Stroke Aetiology and Collateral Status in Acute Ischemic Stroke Patients Receiving Reperfusion Therapy—A Meta-Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Literature Search: Identification and Selection of Studies
2.2. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
2.3. Data Extraction
2.4. Quality Assessment of Included Studies
2.5. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Description of Included Studies
3.2. Association of Large Artery Atherosclerosis with Pre-Intervention Collateral Status
3.3. Association of Cardioembolism with Pre-Intervention Collateral Status
4. Discussion
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study ID i | Author | Year | Region | Study Type | Cohort | Reperfusion | Pre-Intervention Characteristics | Collateral Grading | Stroke Aetiology ii | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reperfusion Modality | tPA n (%) | EVT n (%) | EVT ± tPA n (%) | Age, Years Mean ± SD | Sex, Male n (%) | Good Collaterals, n (%) | Imaging Modality | Collateral Grading Method | Definition of Good Collaterals iii | Definition of Poor Collaterals iii | LAA, n (%) | CE, n (%) | ||||||||||
O | GC | PC | O | GC | BC | |||||||||||||||||
5 | Chang et al. [8] | 2019 | USA | Retrospective | 90 | EVT | NA | 90 (100) | NA | 72.3 ± 11.8 | 54 (60) | 41 (45.6) | mCTA | Menon et al. | 4 (when compared with the asymptomatic contralateral hemisphere, there is a delay of one phase in filling in of peripheral vessels, but prominence and extent is the same); 5 (there is no delay and normal or increased prominence of pial vessels/normal extent within the ischemic territory in the symptomatic hemisphere). | 0 (when compared with the asymptomatic contralateral hemisphere, there are no vessels visible in any phase within the ischemic vascular territory); 1 (there are just a few vessels visible in any phase within the occluded vascular territory); 2 (there is a delay of two phases in filling in of peripheral vessels and decreased prominence and extent or a one-phase delay and some ischemic regions with no vessels); 3 (there is a delay of two phases in filling of peripheral vessels or there is a one-phase delay and significantly reduced number of vessels in the ischemic territory). | NA | NA | NA | 54 (60) | 20 (22.2) | 34 (37.8) |
18 | Sallustio et al. [9] | 2017 | Italy | Retrospective | 135 | EVT ± tPA | 79 (58.5) | 135 (100) | 79 (58.5) | 68.3 ± 14.3 | 67 (49.6) | 75 (55.6) | Cerebral angiography | Christoforidis et al. | 1 (collaterals reconstituted the distal portion of the occluded vessel segment); 2 (collaterals reconstituted vessels in the proximal portion of the segment adjacent to the occluded vessel); 3 (collaterals reconstituted vessels in the distal portion of the segment adjacent to the occluded vessel); 4 (collaterals reconstituted vessels two segments distal to the occluded vessel); 5 (little or no significant reconstitution of the territory of the occluded vessel). | 47 (34.8) | 26 (19.3) | 21 (15.6) | 64 (47.4) | 35 (26) | 29 (21.5) | |
“Good” | “Poor” | |||||||||||||||||||||
19 | Sheth et al. [10] | 2016 | USA | Retrospective | 117 | EVT ± tPA | 59 (50.4) | 96 (82.1) | NA iv | 66.7 ± 16.7 | 45 (38.5) | 51 (43.6) | Cerebral angiography | ASITN/SIR | 3 (collaterals with slow but complete angiographic blood flow of the ischemic bed by the late venous phase); 4 (complete and rapid collateral blood flow to the vascular bed in the entire ischemic territory by retrograde perfusion). | 0 (no collaterals visible to the ischemic site); 1 (slow collaterals to the periphery of the ischemic site with the persistence of some of the defect); 2 (rapid collaterals to the periphery of ischemic site with the persistence of some of the defect and only a portion of the ischemic territory). | 32 (27.3) | 16 (13.6) | 16 (13.7) | 59 (50.4) | 26 (22.2) | 33 (28.2) |
22 v | Hwang et al. [11] | 2015 | Korea | Retrospective | 207 | EVT ± tPA vi | 103 (49.8) | NA vii | NA vii | 67.1 ± 11.1 | 125 (60.4) | 131 (63.3) | Cerebral angiography | ASITN/SIR | 2 (Rapid collateral vessels to the periphery of ischemic site with the persistence of some of the defect and to only a portion of the ischemic territory); 3 (Collateral vessels with slow but complete angiographic blood flow of the ischemic bed by the late venous phase); 4 (Complete and rapid collateral blood flow to the vascular bed in the entire ischemic territory by retrograde perfusion). | 0 (No collateral vessels visible to the ischemic site); 1 (Slow collateral vessels to the periphery of the ischemic site with the persistence of some of the defect). | 66 (31.9) | 40 (19.3) | 26 (12.6) | 107 (51.7) | 68 (32.8) | 39 (18.8) |
31 viii | Al-Dasqui et al. [3] | 2020 | USA | Retrospective | 283 | EVT ± tPA | 130 (45.9) | 270 (95.4) | NA ix | 69.2 ± 15.2 | 159 (56.2) | 129 (45.6) | sCTA | Miteff | Good (major MCA branches reconstituted distal to the occlusion) | moderate (some MCA branches shown in the Sylvian fissure); poor (only distal superficial MCA branches reconstituted). | 52 (18.4) | 32 (11.3) | 20 (7.1) | 178 (62.9) | 68 (24) | 110 (38.9) |
33 | Hassler et al. [12] | 2020 | Austria | Retrospective | 281 | EVT ± tPA | 166 (59.1) | 281 (100) | 166 (59.1) | 68.6 ± 12.1 | 144 (51.2) | 143 (50.9) | sCTA, MRI | Tan | 2 (collateral supply filling >50% but <100%); 3 (100% collateral supply of the occluded MCA territory). | 0 (absent collateral supply of the affected MCA territory); 1 (collateral supply filling ≤ 50%). | 46 (16.4) | 35 (12.5) | 11 (3.9) | NA | NA | NA |
39 | Rebello et al. [4] | 2017 | USA | Retrospective | 122 | EVT ± tPA | 54 (44.3) | 122 (100) | 54 (44.3) | 69.7 ± 12.9 | 64 (52.5) | 94 (77) | sCTA | Souza et al. | 2 (diminished collaterals in <50% of the affected territory); 3 (collaterals equal to the contralateral side); 4 (increased collaterals). | 0 (absent collaterals in >50% of the affected territory); 1 (diminished collaterals in >50% of the affected territory). | 34 (27.9) | 31 (25.4) | 3 (2.5) | 88 (72.1) | 63 (51.6) | 25 (20.5) |
Clinical Variable | Number of Patients with Data Available | Characteristics n (%) |
---|---|---|
Risk Factors | ||
Atrial fibrillation | 952 | 466 (48.9) |
Diabetes mellitus | 952 | 194 (20.3) |
Hyperlipidaemia | 817 | 232 (28.4) |
Hypertension | 952 | 654 (67.7) |
Coronary artery disease | 297 | 44 (14.8) |
Past stroke | 414 | 80 (19.3) |
Smoker | 952 | 198 (20.8) |
Aetiology | ||
Larger artery atherosclerosis | 1145 | 277 (24.2) |
Cardio embolism | 954 | 550 (57.7) |
Undetermined | 490 | 87 (17.8) |
Small vessel disease | 117 | 1 (0.8) |
Outcome | Effect Measure | Treatment Subgroup | Summary Effects | Heterogeneity ¶ | Heterogeneity Variance Estimates | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
REDL | FEMH | FEIV | |||||||||||
RR (95% CI) | Tests of Overall Effect | RR (95% CI) | Tests of Overall Effect | RR (95% CI) | Tests of Overall Effect | Cochran’s Q | H | I2 * | p-Value | τ2 † | |||
LAA | RR | EVT ± tPA | 1.24 (1.04–1.50) | p = 0.02 z = 2.33 | 1.23 (1.11–1.36) | p < 0.0001 z = 3.87 | 1.27 (1.15–1.39) | p < 0.0001 z = 4.75 | 16.05 | 1.79 | 68.8 | 0.007 | 0.0346 |
CE | RR | EVT ± tPA | 0.83 (0.71–0.98) | p = 0.027 z = −2.213 | 0.84 (0.75–0.94) | p = 0.002 z = −3.149 | 0.83 (0.75–0.92) | p < 0.0001 z = −3.526 | 10.61 | 1.46 | 52.9 | 0.060 | 0.0198 |
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Sinha, A.; Stanwell, P.; Beran, R.G.; Calic, Z.; Killingsworth, M.C.; Bhaskar, S.M.M. Stroke Aetiology and Collateral Status in Acute Ischemic Stroke Patients Receiving Reperfusion Therapy—A Meta-Analysis. Neurol. Int. 2021, 13, 608-621. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurolint13040060
Sinha A, Stanwell P, Beran RG, Calic Z, Killingsworth MC, Bhaskar SMM. Stroke Aetiology and Collateral Status in Acute Ischemic Stroke Patients Receiving Reperfusion Therapy—A Meta-Analysis. Neurology International. 2021; 13(4):608-621. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurolint13040060
Chicago/Turabian StyleSinha, Akansha, Peter Stanwell, Roy G. Beran, Zeljka Calic, Murray C. Killingsworth, and Sonu M. M. Bhaskar. 2021. "Stroke Aetiology and Collateral Status in Acute Ischemic Stroke Patients Receiving Reperfusion Therapy—A Meta-Analysis" Neurology International 13, no. 4: 608-621. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurolint13040060
APA StyleSinha, A., Stanwell, P., Beran, R. G., Calic, Z., Killingsworth, M. C., & Bhaskar, S. M. M. (2021). Stroke Aetiology and Collateral Status in Acute Ischemic Stroke Patients Receiving Reperfusion Therapy—A Meta-Analysis. Neurology International, 13(4), 608-621. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurolint13040060