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Efficacy and safety of direct aspiration first pass technique versus stent-retriever thrombectomy in acute basilar artery occlusion-a retrospective single center experience.

Authors :
Gerber, Johannes
Daubner, Dirk
Kaiser, Daniel
Engellandt, Kay
Haedrich, Kevin
Mueller, Angela
Puetz, Volker
Linn, Jennifer
Abramyuk, Andrij
Source :
Neuroradiology. Mar2017, Vol. 59 Issue 3, p297-304. 8p. 2 Charts.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Introduction: The study aimed to compare efficacy and safety of aspiration thrombectomy (AT) to stentriever thrombectomy (SRT) in patients with basilar artery (BA) occlusion (BAO). Methods: We retrospectively included patients with the following characteristics: acute BAO or occlusion of the intracranial vertebral artery (ICVA) and endovascular therapy (EVT) with stentriever (SRT) or aspiration thrombectomy (AT). Additional extra- but not intracranial EVT and intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) were allowed. Results: Between January 2013 and April 2016, 33 patients fulfilled the criteria (13 treated with SRT, 20 with AT). Prior to EVT, 23 (70%) patients received IVT. The proximal intracranial occlusion was ICVA in 2 patients, proximal BA in 5 patients, middle BA in 20 patients, and distal BA in 6 patients. Mean time to treatment was 334 min (95% CI 276-391 min). Procedure duration differed significantly ( p = 0.002) as follows: 97 min with SRT (95% CI 69-124 min) and 55 min with AT (95% CI 43-66 min). Recanalization (arterial occlusive lesion (AOL) 2/3) was achieved in 26 patients (79%). Complete recanalization (AOL 3) happened more often with AT (75% (95% CI 65-85%)) compared to SRT (46% (95% CI 32-60%)). Conversion rate 6% (two patients). Hemorrhages occurred in 12 (36%) patients, periprocedural complications in eight (three dissections, five embolizations to new territory) (no group difference). Ten patients (30%) had a favorable outcome (mRS ≤3) at discharge; mortality rate was 24% (eight deaths) (no group difference). Conclusion: In primarily embolic BAO, aspiration thrombectomy was faster, effective and not detrimental to outcome as compared to stentriever thrombectomy. Thus, it may be justified to use aspiration thrombectomy as first-line treatment in these patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00283940
Volume :
59
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Neuroradiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
122141556
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00234-017-1802-6