作者
Valerio Da Ros,Federica Pusceddu,Simona Lattanzi,Jacopo Scaggiante,Fabrizio Sallustio,Federico Marrama,M. Poggio,Gianpaolo Toscano,Francesca Di Giuliano,Claudia Rolla‐Bigliani,Maria Ruggiero,Niccolo Haznedari,Alessandro Sgreccia,Giuseppina Sanfilippo,Cinzia Finocchi,Marina Diomedi,Santino Ottavio Tomasi,Paolo Palmisciano,Giuseppe Emmanuele Umana,Lidia Strigari,Christoph J. Griessenauer,Francesca Pitocchi,Francesco Garaci,Roberto Floris
摘要
Background The optimal management of patients with acute ischemic stroke (AIS) due to tandem occlusion (TO) and underlying carotid dissection (CD) remains unclear. Objective We present our multicenter-experience of endovascular treatment (EVT) approach used and outcomes for AIS patients with CD-related TO (CD-TO). Methods Consecutive AIS patients underwent EVT for CD-TO at five Italian Neuro-interventional Tertiary Stroke Centers were retrospectively identified. TO from atherosclerosis and other causes of, were excluded from the final analysis. Primary outcome was successful (mTICI 2b-3) and complete reperfusion (mTICI 3); secondary outcome was patients’ 3-months functional independence (mRS≤2). Results Among 214 AIS patients with TO, 45 presented CD-TO. Median age was 54 years (range 29–86), 82.2% were male. Age <65 years ( p < 0.0001), lower baseline NIHSS score ( p = 0.0002), and complete circle of Willis ( p = 0.0422) were associated with mRS ≤ 2 at the multivariate analysis. Comparisons between antegrade and retrograde approaches resulted in differences for baseline NIHSS scores ( p = 0.001) and number of EVT attempts per-procedure ( p = 0.001). No differences in terms of recanalization rates were observed between antegrade and retrograde EVT approaches ( p = 0.811) but higher rates of mTICI3 revascularization was observed with the retrograde compared to the antegrade approach (78.6% vs 73.3%), anyway not statistically significant. CD management technique (angioplasty vs aspiration vs emergent stenting) did not correlate with 3-months mRS≤2. Conclusion AIS patients with CD-TO were mostly treated with the retrograde approach with lower number of attempts per-procedure but it offered similar recanalization rates compared with the antegrade approach. Emergent carotid artery stenting (CAS) proved to be safe for CD management but it does not influence 3-months patients’ clinical outcomes.