 2021
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46. Abstract P522: Endovascular Thrombectomy May Improve Excellent Outcomes in Severe Strokes With Isolated M2 Occlusions: A Pooled Cohort Analysis of the SELECT Study and the INSPIRE Registry
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Bruce C.V. Campbell, Amrou Sarraj, Arthur L. Day, Spiros Blackburn, Deep Pujara, Mark W Parsons, Andrew Bivard, Michael G. Abraham, and Ameer E Hassan
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Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Stroke severity ,Perfusion scanning ,medicine.disease ,Primary outcome ,Internal medicine ,Occlusion ,Infarct volume ,Cardiology ,Medicine ,In patient ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Stroke ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background: The efficacy of endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) in M2 occlusions is uncertain. Methods: In a pooled patient level analysis of the prospective multicenter cohort study of imaging selection (SELECT) and the INternational Stroke Perfusion Imaging REgistry (INSPIRE) EVT outcomes were compared to medical management (MM) in M2 occlusions. Further, we assessed for potential treatment benefit in patients with higher stroke severity (NIHSS). The primary outcome was excellent outcome (mRS 0-1). Results: 387 patients with isolated M2 occlusion (EVT 112, MM 275) met the inclusion criteria. Baseline NIHSS median (IQR) (EVT: 13 (9-19), MM: 10 (6-15), p10 had a trend towards higher excellent outcome rates outcomes with EVT (43%) vs MM (27%), aOR=3.11, 95% CI=0.81-11.95, p=0.098) as shown in figure 1. Conclusion: EVT may result in better rates of excellent outcomes in isolated M2 occlusions, especially those with more severe strokes who are more likely to have worse outcomes without emergent reperfusion.
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- 2021
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47. Does Intravenous Thrombolysis Within 4.5 to 9 Hours Increase Clot Migration Leading to Endovascular Inaccessibility?
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Richard Dowling, Bruce C.V. Campbell, Jeremy C. Lim, Mark W Parsons, Bernard Yan, Stephen M. Davis, Andrew Bivard, Geoffrey A Donnan, Peter Mitchell, Henry K. Ma, and Leonid Churilov
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Time-to-Treatment ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,medicine ,Humans ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,Acute ischemic stroke ,Aged ,Ischemic Stroke ,Retrospective Studies ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Incidence ,Endovascular Procedures ,Interventional radiology ,Thrombolysis ,Middle Aged ,Clinical neurology ,Treatment Outcome ,Emergency medicine ,Administration, Intravenous ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background and Purpose: Distal clot migration is a recognized event following intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) in the setting of acute ischemic stroke. Of note, clots that were initially retrievable by endovascular thrombectomy may migrate to a distal nonretrievable location and compromise clinical outcome. We investigated the incidence of clot migration leading to clot inaccessibility following IVT in the time window of 4.5 to 9 hours. Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis of the EXTEND trial (Extending the Time for Thrombolysis in Emergency Neurological Deficits) data. Baseline and 12- to 24-hour follow-up clot location was determined on computed tomography angiogram or magnetic resonance angiogram. The incidence of clot migration leading to a change from retrievable to nonretrievable location was identified and compared between the two treatment groups (IVT versus placebo). Results: Two hundred twenty patients were assessed. Clot migration from a retrievable to nonretrievable location occurred in 37 patients: 21 patients (19.3%) in the placebo group and 16 patients (14.4%) in the IVT group. No significant difference was identified in the incidence of clot migration leading to inaccessibility between groups ( P =0.336). Conclusions: Our results did not show increased clot migration leading to clot inaccessibility in patients treated with IVT.
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- 2021
48. Reduced Impact of Endovascular Thrombectomy on Disability in Real-World Practice, Relative to Randomized Controlled Trial Evidence in Australia
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Kenneth Butcher, Timothy Kleinig, Lan Gao, Chushuang Chen, Longting Lin, Mark W Parsons, Neil J. Spratt, Bernard Yan, Elise Tan, Philip M.C. Choi, Marj Moodie, Christopher R Levi, and Andrew Bivard
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medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:RC346-429 ,law.invention ,Randomized controlled trial ,Modified Rankin Scale ,law ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Stroke ,lcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,Original Research ,disability adjusted life year (DALY) ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,Hazard ratio ,medicine.disease ,INSPIRE registry ,real-world data analysis ,Confidence interval ,randomized controlled clinical trial (RCT) ,Clinical trial ,Years of potential life lost ,Neurology ,thrombectomy ,Neurology (clinical) ,business - Abstract
Background and Aims: Disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) are an important measure of the global burden of disease that informs patient outcomes and policy decision-making. Our study aimed to compare the DALYs saved by endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) in the Australasian-based EXTEND-IA trial vs. clinical registry data from EVT in Australian routine clinical practice.Methods: The 3-month modified Rankin scale (mRS) outcome and treatment status of consecutively enrolled Australian patients with large vessel occlusion (LVO) stroke were taken from the International Stroke Perfusion Imaging Registry (INSPIRE). DALYs were calculated as the summation of years of life lost (YLL) due to premature death and years lived with a disability (YLD). A generalized linear model (GLM) with gamma family and log link was used to compare the difference in DALYs for patients receiving/not receiving EVT while controlling for key covariates. Ordered logit regression model was utilized to compare the difference in functional outcome at 3 months between the treatment groups. Cox regression analysis was undertaken to compare the difference in survival over an 18-year time horizon. Estimated long-term DALYs saved based on the EXTEND-IA randomized controlled trial (RCT) results were used as the comparator.Results: INSPIRE patients who received EVT treatment only achieved nominally better functional outcomes than the non-EVT group (p = 0.181) at 3 months. There was no significant survival gain from EVT over the first 3 months of stroke in both INSPIRE and EXTEND-IA patients. However, measured against no EVT in the long-term, EVT in INSPIRE was associated with no significant survival gain [hazard ratio (HR): 0.92, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.78–1.08, p = 0.287] compared with the survival benefit extrapolated from the EXTEND-IA trial (HR: 0.42, 95% CI: 0.22–0.82, p = 0.01]. Offering EVT to patients with LVO stroke was also associated with fewer DALYs lost (11.04, 95% CI: 10.45–11.62) than those not receiving EVT in INSPIRE (12.13, 95% CI: 11.75–12.51), a reduction of −1.09 DALY (95% CI: −1.76 to −0.43, p = 0.002). The absolute magnitude of the treatment effect was lower than that seen in EXTEND-IA (−2.72 DALY reduction in EVT vs non-EVT patients).Conclusions: EVT for the treatment of LVO in a registry of routine care was associated with significantly lower DALYs lost than medical care alone, but the saved DALYs are less than those reported in clinical trials, as there were major differences in the baseline characteristics of the patients.
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- 2020
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49. Multimodal Computed Tomography Increases the Detection of Posterior Fossa Strokes Compared to Brain Non-contrast Computed Tomography
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Cecilia Ostman, Carlos Garcia-Esperon, Thomas Lillicrap, Shinya Tomari, Elizabeth Holliday, Christopher Levi, Andrew Bivard, Mark W. Parsons, and Neil J. Spratt
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medicine.medical_treatment ,delay time ,Perfusion scanning ,lcsh:RC346-429 ,posterior fossa stroke ,medicine ,cardiovascular diseases ,Stroke ,lcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,Original Research ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Thrombolysis ,medicine.disease ,Neurology ,Angiography ,CT perfusion ,multimodal CT ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,Perfusion ,mean transit time ,Diffusion MRI - Abstract
Aims: Multimodal computed tomography (mCT) (non-contrast CT, CT angiography, and CT perfusion) is not routinely used to assess posterior fossa strokes. We described the area under the curve (AUC) of brain NCCT, WB-CTP automated core-penumbra maps and comprehensive CTP analysis (automated core-penumbra maps and all perfusion maps) for posterior fossa strokes.Methods: We included consecutive patients with signs and symptoms of posterior fossa stroke who underwent acute mCT and follow up magnetic resonance diffusion weighted imaging (DWI). Multimodal CT images were reviewed blindly and independently by two stroke neurologists and area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) was used to compare imaging modalities.Results: From January 2014 to December 2019, 83 patients presented with symptoms suggestive of posterior fossa strokes and had complete imaging suitable for inclusion (49 posterior fossa strokes and 34 DWI negative patients). For posterior fossa strokes, comprehensive CTP analysis had an AUC of 0.68 vs. 0.62 for automated core-penumbra maps and 0.55 for NCCT. For cerebellar lesions >5 mL, the AUC was 0.87, 0.81, and 0.66, respectively.Conclusion: Comprehensive CTP analysis increases the detection of posterior fossa lesions compared to NCCT and should be implemented as part of the routine imaging assessment in posterior fossa strokes.
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- 2020
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50. The Metabolic Cost of Exercising With a Robotic Exoskeleton: A Comparison of Healthy and Neurologically Impaired People
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Kerrin Palazzi, Nicola Postol, Margaret Galloway, Andrew Bivard, Steven Lamond, Jodie Marquez, and Neil J. Spratt
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030506 rehabilitation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Biomedical Engineering ,Powered exoskeleton ,Subgroup analysis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Oxygen Consumption ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Exoskeleton Device ,Stroke ,Neurorehabilitation ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Multiple sclerosis ,Robotics ,medicine.disease ,Exoskeleton ,Exercise Therapy ,0305 other medical science ,business ,human activities ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
While neuro-recovery is maximized through active engagement, it has been suggested that the use of robotic exoskeletons in neuro-rehabilitation provides passive therapy. Using oxygen consumption (VO2) as an indicator of energy expenditure, we investigated the metabolic requirements of completing exercises in a free-standing robotic exoskeleton, with 20 healthy and 12 neurologically impaired participants (six with stroke, and six with multiple sclerosis (MS)). Neurological participants were evaluated pre- and post- 12 weeks of twice weekly robotic therapy. Healthy participants were evaluated in, and out of, the exoskeleton. Both groups increased their VO2 level from baseline during exoskeleton-assisted exercise (Healthy: mean change in VO2 = 2.10 ± 1.61 ml/kg/min, p =< 0.001; Neurological: 1.38 ± 1.22, p = 0.002), with a lower predicted mean in the neurological sample (−1.08, 95%CI −2.02, −0.14, p = 0.02). Healthy participants exercised harder out of the exoskeleton than in it (difference in VO2 = 3.50, 95%CI 2.62, 4.38, p =< 0.001). There was no difference in neurological participants’ predicted mean VO2 pre- and post- 12 weeks of robotic therapy 0.45, 95%CI −0.20, 1.11, p = 0.15), although subgroup analysis revealed a greater change after 12 weeks of robotic therapy in those with stroke (MS: −0.06, 95%CI −0.78, 0.66, p = 0.85; stroke: 1.00, 95%CI 0.3, 1.69, p = 0.01; difference = 1.06, p = 0.04). Exercise in a free-standing robotic exoskeleton is not passive in healthy or neurologically impaired people, and those with stroke may derive more benefit than those with MS.
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- 2020
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