1. Endovascular thrombectomy for acute ischemic stroke in elderly patients with large ischemic cores.
- Author
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Liu, Qian, Fang, Jinghuan, Jiang, Xin, Duan, Ting, Luo, Yaxi, Gao, Lijie, Dong, Shuju, Ma, Mengmeng, Zhou, Muke, and He, Li
- Subjects
STROKE patients ,ENDOVASCULAR surgery ,OLDER patients ,CEREBRAL infarction ,INTRACRANIAL hemorrhage - Abstract
Background: Understanding the benefits and risks of endovascular therapy (EVT) is crucial for elderly patients with large ischemic cores, as the combination of advanced age and extensive brain infarction may negatively impact clinical outcomes. Methods: The study retrospectively analyzed clinical outcomes for elderly stroke patients (age ≥ 70) with large ischemic cores (Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score [ASPECTS] < 6 or ischemic cores ≥ 70 ml) in the anterior circulation using data from our prospective database between June 2018 and January 2022. The effectiveness and risks of EVT in those patients were investigated, with the primary outcome being fair outcome (modified Rankin Scale, mRS ≤ 3). Results: Among 182 elderly patients with large ischemic core volume (120 in the EVT group and 62 in the non-EVT group), 20.9% (38/182, 22.5% in the EVT group vs. 17.7% in the non-EVT group) achieved a fair outcome. Meanwhile, 49.5% (90/182, 45.8% in the EVT group vs. 56.5% in the non-EVT group) of them died at 3 months. The benefits of EVT numerically exceeded non-EVT treatment for those aged ≤ ~ 85 years or with a mismatch volume ≥ ~ 50 ml. However, after adjustment, EVT was associated with an increased risk of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (aOR 4.24, 95%CI 1.262–14.247). Conclusions: This study highlights the clinical challenges faced by elderly patients with large infarctions, resulting in poor outcomes at 3 months. EVT may still provide some benefits in this population, but it also carries an increased risk of intracranial hemorrhage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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