High-permeability region size on perfusion CT predicts hemorrhagic transformation after intravenous thrombolysis in stroke
Full Text
Share
Blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability has been proposed as a predictor of hemorrhagic
transformation (HT) after tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) administration; however, the
reliability of perfusion computed tomography (PCT) permeability imaging for predicting HT
is uncertain.
We aimed to determine the performance of high-permeability region size on PCT (HPrsPCT)
in predicting HT after intravenous tPA administration in patients with acute stroke.
Methods
We performed a multimodal CT protocol (non-contrast CT, PCT, CT angiography) to prospectively
study patients with middle cerebral artery occlusion treated with tPA within 4.5
hours of symptom onset. HT was graded at 24 hours using the European-Australasian
Acute Stroke Study II criteria. ROC curves selected optimal volume threshold, and multivariate
logistic regression analysis identified predictors of HT.
Results
The study included 156 patients (50% male, median age 75.5 years). Thirty-seven (23,7%)
developed HT [12 (7,7%), parenchymal hematoma type 2 (PH-2)]. At admission, patients
with HT had lower platelet values, higher NIHSS scores, increased ischemic lesion volumes, larger HPrs-PCT, and poorer collateral status. The negative predictive value of HPrs-PCT at
a threshold of 7mL/100g/min was 0.84 for HT and 0.93 for PH-2. The multiple regression
analysis selected HPrs-PCT at 7mL/100g/min combined with platelets and baseline NIHSS
score as the best model for predicting HT (AUC 0.77). HPrs-PCT at 7mL/100g/min was the
only independent predictor of PH-2 (OR 1, AUC 0.68, p = 0.045).
Conclusions
HPrs-PCT can help predict HT after tPA, and is particularly useful in identifying patients at
low risk of developing HT