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Endovascular thrombectomy for acute ischemic stroke

Wassélius, Johan LU ; Arnberg, Fabian ; von Euler, Mia ; Wester, Per and Ullberg, Teresa LU (2022) In Journal of Internal Medicine 291(3). p.303-316
Abstract

This review describes the evolution of endovascular treatment for acute ischemic stroke, current state of the art, and the challenges for the next decade. The rapid development of endovascular thrombectomy (EVT), from the first attempts into standard of care on a global scale, is one of the major achievements in modern medicine. It was possible thanks to the establishment of a scientific framework for patient selection, assessment of stroke severity and outcome, technical development by dedicated physicians and the MedTech industry, including noninvasive imaging for patient selection, and radiological outcome evaluation. A series of randomized controlled trials on EVT in addition to intravenous thrombolytics, with overwhelmingly... (More)

This review describes the evolution of endovascular treatment for acute ischemic stroke, current state of the art, and the challenges for the next decade. The rapid development of endovascular thrombectomy (EVT), from the first attempts into standard of care on a global scale, is one of the major achievements in modern medicine. It was possible thanks to the establishment of a scientific framework for patient selection, assessment of stroke severity and outcome, technical development by dedicated physicians and the MedTech industry, including noninvasive imaging for patient selection, and radiological outcome evaluation. A series of randomized controlled trials on EVT in addition to intravenous thrombolytics, with overwhelmingly positive results for anterior circulation stroke within 6 h of onset regardless of patient characteristics with a number needed to treat of less than 3 for any positive shift in outcome, paved the way for a rapid introduction of EVT into clinical practice. Within the “extended” time window of 6–24 h, the effect has been even greater for patients with salvageable brain tissue according to perfusion imaging with a number needed to treat below 2. Even so, EVT is only available for a small portion of stroke patients, and successfully recanalized EVT patients do not always achieve excellent functional outcome. The major challenges in the years to come include rapid prehospital detection of stroke symptoms, adequate clinical and radiological diagnosis of severe ischemic stroke cases, enabling effective recanalization by EVT in dedicated angiosuites, followed by personalized post-EVT stroke care.

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author
; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
acute ischemic stroke, contact aspiration thrombectomy, endovascular thrombectomy, interventional neuroradiology, intravenous thrombolysis, stentretriever thrombectomy
in
Journal of Internal Medicine
volume
291
issue
3
pages
14 pages
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • pmid:35172028
  • scopus:85124711186
ISSN
0954-6820
DOI
10.1111/joim.13425
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
80752f49-f95a-4e2b-a40c-3aab4d008618
date added to LUP
2022-04-13 14:16:28
date last changed
2024-06-18 16:03:32
@article{80752f49-f95a-4e2b-a40c-3aab4d008618,
  abstract     = {{<p>This review describes the evolution of endovascular treatment for acute ischemic stroke, current state of the art, and the challenges for the next decade. The rapid development of endovascular thrombectomy (EVT), from the first attempts into standard of care on a global scale, is one of the major achievements in modern medicine. It was possible thanks to the establishment of a scientific framework for patient selection, assessment of stroke severity and outcome, technical development by dedicated physicians and the MedTech industry, including noninvasive imaging for patient selection, and radiological outcome evaluation. A series of randomized controlled trials on EVT in addition to intravenous thrombolytics, with overwhelmingly positive results for anterior circulation stroke within 6 h of onset regardless of patient characteristics with a number needed to treat of less than 3 for any positive shift in outcome, paved the way for a rapid introduction of EVT into clinical practice. Within the “extended” time window of 6–24 h, the effect has been even greater for patients with salvageable brain tissue according to perfusion imaging with a number needed to treat below 2. Even so, EVT is only available for a small portion of stroke patients, and successfully recanalized EVT patients do not always achieve excellent functional outcome. The major challenges in the years to come include rapid prehospital detection of stroke symptoms, adequate clinical and radiological diagnosis of severe ischemic stroke cases, enabling effective recanalization by EVT in dedicated angiosuites, followed by personalized post-EVT stroke care.</p>}},
  author       = {{Wassélius, Johan and Arnberg, Fabian and von Euler, Mia and Wester, Per and Ullberg, Teresa}},
  issn         = {{0954-6820}},
  keywords     = {{acute ischemic stroke; contact aspiration thrombectomy; endovascular thrombectomy; interventional neuroradiology; intravenous thrombolysis; stentretriever thrombectomy}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{3}},
  pages        = {{303--316}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Journal of Internal Medicine}},
  title        = {{Endovascular thrombectomy for acute ischemic stroke}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/joim.13425}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/joim.13425}},
  volume       = {{291}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}