Department of Neurology, Melbourne Brain Centre, The Royal Melbourne Hospital, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.
Neurology Unit, Department of Medicine, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia.
J Neurointerv Surg. 2024 Jun 17;16(7):652-656. doi: 10.1136/jnis-2023-020512.
First pass effect (FPE), defined as single-pass complete or near complete reperfusion during endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) for large vessel occlusion (LVO) strokes, is a critical performance metric. Atrial fibrillation (AF)-related strokes have different clot composition compared with non-AF strokes, which may impact thrombectomy reperfusion results. We compared FPE rates in AF and non-AF stroke patients to evaluate if AF-related strokes had higher FPE rates.
We conducted a post-hoc analysis of the DIRECT-SAFE trial data, including patients with retrievable clots on the initial angiographic run. Patients were categorized into AF and non-AF groups. The primary outcome was the presence or absence of FPE (single-pass, single-device resulting in complete/near complete reperfusion) in AF and non-AF groups. We used multivariable logistic regression to examine the association between FPE and AF, adjusting for thrombolysis pre-thrombectomy and clot location.
We included 253 patients (67 with AF, 186 without AF). AF patients were older (mean age: 74 years vs 67.5 years, p=0.001), had a higher proportion of females (55% vs 40%, p=0.044), and experienced more severe strokes (median National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score: 17 vs 14, p=0.009) than non-AF patients. No differences were observed in thrombolytic agent usage, time metrics, or clot location. AF patients achieved a higher proportion of FPE compared with non-AF patients (55.22% vs 37.3%, adjusted odds ratio 2.00 (95% CI 1.13 to 3.55), p=0.017).
AF-related strokes in LVO patients treated with EVT were associated with FPE. This highlights the need for preparedness for multiple passes and potential adjuvant/rescue therapy in non-AF-related strokes.
首次通过效应(FPE)定义为血管内血栓切除术(EVT)治疗大血管闭塞(LVO)卒中时单次通过完全或近乎完全再灌注,是一项关键的性能指标。与非房颤(AF)相关的卒中相比,房颤相关的卒中的血栓组成不同,这可能会影响血栓切除术再灌注的结果。我们比较了房颤和非房颤卒中患者的 FPE 率,以评估房颤相关卒中是否具有更高的 FPE 率。
我们对 DIRECT-SAFE 试验数据进行了事后分析,包括初始血管造影运行中可回收血栓的患者。患者分为房颤和非房颤组。主要结局是房颤和非房颤组是否存在 FPE(单次通过,单次使用设备导致完全/近乎完全再灌注)。我们使用多变量逻辑回归来检查 FPE 与房颤之间的关联,调整溶栓前和血栓位置。
我们纳入了 253 名患者(67 名房颤,186 名非房颤)。房颤患者年龄较大(平均年龄:74 岁 vs 67.5 岁,p=0.001),女性比例较高(55% vs 40%,p=0.044),卒中严重程度更严重(中位数国立卫生研究院卒中量表(NIHSS)评分:17 分 vs 14 分,p=0.009)。两组在溶栓药物使用、时间指标或血栓位置方面无差异。与非房颤患者相比,房颤患者 FPE 比例更高(55.22% vs 37.3%,调整后的优势比 2.00(95%CI 1.13 至 3.55),p=0.017)。
在接受 EVT 治疗的 LVO 患者中,房颤相关卒中与 FPE 相关。这突出表明需要为非房颤相关卒中做好多次通过和潜在辅助/挽救治疗的准备。