Placing the balloon-guide catheter in the high cervical segment of the internal carotid artery is associated with improved recanalization

Author:

Moreu ManuelORCID,Gómez-Escalonilla Carlos,Miralbes Salvador,Naravetla Bharath,Spiotta Alejandro MORCID,Loehr Christian,Martínez-Galdámez MarioORCID,McTaggart Ryan A,Defreyne LucORCID,Vega PedroORCID,Zaidat Osama OORCID,Price Lori Lyn,Liebeskind David SORCID,Möhlenbruch Markus A,Gupta Rishi,Rosati Santiago

Abstract

BackgroundMechanical thrombectomy (MT) is part of the standard of care for stroke treatment, and improving its efficacy is one of the main objectives of clinical investigation. Of importance is placement of the distal end of balloon-guided catheters (BGC). We aim to determine if this influences outcomes.MethodsWe analyzed data from the ASSIST Registry, an international, multicenter prospective study of 1492 patients. We divided patients treated with BGC according to the placement of the BGC: low cervical (LCG (the lower 2/3 of cervical internal carotid artery (ICA)) or high cervical (HCG (upper 1/3 of cervical ICA, petro-lacerum or higher)). We analyzed characteristics and outcomes overall and stratified on the primary MT technique: Stent-Retriever only (SR Classic), Combined use of aspiration catheter and SR (Combined), and Direct Aspiration (ADAPT).ResultsOur study included 704 subjects —323 in the low cervical and 381 in the high cervical groups. Statistical differences were seen in the proportion of females and tandem lesions (both higher for LCG). Placing the BGC in the high cervical segment is associated with better recanalization rates (expanded treatment in cerebral infarction (eTICI) score of 2c-3) at the end of the procedure (P<0.0001) and shorter procedures (P=0.0005). After stratifying on the three primary techniques (SR Classic, Combined, and ADAPT), placing the BGC in the high segment is associated with a better first-pass effect (FPE), less distal emboli, and better clinical outcomes in the SR Classic technique.ConclusionsPlacing the distal end of the BGC at the high cervical segment or higher is associated with better recanalization.

Funder

Stryker Neurovascular

Publisher

BMJ

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