Multiparametric Model for Penumbral Flow Prediction in Acute Stroke.

Stroke

From the Center for Stroke Research Berlin (CSB) (M.L., T.K., V.I.M., J.S.), and Department of Neurosurgery (V.I.M.), Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Germany; Max-Planck-Institute for Neurological Research, Cologne, Germany (O.Z.-W., W.-D.H.); Department of Radiology, Ludmillenstift Meppen, Germany (W.M.-H.); and Center of Functionally Integrative Neuroscience, Aarhus University, Denmark (K.M.).

Published: July 2017

Background And Purpose: Identification of salvageable penumbra tissue by dynamic susceptibility contrast magnetic resonance imaging is a valuable tool for acute stroke patient stratification for treatment. However, prior studies have not attempted to combine the different perfusion maps into a predictive model. In this study, we established a multiparametric perfusion imaging model and cross-validated it using positron emission tomography perfusion for detection of penumbral flow.

Methods: In a retrospective analysis of 17 subacute stroke patients with consecutive magnetic resonance imaging and H2O15 positron emission tomography scans, perfusion maps of cerebral blood flow, cerebral blood volume, mean transit time, time-to-maximum, and time-to-peak were constructed and combined using a generalized linear model (GLM). Both the GLM maps and the single perfusion maps alone were cross-validated with positron emission tomography-cerebral blood flow scans to predict penumbral flow on a voxel-wise level. Performance was tested by receiver-operating characteristics curve analysis, that is, the area under the curve, and the models' fits were compared using the likelihood ratio test.

Results: The GLM demonstrated significantly improved model fit compared with each of the single perfusion maps (<1×e-5) and demonstrated higher performance, with an area under the curve of 0.91. However, the absolute difference between the performance of GLM and the best-performing single perfusion parameter (time-to-maximum) was relatively low (area under the curve difference =0.04).

Conclusions: Our results support a dynamic susceptibility contrast magnetic resonance imaging-based GLM as an improved model for penumbral flow prediction in stroke patients. With given perfusion maps, this model is a straightforward and observer-independent alternative for therapy stratification.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.117.016631DOI Listing

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