AI Article Synopsis

  • This study explores the predictive value of certain radiographic features for neurologic outcomes in patients with basilar artery occlusion (BAO) who undergo endovascular therapy, as prior trials only included specific patients based on prognostic scores.
  • It analyzes data from a thrombectomy database, correlating various demographic factors and radiographic scoring systems (PCCS, BATMAN, pc-ASPECTS) with 90-day neurologic outcomes, finding that lower scores on PCCS and BATMAN were linked to worse outcomes.
  • Results showed that 21.5% of patients had a good neurologic outcome after 90 days, with significant associations found between poor outcomes and existing infarcts in specific brain

Article Abstract

Background: Randomized controlled trials indicate functional and mortality benefits in endovascular therapy for basilar artery occlusion (BAO). However, these studies only include patients who meet specific prognostic scores. This study investigates radiographic predictors of posterior circulation territory infarcts that may predict neurologic outcome at 90-day post-intervention.

Methods: This is a retrospective cohort study of a prospectively maintained thrombectomy database of all patients who underwent mechanical thrombectomy for BAO. Baseline demographics, comorbidities, baseline functional status (mRS), and severity of presenting neurologic deficits (NIHSS) were collected. Pc-ASPECTS, posterior circulation collateral score (PCCS), and basilar artery on computed tomography angiography (BATMAN) measured radiographic characteristics. Core infarct territory was identified. Primary outcomes were good neurologic outcome (mRS 0-3) and poor neurologic outcome (mRS 4-6) at 90-day post-thrombectomy. 90-day mortality was a secondary outcome.

Results: About 21.5% of patients achieved a good neurologic outcome. About 32.3% of patients were deceased at 90 days. Receiver operating characteristic analysis shows PCCS collateral scores (AUC = 0.74, SE = 0.03, CI = 0.62-0.74) and BATMAN (AUC = 0.72, SE = 0.04, CI = 0.35-0.49) have potential to differentiate between those with good neurologic outcome from those with poor neurologic outcome. Although there was no statistically significant difference in AUC between the three curves, pc-ASPECTS score trended toward being weaker predictor of neurologic outcome (AUC = 0.49, SE = 0.04, CI = 0.35-0.49). There were significant associations between 90-day poor neurologic outcome and established infarcts within the pons ( = 0.01), left cerebellum ( = 0.01), and left occipital lobe ( = 0.03) on pre-thrombectomy CT.

Conclusion: Low BATMAN and PCCS collateral scores can be predictors of poor neurologic outcomes at 90-day post-thrombectomy for BAO while pc-ASPECTS score may be a weaker predictor of outcome.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11559930PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/15910199241285581DOI Listing

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