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Published Online
on October 15, 2009

Stroke. 2009
Published online before print October 15, 2009, doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.109.561787
A more recent version of this article appeared on December 1, 2009
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Submitted on July 6, 2009
Revised on August 13, 2009
Accepted on September 3, 2009

Significance of Large Vessel Intracranial Occlusion Causing Acute Ischemic Stroke and TIA

Wade S. Smith MD, PhD*; Michael H. Lev MD, FAHA; Joey D. English MD, PhD; Erica C. Camargo MD, MMSc; Maggie Chou; S. Claiborne Johnston MD, PhD; Gilberto Gonzalez MD, PhD; Pamela W. Schaefer MD; William P. Dillon MD; Walter J. Koroshetz MD; and Karen L. Furie MD, MPH

From the Departments of Neurology (W.S.S., J.D.E., S.C.J.) and Radiology (W.P.D.), University of California, San Francisco, Calif; the Departments of Radiology (M.H.L., G.G., P.W.S.) and Neurology (E.C.C., K.L.F.), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Mass; the Department of Neurology (M.C.), Columbia University, New York, NY; and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (W.J.K.), Bethesda, Md.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: smithw{at}neurology.ucsf.edu.

Background and Purpose—Acute ischemic stroke due to large vessel occlusion (LVO)—vertebral, basilar, carotid terminus, middle and anterior cerebral arteries—likely portends a worse prognosis than stroke unassociated with LVO. Because little prospective angiographic data have been reported on a cohort of unselected patients with stroke and with transient ischemic attack, the clinical impact of LVO has been difficult to quantify.

Methods—The Screening Technology and Outcome Project in Stroke Study is a prospective imaging-based study of stroke outcomes performed at 2 academic medical centers. Patients with suspected acute stroke who presented within 24 hours of symptom onset and who underwent multimodality CT/CT angiography were approached for consent for collection of clinical data and 6-month assessment of outcome. Demographic and clinical variables and 6-month modified Rankin Scale scores were collected and combined with blinded interpretation of the CT angiography data. The OR of each variable, including occlusion of intracranial vascular segment in predicting good outcome and 6-month mortality, was calculated using univariate and multivariate logistic regression.

Results—Over a 33-month period, 735 patients with suspected stroke were enrolled. Of these, 578 were adjudicated as stroke and 97 as transient ischemic attack. Among patients with stroke, 267 (46%) had LVO accounting for the stroke and 13 (13%) of patients with transient ischemic attack had LVO accounting for transient ischemic attack symptoms. LVO predicted 6-month mortality (OR, 4.5; 95% CI, 2.7 to 7.3; P<0.001). Six-month good outcome (modified Rankin Scale score ≤2) was negatively predicted by LVO (0.33; 0.24 to 0.45; P<0.001). Based on multivariate analysis, the presence of basilar and internal carotid terminus occlusions, in addition to National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale and age, independently predicted outcome.

Conclusion—Large vessel intracranial occlusion accounted for nearly half of acute ischemic strokes in unselected patients presenting to academic medical centers. In addition to age and baseline stroke severity, occlusion of either the basilar or internal carotid terminus segment is an independent predictor of outcome at 6 months.


Key words: CT angiography • prognosis