Arba Francesco, Leigh Richard, Inzitari Domenico, Warach Steven J, Luby Marie, Lees Kennedy R
From the NEUROFARBA Department (F.A., D.I.), University of Florence, Italy; National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (R.L., M.L.), NIH, Bethesda, MD; Institute of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences (F.A.), Queen Elizabeth University Hospital, Glasgow, UK; Department of Neurology (S.J.W.), Dell Medical School, University of Texas at Austin; and Institute of Cardiovascular & Medical Sciences (K.R.L.), University of Glasgow, UK.
Neurology. 2017 Nov 21;89(21):2143-2150. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000004677. Epub 2017 Oct 25.
In patients with acute ischemic stroke, we aimed to investigate the relation between preexisting small vessel disease (SVD) and the amount of blood-brain barrier (BBB) leakage in ischemic and nonischemic area before IV thrombolysis.
We retrospectively accessed anonymous patient-level data from the Stroke Imaging Repository and the Virtual International Stroke Trials Archive resources and included patients treated with IV thrombolysis with pretreatment MRI. We rated SVD features using validated qualitative magnetic resonance (MR) scales. Leakage of BBB was assessed with postprocessing of perfusion-weighted images. We evaluated associations between SVD features (individually and summed in a global SVD score) and BBB leakage using linear regression analysis, adjusting for major clinical confounders.
A total of 212 patients, mean age (±SD) 69.5 years (±16.1), 102 (48%) male, had available MR before IV thrombolysis. Evidence of BBB leakage was present in 175 (80%) and 205 (94%) patients in the ischemic and nonischemic area, respectively. Lacunar infarcts (β = 0.17, = 0.042) were associated with BBB leakage in the ischemic area, and brain atrophy was associated with BBB leakage in both ischemic (β = 0.20, = 0.026) and nonischemic (β = 0.27, = 0.001) areas. Increasing SVD grade was independently associated with BBB leakage in both ischemic (β = 0.26, = 0.007) and nonischemic (β = 0.27, = 0.003) area.
Global SVD burden is associated with increased BBB leakage in both acutely ischemic and nonischemic area. Our results support that SVD score has construct validity, and confirm a relation between SVD and BBB disruption also in patients with acute stroke.
在急性缺血性脑卒中患者中,我们旨在研究既往存在的小血管疾病(SVD)与静脉溶栓前缺血区和非缺血区血脑屏障(BBB)渗漏量之间的关系。
我们回顾性获取了来自卒中影像库和虚拟国际卒中试验档案资源的匿名患者水平数据,并纳入了接受静脉溶栓且有治疗前MRI的患者。我们使用经过验证的定性磁共振(MR)量表对SVD特征进行评分。通过灌注加权图像的后处理评估BBB渗漏情况。我们使用线性回归分析评估SVD特征(单独及汇总为总体SVD评分)与BBB渗漏之间的关联,并对主要临床混杂因素进行校正。
共有212例患者在静脉溶栓前有可用的MR,平均年龄(±标准差)为69.5岁(±16.1),男性102例(48%)。缺血区和非缺血区分别有175例(80%)和205例(94%)患者存在BBB渗漏证据。腔隙性梗死(β = 0.17,P = 0.042)与缺血区BBB渗漏相关,脑萎缩与缺血区(β = 0.20,P = 0.026)和非缺血区(β = 0.27,P = 0.001)的BBB渗漏均相关。SVD分级增加与缺血区(β = 0.26,P = 0.007)和非缺血区(β = 0.27,P = 0.003)的BBB渗漏均独立相关。
总体SVD负担与急性缺血区和非缺血区BBB渗漏增加相关。我们的结果支持SVD评分具有结构效度,并证实了急性卒中患者中SVD与BBB破坏之间的关系。