Background: Recanalizing therapy in ischemic stroke is restricted to thrombolysis within 3 h. Multimodal imaging of vessel and parenchymal perfusion status may allow the extension of this time window.
Aim: To retrospectively analyze treatment results of any recanalizing therapy in clinical practice.
Methods: Patients comprised three groups: 'standard' intravenous thrombolysis within 3 h; 'off-label' intravenous thrombolysis, and off-label interventional therapy. Recanalizing therapy was applied dependent on multimodal CT according to standardized pathways. Short-term clinical courses were analyzed.
Results: Of 543 patients (ischemic stroke, TIA), 68 (12.5%) received some type of recanalizing therapy. Of these, 47 (mean age 73.4, 24 female, mean symptom onset and hospital admission 62 min) received standard and 10 off-label thrombolysis (70.8, 6 female, 332 min), and 11 interventional therapy, mostly mechanical thrombectomy (mean age 62.5, 7 female, 186 min). Mean Δ short-term National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (2-5 days) in these three groups were 3.7 ± 4.7, 3.9 ± 4.4, and 4.1 ± 5.8, respectively. The short-term clinical benefit was similar in the three groups.
Conclusion: Off-label therapy is considered to have a higher risk of complications. However, if multimodal CT imaging of acute ischemic stroke is incorporated in everyday clinical decision-making, the rate of effective recanalizing procedures may be increased without an apparent negative effect on short-term outcome.
Copyright © 2012 S. Karger AG, Basel.