- Nael, Kambiz;
- Knitter, James R;
- Jahan, Reza;
- Gornbein, Jeffery;
- Ajani, Zahra;
- Feng, Lei;
- Meyer, Brett C;
- Schwamm, Lee H;
- Yoo, Albert J;
- Marshall, Randolph S;
- Meyers, Philip M;
- Yavagal, Dileep R;
- Wintermark, Max;
- Liebeskind, David S;
- Guzy, Judy;
- Starkman, Sidney;
- Saver, Jeffrey L;
- Kidwell, Chelsea S
Background and purpose
Patients with acute ischemic stroke are at increased risk of developing parenchymal hemorrhage (PH), particularly in the setting of reperfusion therapies. We have developed a predictive model to examine the risk of PH using combined magnetic resonance perfusion and diffusion parameters, including cerebral blood volume (CBV), apparent diffusion coefficient, and microvascular permeability (K2).Methods
Voxel-based values of CBV, K2, and apparent diffusion coefficient from the ischemic core were obtained using pretreatment magnetic resonance imaging data from patients enrolled in the MR RESCUE clinical trial (Mechanical Retrieval and Recanalization of Stroke Clots Using Embolectomy). The associations between PH and extreme values of imaging parameters were assessed in univariate and multivariate analyses. Receiver-operating characteristic curve analysis was performed to determine the optimal parameter(s) and threshold for predicting PH.Results
In 83 patients included in this analysis, 20 developed PH. Univariate analysis showed significantly lower 10th percentile CBV and 10th percentile apparent diffusion coefficient values and significantly higher 90th percentile K2 values within the infarction core of patients with PH. Using classification tree analysis, the 10th percentile CBV at threshold of 0.47 and 90th percentile K2 at threshold of 0.28 resulted in overall predictive accuracy of 88.7%, sensitivity of 90.0%, and specificity of 87.3%, which was superior to any individual or combination of other classifiers.Conclusions
Our results suggest that combined 10th percentile CBV and 90th percentile K2 is an independent predictor of PH in patients with acute ischemic stroke with diagnostic accuracy superior to individual classifiers alone. This approach may allow risk stratification for patients undergoing reperfusion therapies.Clinical trial registration
URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00389467.