Intracranial stenting or intra-arterial
tPA may be better than other treatments for urgent ischemic strokes
Intracranial stenting and intra-arterial tPA may be more
effective than other urgent ischemic stroke treatments, researchers said at the
American Stroke Association's International Stroke Conference 2010.
In a study of 1,056 severe stroke patients treated with
one or more therapies within eight hours of symptom onset, blood flow was restored
in 76 percent of stented patients and 72 percent of those receiving the clot-busting
drug tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) directly to the brain (intra-arterial
tPA). Overall, blood flow was restored in only 69 percent of patients treated
with other drug techniques or interventions.
Ischemic stroke is caused by blockages in a vessel in
or leading to the brain.
Researchers studied several treatment techniques:
- intra-arterial tPA
- intracranial stenting
- intravenous delivery of tPA via the arm
- Merci RetrieverTM - a corkscrew-like device that is threaded into
the blocked blood vessel to grab and pull out clots
- PrenumbraTM aspiration catheter - uses suction to remove blood
clots
- glycoprotein IIb/IIIa antagonists
- angioplasty (without stenting)
But only results for intra-arterial tPA and intracranial
stenting reached statistical significance.
"Essentially, there is no standard currently as to which
interventions are performed for acute stroke in this country," said Rishi Gupta,
M.D., senior author of the study and an assistant professor at Vanderbilt University
Medical Center's Department of Neurology in Nashville, Tenn. "We decided to study
treatment at 12 of the busiest stroke centers in the country to determine which
of the therapies currently in use may be yielding the best results in terms of
opening the blood vessel without creating hemorrhage."
Researchers said 534 patients received more than one
therapy and 75 percent of the time (or in 400 patients), it was successful.
The next phase of the study will examine whether the
initial success of these two treatments continues through three months of follow-up,
he said.
The study's lead author is Esteban Cheng-Ching, M.D.,
a neurology resident at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation. Other co-authors are
Elad I. Levy, M.D.; Osama Zaidat, M.D.; Sabareesh K. Natarajan, M.D., M.S.; Junaid
S. Kalia, M.D.; Tudor G. Jovin, M.D.; Albert J. Yoo, M.D.; Raul G. Nogueira, M.D.;
Marilyn Rymer, M.D.; Ashis H. Tayal, M.D.; Daniel P. Hsu, M.D.; David S. Liebeskind,
M.D.; Alex Abou-Chebl, M.D.; Ashish Nanda, M.D.; Melissa Tian; Qing Hao, M.D.,
Ph.D.; Thanh N. Nguyen, M.D.; and Michael Chen, M.D.
Author disclosures are on the abstract.
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