In this part 2 of EM Cases Journal Jam podcast on Thrombolysis and Endovascular Therapy for Stroke Justin Morgenstern, Rory Spiegel and Anton Helman do a deep dive into the world's literature on endovascular therapy for stroke. While the evidence for endovascular therapy is stronger than that for IV systemic thrombolysis for stroke outcomes at 90 days, a closer look at the literature reveals that a very small minority of patients are eligible for endovascular therapy and we still don't know which patients benefit most from endovascular therapy...
Podcast produced by Anton Helman, Justin Morgenstern and Rory Spiegel; sound design and editing by Anton Helman; EBM bomb by Anton Nikoline.
Written Summary and blog post by Anton Helman July, 2016
Cite this podcast as: Morgenstern, J, Spiegel, R, Helman, A. Part 2 Endovascular Therapy for Stroke. Emergency Medicine Cases. July, 2016. https://emergencymedicinecases.com/endovascular-therapy-stroke/. Accessed [date].
Endovascular Therapy for Stroke Trials
Adapted from R.E.B.E.L. EM
IMS-III
Broderick JP
2013
No benefit
MR RESCUE
Kidwell CS
2013
No benefit
SYNTHESIS
Ciccone A
2013
No benefit
MR CLEAN
Fransen PS
2014
13.5% disability benefit
ESCAPE
Goyal M
2015
24% disability benefit
EXTEND IA
Campbell BC
2015
31% disability benefit
SWIFT PRIME
Saver JL
2015
26% disability benefit
REVASCAT
Jovin TG
2015
16% disability benefit
THRACE
Bracard S
2016
11% disability benefit
THERAPY
Mocco J
2016
8% disability benefit
A very small percentage of patients with acute stroke (about 1%) will be eligible for endovascular therapy. Most of the trials listed above enrolled patients with anterior circulation large vessel severe strokes that have demonstrable salvageable brain tissue on imaging.
Issues with these endovascular therapy for stroke trials
* Open label (not blinded)
* Many were stopped early
* Inclusion criteria were heterogeneous between trials - different imaging requirements, differents timeframes, most people got tPa (but some didn’t), different interventions in addition to thrombectomy
* Indication creep (see this post by Kevin Klauer for explanation)
Food for thought on endovascular therapy for stroke
The bigger question is whether the small benefits of endovascular therapy to a very small number of patients is worth the larger societal costs of interventional radiologists on call, equipment, administration etc. for "code stroke" to be called at any time of day.
Drs. Helman, Morgenstern and Spiegel have no conflicts of interest to declare
References
Broderick JP et al. Endovascular Therapy After Intravenous t-PA Versus t-PA Alone for Stroke. NEJM 2013; 368(10): 893-903.
Kidwell CS et al. A Trial of Imaging Selection and Endovascular Treatment for Ischemic Stroke. NEJM 2013; 368(10): 914-23.
Ciccone A et al. Endovascular Treatment for Acute Ischemic Stroke. NEJM 2013; 368(10): 904-13.
Fransen PS et al.