Basilar artery occlusion management: Specialist perspectives from an international survey

Authors

EDWARDS Christopher DRUMM Brian SIEGLER James E SCHONEWILLE Wouter J KLEIN Piers HUO Xiaochuan CHEN Yimin ABDALKADER Mohamad QURESHI Muhammad M STRBIAN Daniel LIU Xinfeng HU Wei JI Xunming LI Chuanhui FISCHER Urs NAGEL Simon PUETZ Volker MICHEL Patrik ALEMSEGED Fana SACCO Simona YAMAGAMI Hiroshi YAGHI Shadi STRAMBO Davide KRISTOFFERSEN Espen Saxhaug SANDSET Else C MIKULÍK Robert TSIVGOULIS Georgios MASOUD Hesham E AGUIAR de Sousa Diana MARTO Joao Pedro LOBOTESIS Kyriakos ROI Dylan BERBERICH Anne DEMEESTERE Jelle MEINEL Thomas R RIVERA Rodrigo POLI Sven TON Mai Duy ZHU Yuyou LI Fengli SANG Hongfei THOMALLA Goetz PARSONS Mark CAMPBELL Bruce C V ZAIDAT Osama O CHEN Hui-Sheng FIELD Thalia S RAYMOND Jean KAESMACHER Johannes NOGUEIRA Raul G JOVIN Tudor G SUN Dapeng LIU Raynald QURESHI Adnan I QIU Zhongming MIAO Zhongrong BANERJEE Soma NGUYEN Thanh N

Year of publication 2023
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Journal of Neuroimaging
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
Web https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jon.13084
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jon.13084
Keywords basilar artery occlusion; endovascular therapy; intravenous thrombolysis; mechanical thrombectomy
Description Background and PurposeTwo early basilar artery occlusion (BAO) randomized controlled trials did not establish the superiority of endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) over medical management. While many providers continue to recommend EVT for acute BAO, perceptions of equipoise in randomizing patients with BAO to EVT versus medical management may differ between clinician specialties. MethodsWe conducted an international survey (January 18, 2022 to March 31, 2022) regarding management strategies in acute BAO prior to the announcement of two trials indicating the superiority of EVT, and compared responses between interventionalists (INTs) and non-interventionalists (nINTs). Selection practices for routine EVT and perceptions of equipoise regarding randomizing to medical management based on neuroimaging and clinical features were compared between the two groups using descriptive statistics. ResultsAmong the 1245 respondents (nINTs = 702), INTs more commonly believed that EVT was superior to medical management in acute BAO (98.5% vs. 95.1%, p < .01). A similar proportion of INTs and nINTs responded that they would not randomize a patient with BAO to EVT (29.4% vs. 26.7%), or that they would only under specific clinical circumstances (p = .45). Among respondents who would recommend EVT for BAO, there was no difference in the maximum prestroke disability, minimum stroke severity, or infarct burden on computed tomography between the two groups (p > .05), although nINTs more commonly preferred perfusion imaging (24.2% vs. 19.7%, p = .04). Among respondents who indicated they would randomize to medical management, INTs were more likely to randomize when the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale was >= 10 (15.9% vs. 6.9%, p < .01). ConclusionsFollowing the publication of two neutral clinical trials in BAO EVT, most stroke providers believed EVT to be superior to medical management in carefully selected patients, with most indicating they would not randomize a BAO patient to medical treatment. There were small differences in preference for advanced neuroimaging for patient selection, although these preferences were unsupported by clinical trial data at the time of the survey.

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