Impact of aspiration catheter size on clinical outcomes in aspiration thrombectomy.
Publication/Presentation Date
9-1-2023
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Direct aspiration thrombectomy is a well-established method for mechanical thrombectomy in acute ischemic stroke. Yet, the influence of aspiration catheter internal diameter (ID) on aspiration thrombectomy efficacy is incompletely understood.
METHODS: A systematic literature review and meta-regression analysis was completed to evaluate the impact of primary aspiration thrombectomy outcomes based on the ID of the aspiration catheter. Primary outcome measures were: final recanalization of modified Thrombolysis In Cerebral Ischemia (mTICI) 2b-3 with aspiration only and with rescue modalities, first pass effect (FPE), need for rescue modalities, intracranial hemorrhagic complication rates, and functional outcomes of 90-day modified Rankin Scale (mRS) of 0-2.
RESULTS: 30 studies were identified with 3228 patients. Meta-regression analysis revealed a significant association between increasing aspiration catheter ID and FPE (p=0.032), between ID and final recanalization with aspiration only (p=0.05), and between ID size and recanalization including cases with rescue modalities (p=0.002). Further, subgroup analysis indicated that catheters with an ID ≥0.064 inch had a lower rate of need for rescue than smaller catheters (p=0.013). Additionally, catheters with an ID ≥0.068 inch had a higher rate of intracranial bleeding complications (p=0.025). Lastly, no significant association was found in functional outcomes overall.
CONCLUSIONS: Larger aspiration catheters are associated with a higher rate of FPE, final recanalization with only an aspiration catheter, and in cases with rescue modalities, though with a higher rate of hemorrhagic complications. These findings confirm that aspiration catheter size functions as a variable in aspiration thrombectomy, which should be considered in future study and trial design.
Volume
15
Issue
e1
First Page
111
Last Page
111
ISSN
1759-8486
Published In/Presented At
Schartz, D., Ellens, N., Kohli, G. S., Rahmani, R., Akkipeddi, S. M. K., Colby, G. P., Hui, F., Bhalla, T., Mattingly, T., & Bender, M. T. (2023). Impact of aspiration catheter size on clinical outcomes in aspiration thrombectomy. Journal of neurointerventional surgery, 15(e1), e111–e116. https://doi.org/10.1136/jnis-2022-019246
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
35918126
Department(s)
Department of Surgery
Document Type
Article