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Acute Ischemic Stroke Imaging and Thrombectomy Treatment, Dr. Jeremy J. Heit (11-3-22)

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Today we are honored to welcome Dr. Jeremy height for a

0:46

lecture on acute ischemic stroke Imaging and thrombectomy

0:49

treatment Dr. Hite is an associate

0:52

professor of radiology and neurosurgery in the

0:55

interim chief of neuroimaging and neuro intervention at

0:58

Stanford University. He is a practicing Diagnostic and

1:01

Interventional neuroradiologist who specializes

1:04

in the diagnosis and minimally invasive treatment of

1:07

ischemic and himrochix stroke

1:10

Dr. Heitz research seeks to understand the patho physiological

1:13

basis of cerebral vascular

1:16

disease in addition. His group is developing new minimally,

1:19

invasive image guided treatments at the end

1:22

of the lecture join Dr. Height in a Q&A session where he will

1:25

address any questions you may have on today's topic. Please remember to

1:28

use the Q&A feature to submit your questions we can get to as many

1:31

as we can before our time is up with that being said we

1:34

are ready to begin today's lecture Dr. Height. Please take

1:37

it from here.

1:38

Well, this should be a lot of fun. So thanks again to the

1:41

folks at MRI online for for inviting me to talk today.

1:44

I want to talk about acute stroke

1:47

Imaging which I think is of interest to the most of the audience here,

1:50

but also a little bit about how we treat patients with

1:53

ischemic stroke by thrombectomy. And I think you'll pretty quickly

1:56

appreciate that the Imaging is very intimately tied to

1:59

the procedure. And in fact, I would argue it

2:02

really is the first step of the procedure. So with that

2:05

let's go ahead and get started here are my disclosures.

2:10

And I'm going to briefly touch on sort of the underpinnings of

2:13

acute stroke physiology. And then how we image patients with

2:16

acute ischemic stroke, then we'll talk about the thrombectomy treatment

2:19

of stroke and some of the data the underpins US doing

2:22

these procedures and then I want to talk about stroke systems

2:25

of care and how the Radiology practices integrate into

2:28

the the transfer and evaluation of these patients and

2:31

then we'll really spend the end of it how to

2:34

reviewing some of the general Imaging triage of patients for thrombectomy treatment,

2:37

but let's start by talking about ischemic stroke.

2:40

So, you know, very briefly stroke happens when

2:43

you interrupt blood flow to the brain and that's what causes an ischemic stroke

2:46

and that can be due to blockage of an artery

2:49

in the brain such as this patient. We see here that there's the arrows

2:52

pointing to blockage of the first part of the middle cerebral artery,

2:55

which is a large artery that supplies the brain and

2:58

you can see that there's a lack of blood flow here to the MCA

3:01

territory in this patient and it could be due

3:04

to blockage of an artery in the neck. But what happens when you

3:07

do have a blockage of blood flow to the brain is it?

3:10

Result in permanent injury to the brain and that's shown here on

3:13

this ischemic stroke here on a diffusion weighted image. Now, if

3:16

you think about it, you don't necessarily have

3:19

all of the brain tissue that you've got

3:22

suddenly die. When you block an artery, right? You can have some tissue

3:25

that really is highly dependent on the nutrients that

3:28

are in the blood that die because you cut off that blood

3:31

supply and and that is kind of schematized here in red but very

3:34

often you can have a larger region of brain sort of

3:37

surrounding this area where you know, there's not enough blood flow

3:40

for the neurons here to maintain their ion gradients. They

3:43

don't function quite normally but there is enough collateral blood flow

3:46

that this tissue is still alive. It's just not functioning and

3:49

if you kind of fundamentally think about these two compartments you

3:52

have dead tissue and tissue at risk and these

3:55

are terms that we are also commonly assigned to

3:58

these two compartments which is the ischemic core and that

4:01

really refers to tissue. We think is likely to be irreversibly injured

4:04

and then the penumbra which refers to

4:07

the potentially salvageable tissue.

4:10

That if we're able to restore blood flow can go

4:13

back to normal and not go on to permanently dive.

4:16

So let's do a little thought experiment. So a patient comes into your

4:19

Ed and they're having an ischemic stroke and you're

4:22

looking at their symptoms and you know that they may look something kind

4:25

of like this. If you could take a picture of their brain, they've got some amount

4:28

of ischemic core that's dead. They've got some hopefully larger

4:31

amount of salvageable penumbra and what do

4:34

you want to do with this patient? Well, you want to reperfuse the brain you

4:37

want to open up that artery that is blocked because if

4:40

you restore blood flow to the brain, all of this blue penumbra

4:43

goes back to normal and the patients left with

4:46

the same amount of permanently and your tissue that they

4:49

had when they came in through your front door and that's really the

4:52

goal of what we're trying to do a stroke patient. So you could achieve this

4:55

reperfusion either with intravenous thrombolysis with

4:58

TPA or connect to place or with an Indo

5:01

vascular thrombectomy procedure to pull the blood clot out

5:04

that's blocking the artery to the brain. Now, if you're

5:07

not successful say the patient is not a candidate

5:10

for TPA or tnk or say that they're you

5:13

know, you're not able to to promptly

5:16

An endovascular thrombectomy. Well, what can happen in those situations

5:19

is that this penumbra will go on to permanently

5:22

die. And so now you can see this patient has

5:25

a much larger area of permanent infarction. And

5:28

obviously this patient is not going to do as well

5:31

as this patient. And so the really the

5:34

goal of all stroke treatment is to restore blood flow to the

5:37

brain and as timely a manner as possible.

5:40

So just a couple of real-world examples of this. This is

5:43

a gentleman who was treated at Stanford. He

5:46

was raking leaves in his front yard when he collapsed and

5:49

that was witnessed by his family. He was transferred initially

5:52

to an outside hospital and quickly transferred over to Stanford

5:55

given the severity of the symptoms and here's his diffusion

5:58

way to image from his arrival at Stanford. You can

6:01

see just the subtlest subtle hyper-intensity that's

6:04

in the caudate head on this diffusion weighted image.

6:07

He had a Mr. Profusion study that

6:10

shows you know, prolong blood flow into the

6:13

entirety of the left MCA territory. This is

6:16

someone that should be you know, a really good thrown back to me candidate and

6:19

here's his angiogram that shows you that M1 occlusion

6:22

in the cath lab and fortunately this was

6:25

revascular eyes. And so all the blood flow is very

6:28

quickly restored to his brain and so he had all

6:31

of this, you know large area of under perfusion

6:34

that could have gone on to die. But because blood

6:37

flow was restored he ends up with an

6:40

Parked that's basically the exact same size as what

6:43

he came in with and he did extremely well and was

6:46

able to leave the hospital a couple days later with minimal symptoms. So

6:49

that's that's what we want to have happen. Let's look

6:52

at this patient. So again, we can see a patient coming this

6:55

time with the right side at stroke and there's you know, a little bit larger

6:58

but still relatively small ischemic core that we're seeing

7:01

and the lentiform nucleus and in the caudate head on

7:04

the right side again, we see that there's Mr. Profusion

7:07

obtain so much larger penumbra here with prolonged blood

7:10

flow on this time to maximum math. This is another

7:13

good patient to take up for treatment. So here's the

7:16

angiogram

7:17

Again, we see an M1 occlusion this time on the right side

7:20

in this patient. And this was one of these very difficult clots

7:23

to remove. So we're pretty good at removing these

7:26

clots, but there is a good 10 to 15% of patients

7:29

where we just cannot open up the artery and

7:32

despite our best efforts. We could not open up this artery it

7:35

remain blocked and because of that all of this

7:38

tissue that the patient had that was at risk of infarcting did

7:41

in fact go on to permanently and fart and

7:44

so you can see that this is someone who's not going to do as well

7:47

in this patient did not do as well compared to the first patient

7:50

that I showed you in which blood flow to the brain was restored.

7:53

And so this is a very simple concept but

7:56

it really is something that we see every day and

7:59

simple is good. And if we just remember

8:02

we're trying to restore the blood flow to minimize the

8:05

amount of permanent ischemic injury to the brain. That's our

8:08

goal.

8:09

So with that you're already

8:12

getting a sense that Imaging is going to be really important

8:15

right? I showed you a bunch of examples already here of

8:18

where Imaging different compartments in the brain, but when

8:21

we think about the evaluation of a stroke patient, what are our

8:24

goals and I would argue that there's really kind of four goals that we're thinking about.

8:27

So first off we want to confirm that we

8:30

have the right diagnosis. We want to make sure that we're dealing within a patient

8:33

with an ischemic stroke. It could be a hemorrhagic stroke. It

8:36

could also be a stroke mimic and so we'd like to ideally rule

8:39

out stroke mimics. If we are able to we want

8:42

to make sure that we're identifying any contraindications to

8:45

revascularization and that could again be

8:48

by intravenous thrombolysis or by a throne back to

8:51

me procedure and then increasingly we're really thinking a lot

8:54

about identifying thrombectomy candidates and how we almost optimally

8:57

do that.

8:58

So when we talk about confirming the diagnosis, I

9:01

think that's something that's on all of our minds. That's Radiologists. We're

9:04

thinking about that all the time when we're looking at a

9:07

scan and it says, you know evaluate for a stroke and you know, we have two

9:10

modalities that are disposal. We have CT and MRI.

9:13

They both certainly work. I like this picture because it's

9:16

very easy to see the obvious stroke. It's quite large

9:19

and this patient on the diffusion weight at MRI, but on

9:22

the CT scan, it's more challenging. If you look though,

9:25

you can see that we have this hypodensity here that's in

9:28

the left insula. It's extending into the left lentiform nucleus,

9:31

but that relative drop in density compared to

9:34

the side. I think is more challenging to see and that's the advantage

9:37

of MRIs that the signal to noise is just much higher. It's much

9:40

easier to make the stroke diagnosis, but regardless, these

9:43

are two modalities and the Radiologists needs to be Adept and

9:46

interpretation of both of them.

9:48

So why do we typically do CT

9:51

in this country? Well, it's fast it's really

9:54

widely available. Pretty much every emergency department has a

9:57

CT scanner and it's relatively inexpensive compared to

10:00

to MRI and by Contrast MRI has

10:03

a reputation of being slower. It's certainly

10:06

not as always available and it is more expensive. The

10:09

machines are more expensive and they're they're more expensive to

10:12

to operate but I would make a slight

10:15

argument that these perceptions may not

10:18

quite be true and I would challenge you all to start to think

10:21

about that a little bit so I'm right can actually be done quite quickly. It is

10:24

increasingly available. You have to make a little

10:27

bit of effort to make it available for stroke patients all

10:30

times and it may actually be cost assist

10:33

efficient because a lot of times when you have a CT scan that doesn't

10:36

reveal a diagnosis. What do they do? Well, you go on and you

10:39

get an MRI, so if you can just go straight to the MRI, you're

10:42

gonna be able to answer more of those clinical questions and potentially there's

10:45

room for cost savings and that so this

10:48

is the

10:48

Most streamlined MRI protocol we use at Stanford

10:51

for triaging patients for thrombectomy. And I put

10:54

this up to show you that you can do this pretty quickly. What are

10:57

we doing here? Well, we have a diffusion weighted image to evaluate for how

11:00

significant the ischemic chorus. We have a

11:03

gradient Echo sequence where we're looking for the presence of any Hemorrhage

11:06

which could be a contraindication to treatment. It also can help you see

11:09

the thrombus in many cases. We have an MR angiogram

11:12

to evaluate where a large vessel occlusion is and

11:15

in this case, we have an M1 occlusion here on the left side. And then

11:18

we do perfusion imaging to identify the penumbra

11:21

and make sure that there is salvageable tissue. So these

11:24

are the scan times for each sequence. And if you add up the

11:27

scan time, it's just a little over five minutes and obviously there's some transition

11:30

time in between the two, you know, you've got a look image

11:33

but really you can do an MR pretty quickly and

11:36

around 10 minutes or less if you're really dedicated to

11:39

getting it done quickly and I would argue that that's pretty comparable

11:42

to CT in most patients

11:45

with an ischemic stroke. So Mr. Can certainly

11:48

be

11:48

quickly, and it's something to at least think about

11:51

So we also want to try to exclude stroke

11:54

mimics. And so these are three different patients who

11:57

were brought in for thought that they had an

12:00

ischemic stroke, but none of them does and so

12:03

let's look at each of these in turn. So this first one we've got a flare

12:06

image, you know, really? It doesn't look horribly remarkable.

12:09

I will tell you this patient is hemiplegic and

12:12

has a gaze preference so they certainly look like someone who has

12:15

a large vessel occlusion stroke. Maybe you

12:18

can see that there's some increased, you

12:21

know, T2 signal in the cortex in this patient.

12:24

But if you add an ASL to look at blood flow, we

12:27

see that there's extremely high blood flow to the cortex in the

12:30

right Hemisphere and this patient is actively seizing right. So

12:33

that's a stroke mimic. This is not someone that you want to give TPA to

12:37

This patient was brought in with what was thought to be a cute

12:40

weakness and then a little bit later you find out that it may have been

12:43

more of a slowly Progressive weakness, but here's their non-con CT

12:46

and we can certainly see areas of hypodensity in

12:49

the left MCA territory. There's some

12:52

Mass Effect on The ventricle, you might worry that you're looking at a

12:55

Subacute stroke that's you know already kind of the cats out

12:58

of the bag but it looks a little bit funny right? We've got some sparing of

13:01

tissue in the midst of the areas of hypodensity. Then

13:04

you want to look at the whole study and contrast can be

13:07

helpful because this is a patient with a secretory meningioma

13:10

where all of this edema and the patients

13:13

weakness are really due to this tumor that

13:16

just needs to be removed.

13:18

This last patient here came in with concern for

13:21

a posterior circulation stroke. They were having visual disturbances and

13:24

on the non-con CT. We see hypodensity and

13:27

the occipital lobes. It looks a little bit symmetric but

13:30

there is a little bit of sparing of the cortex over

13:33

the area of hypodensity and both of these regions and this

13:36

is actually a patient who is quite hypertensive. And

13:39

this is a case of press posterior reversible encephalopathy

13:42

syndrome. And so, you know, all of

13:45

these are stroke mimics and if you're not careful and you don't

13:48

look at the Imaging closely, you potentially could miss these diagnoses but

13:51

none of these patients is gonna benefit from intravenous

13:54

thrombolysis or thrombectomy. So if

13:57

we're able to identify the mimics that is good for the patients.

14:01

So what about contraindications to treatment? Well, there are a few.

14:04

So here's a patient who came in again with visual symptoms

14:07

concern for ischemic stroke in the Ed. Here's the

14:10

non-con CT and we're seeing a sort of heterogeneous

14:13

hypodense lesion here, you know,

14:16

you're getting the sense that doesn't really look like a stroke

14:19

and sure enough this ends up being a primary brain neoplasm.

14:22

This is a GBM certainly not something you

14:25

want to be doing giving TPA to as the presence

14:28

of an intra a parenchymal tumor is a contraindication this

14:31

middle patient here with someone who is altered came

14:34

in with some isolated weakness was thought to

14:37

maybe have a deep stroke. It's a non-con CT and we're

14:40

seeing little Foci of hyper density that certainly look

14:43

concerning for small areas of hemorrhage. And these are

14:46

Hemorrhage is related to mycotic aneurysms. So certainly

14:49

not a patient. You want to be giving TPA to important to

14:52

identify this contraindication this last

14:55

patient. This was a I can't make this up and investment banker

14:58

who tripped on the cobblestones in nantuck.

15:01

And actually had weakness on the left side of the body got

15:04

this head CT and you can get sensors a

15:07

little bit of trauma here and there is some hyper density

15:10

in the central sulcus here. And this is traumatic

15:13

subarachnoid hemorrhage. That was probably causing some

15:16

irritation may be a focal seizure to account for

15:19

the patient's weakness. So three contraindications to

15:22

treatment that you want to pick up and certainly are non-invasive

15:25

Imaging is helpful and identifying these contraindications.

15:28

All right. So increasingly we're

15:31

really concerned about identifying patients for

15:34

thrombectomy because these are patients who can really benefit from

15:37

that procedure and it's up to the radiologist to

15:40

work with the stroke teams to make sure that we're identifying these patients

15:43

correctly. And so generally, who are we looking

15:46

for? I would say that patients who are good. Thrombectomy candidates

15:49

fit these three criteria first off. They should

15:52

have a relatively small ischemic core.

15:55

All right, right. Now the evidence is that if patients

15:58

have less permanent injury.

16:01

More likely to do. Well that does not mean thrombectomy is

16:04

not going to benefit a patient who has a larger core it

16:07

probably does and we're we have

16:10

ongoing trials that may change this first point and the

16:13

next year or so the patient should also have some

16:16

salvageable tissue. All right, and that's evidenced by

16:19

a larger penumbra and that makes sense. Right? If

16:22

you're going to open up a blood vessel. You want to restore blood flow to

16:25

some amount of brain that's not dead because if

16:28

it's all dead, I don't see how restoring blood flow is

16:31

going to help that patient. And so the patient should have a

16:34

small core a larger penumbra and they should also have a

16:37

blood vessel that is amenable to end of vascular thrombectomy.

16:40

This is defined right now as a large

16:43

vessel occlusion, and that means a occlusion of

16:46

the internal crowded artery the first part of the middle cerebral artery

16:49

the first part of the anterior cerebral artery and

16:52

now we finally have evidence for the basil or intra

16:55

cranial vertebral arteries. This is

16:58

another area where I can probably give you this talk next year and the

17:01

Data may be new and different and we are increasingly going out into

17:04

M2 vessels and to more distal vessels within

17:07

the intracranial circulation. But right now

17:10

at least we should really be looking for patients who have a relatively

17:13

small amount of ischemic injury a larger penumbra

17:16

and a vessel that is amenable to thrombectomy meaning

17:19

a large vessel occlusion.

17:21

You can obviously identify those characteristics on

17:24

MRI or CT and so by CT. We

17:27

can you CTP to find the core we can use a non-con we'll

17:30

get into that in a minute. We can identify the number using

17:33

perfusion or patient symptoms and we can certainly

17:36

do a CTA to look for an lvo.

17:40

Okay. So let's take a second and

17:43

talk about Precision Imaging and I think this is

17:46

really important because there's really been an evolution and how we

17:49

use Imaging to guide stroke patient treatment. And this

17:52

is a relatively old church and I

17:55

kind of like colored the picture here to make it look old but

17:58

it is actually old and I put this up here because of the

18:01

clock and so for many many years the treatment of patients

18:04

with stroke was really governed by the clock how long has it

18:07

been since their symptoms started and basically you

18:10

would have a really short time window to offer

18:13

an active treatment to stroke patients. If you

18:16

were a patient who shows up within zero to three hours of your symptom

18:19

onset, you could get intravenous TPA if

18:22

you qualified based on your Imaging and then that

18:25

got extended out to four and a half hours with some additional

18:28

data all the FDA on label approval for

18:31

for TPA remain only at three hours. Most people will still give

18:34

it up to four and a half hours from symptom onset though, but

18:37

what's the problem with using the clock and let's talk?

18:40

About that for a second and this is a Nantucket. By the

18:43

way, if you haven't been it's a really lovely place to go. Well, here's the problem with

18:46

the clock. These are three different patients and they were

18:49

all last seen normal within 30 minutes of each

18:52

other and they're getting evaluated at six and a half to seven hours

18:55

from symptom onset.

18:56

So here's the MRA in each of these patients and

18:59

so we can see the each of them has an M1 occlusion

19:02

on the left side. They each have a very similar Stroke

19:05

Scale as well.

19:07

Here's their perfusion in it. And so each of them has a

19:10

pretty similar sized ischemic penumbra, right?

19:13

We're seeing that there may be some heterogeneity and

19:16

you know how severe the blood flow is on these T-Max Maps,

19:19

but we can see each of them has a perfusion delay into the

19:22

left MCA territory so far. They're looking really quite similar.

19:26

But when we look at their DWI and look at

19:29

the size of each of these patients, ischemic core, look at

19:32

the variability that we're seeing these first two patients have

19:35

pretty small ischemic cores, whereas this last patient has a

19:38

pretty large ischemic core. And so even though

19:41

all three of these patients had their symptoms starting at essentially the

19:44

same time. There's a market difference in

19:47

the size of their ischemic core when they're being evaluated for

19:50

potential treatment. And so if you're really relying on

19:53

the clock, you're not going to be able to sort out these three individuals

19:56

and you would either have to treat none of

19:59

them or treat all of them knowing that at least this patient is probably unlikely

20:02

to benefit from your treatment and this

20:05

was looked at in the diffuse 2 cohort and so

20:08

these are patients with known ICA or MCA collusions, and

20:11

they have a known symptom onset time. And so if

20:14

you graph their core based on when their symptoms

20:17

started and on the x-axis to the time of

20:20

Imaging evaluation, and then they're core volume by

20:23

DWI on the y-axis you can see

20:26

There's tremendous variability, right? You could be this patient

20:29

you're at 11 hours and you've got a super small core

20:32

or you could be this patient at a little bit more than two hours

20:35

with a Holo hemispheric infarction. And so there's

20:38

a lot of physiologic variability people have very

20:41

different abilities to tolerate an ischemic

20:44

Challenge and you always hope you're one of these patients but

20:47

the reality is when you're just looking at a patient without Imaging

20:50

you don't know where any individual patient lands in

20:53

the Spectrum and that's why Imaging is so so critical and

20:56

it really is a form of precision medicine. So what

20:59

we're really looking for is a favorable patient who's

21:02

got a small core a larger penumbra and

21:05

there should be some quantifiable difference that you're

21:08

seeing and of course the large vessel occlusion patients who

21:11

are less favorable really have what we call a matched

21:14

profile their core is the same size as their potentially

21:17

salvageable tissue. And so the treatment of these patients is

21:20

unlikely to offer a benefit and there's very good data to

21:23

support this concept.

21:26

So even though historically stroke treatment is

21:29

based on the clock. I think we're really moving into this era of

21:32

precision Imaging where we're using physiologic Imaging and

21:35

other Imaging techniques to really triage

21:38

our patients for treatment and that's really great for radiology. And

21:41

it's really important that we all understand that so that our

21:44

role in helping take care of these patients as well understood. Okay.

21:47

So let's pivot and talk now about thrombectomy. This

21:50

is what a thrombectomy looks like.

21:53

This is one of my patients. There is a right M1

21:56

occlusion shown here by the arrow. This is the thrombectomy

21:59

procedure being performed and then after a

22:02

successful thrombectomy, the blue arrow is showing you restoration of

22:05

flow into that that right MCA territory.

22:08

And so, you know, we do this procedure quite a

22:11

lot at Stanford and we do it because it is so tremendously impactful

22:14

and here's an slide that

22:17

just shows the evidence from the largest trials that have validated the

22:20

efficacy of thrombectomy. So this is again for internal credit

22:23

artery or M1 occlusions of The Middle.

22:26

Little artery and these are all randomized trials. All

22:29

of them are published in the New England Journal of Medicine. This dashed

22:32

line separates the early window trials from

22:35

the late window trials and we Define early as now zero

22:38

to six hours and then late window as 6 to 16 or

22:41

24 hours. So the trial names are here. The

22:44

medical arm is the blue and the red arm

22:47

is the throne back to me and the y-axis is what percentage

22:50

of patients had a good functional outcome. Meaning that they

22:53

are living independently three months after their procedure. And

22:56

if you see in each one of these trials there is

22:59

a market benefit of thrombectomy over

23:02

our standard medical therapy and the publication of these trials

23:05

is really led to a sea change in the care of these patients. And

23:08

in fact, the number needed to treat is only

23:11

two to three for these procedures and that's really quite impressive. So

23:14

for every two to three patients you treat one of

23:17

them will do well and just to contrast that with something you

23:20

might be more familiar with if you look at patients with an st

23:23

elevation Mi who go to you know, get

23:26

Into the cath lab for a coronary artery intervention with

23:29

an angioplastier stent placement. The number needed to treat for

23:32

that procedure is somewhere around 17. So this

23:35

is much much more effective than even coronary intervention

23:38

for St. Elevation Mi and we have certainly

23:41

built whole systems of our health care around the

23:44

care of those cardiac patients and that starts to make you

23:47

appreciate the importance of doing something similar that works really

23:50

well for our stroke patients. So how do we

23:53

triage these patients for thrombectomy and we've talked about this a

23:56

little bit more but let's delve into a little bit more detail. Okay. So

23:59

what do we need? Well we talked about right now. We're

24:02

treating patients with a large vessel occlusion. And so

24:05

that we need to have some sort of vessel Imaging in

24:08

most patients and that's really can be done by an MRN

24:11

angiogram or a CT angiogram. You can see the left M1 occlusion

24:14

in both of these patients. There should be some sort

24:17

of assessment for how much injury there

24:20

is to the brain at Baseline. All right. How big do you think the ischemic core

24:23

is so if you've got a diffusion way to

24:26

Great. We think that's a great estimate of you know, how big the core

24:29

is if you just have a non-contrast CT

24:32

great. We can look for hypodensity and make sure that we're

24:35

not seeing, you know, the whole entirety of the MCA territory being

24:38

hypodens, which would be consistent with probably an

24:41

irreversible infarct and then we can

24:44

use perfusion imaging to identify the presence of

24:47

a salvageable penumbra.

24:50

So we can also do perfusion imaging

24:53

to look at the core. Okay, so that's

24:56

a kind of a variation on the CT technique. And if

24:59

you're getting the penumbral Imaging you would also be getting the same

25:02

Imaging of the core from that same technique. However, you

25:05

really do not have to do perfusion in

25:08

early time Windows. It is perfectly acceptable to

25:11

do so and two of the randomized trials

25:14

did use perfusion to treat patients. So there's good

25:17

data for it, but you don't need to do it to

25:20

make a good treatment decision that's important to understand. Once you

25:23

get into those late time window patients Beyond six hours

25:26

both of the trials that suggested a benefit in

25:29

those patients did use perfusion imaging to identify at least

25:32

the ischemic core and you can discern whether there's a

25:35

salvageable penumbra either from profusion or from symptoms severity

25:38

that is mismatch from the size of their core.

25:42

All right. So that's our Imaging goals. That's kind of

25:45

what we're looking at. How do we start to integrate all of this into the

25:48

care and the workflow of patients with ischemic

25:51

stroke? So I'm going to kind of talk a little bit about some of the systems of

25:54

care that we have in this country and there's certainly variability worldwide. But

25:57

you know since I practice in the US, that's what

26:00

I thought I would talk about. So first off this slides a couple years old

26:03

now, but I put this up to show that Throne back

26:06

to me really remains a limited resource. There are

26:09

not neuron eventualists practicing absolutely everywhere. There

26:12

are still relatively few of us. And I

26:15

think we're getting closer to having the number be appropriately matched

26:18

to the number of patients that need us, but there's certainly a geographic difference.

26:21

If you live in a major metropolitan area

26:24

on the coast. There's likely a neuron

26:27

eventualist near you. But if you live in the center of the country, there are

26:30

a large areas where you could be quite a ways

26:33

away from a neuron evangelist that could offer your throne back

26:36

to me that's shown here by driving or flying time is what these

26:39

color overlays mean.

26:41

So the way patients tend to flow to neuron

26:44

eventualists and stroke care teams in this country is

26:47

they will have a stroke and they will be brought

26:50

into a hospital and usually their first brought to a primary

26:53

stroke center primary stroke centers are fabulous. They're

26:56

able to offer TBA or connect to

26:59

place and they're sort of the Frontline hospital system for taking

27:02

care of these patients, but in general they don't have

27:05

more comprehensive level of stroke care, which

27:08

is something you're going to get at a comprehensive stroke center. And

27:11

so if you are a patient with a large vessel occlusion who needs

27:14

a throne back to me, you're going to get transferred to a comprehensive

27:17

stroke center or a thrombectomy capable center

27:20

with Staffing who can perform the throne back to me

27:23

procedure. There's some very interesting work going on right now

27:26

a Rhode Island's really doing a lot of great work at Brown on potentially

27:29

by passing a primary stroke center for

27:32

patients who are found to have a large vessel occlusion in the field and

27:35

going direct to a comprehensive stroke center. And that seems

27:38

to actually potentially be very beneficial.

27:41

For the care of these patients and lead to improved outcomes. So

27:44

this is a very active area of research that I think

27:47

will lead to some changes in our practice in the coming years.

27:51

So at Stanford most of our patients here are transferred in

27:54

so about 85% of our patients are transferred from

27:57

primary stroke centers the number of patients who walk in

28:00

through our Ed with a stroke or who have a stroke while

28:03

they're in our hospital is a smaller proportion. It's around 15% last

28:06

time we looked at our numbers. So what I

28:09

want to do is kind of walk you through the different workflows for

28:12

each of these patients to give you flavor of how we do things that Stanford and

28:15

maybe that'll help you think about what you're doing your hospital

28:18

things you could do differently certainly probably do

28:21

things some things better than us, too. There's a whole bunch of ideas and

28:24

that's why we talk about it. So let's start if you present to an

28:27

outside hospital with the stroke what happens? Well, you go

28:30

into an Ed and you're found to have, you know

28:33

symptoms consistent with a large vessel inclusion you get

28:36

your valuation and that Ed thinks that you need

28:39

to throw back to me, but they don't have a neuron eventualist.

28:42

What they do is they call our Stanford Transfer Center and I

28:45

get paged you can see this happens at all kinds of times a

28:48

day and the Stanford's Transfer

28:51

Center will activate me our stroke neurology

28:54

attending and our stroke neurology fellow and the three

28:57

of us will get on the phone within five minutes and be connected to

29:00

the Ed doc at the referring hospital.

29:03

Do you hear about the patient at the same time that

29:06

we're taking that phone call? We actually launch our helicopter. We

29:09

just go ahead and say let's get the the ball rolling. Let's

29:12

start to arrange the patient transfer and so our life

29:15

flight will lift while we're on the phone and if

29:18

we accept the patient, they keep flying if we change our mind for

29:21

any reason they come back so they go and they pick up the

29:24

patient and here's now the helicopter returning to Stanford. This

29:27

was a stroke transfer where I was with three

29:30

of my four kids and the patients about to land and I'm doing a patient

29:33

transfer for the helicopter and a child

29:36

transfer with my life. So sometimes you got a multi-test but

29:39

it works really well and the helicopter.

29:42

Lands on the roof. And then what do you do? Well, you've got to really

29:45

expedite things we go straight from the roof of the hospital to

29:48

the Imaging suite and we want to go straight down

29:51

and we want to image our patient and that's what we will

29:54

do and here we can see we've got an image that shows no ischemic

29:57

core on this patient, but a large salvageable penumbra

30:00

and perfusion imaging this is a great stroke treatment

30:04

patient. They're clearly highly impaired and here is

30:07

the patient's angiogram in the

30:10

cath lab. So this is an anterior posterior view. So

30:13

you're looking right at the patient and the black is the contrast diet that

30:16

we've injected into the left internal credit artery and right

30:19

here. We see blockage of the first part of the middle cerebral

30:22

artery. So that's our Target. And what I'm going to do is show

30:25

you a few videos about how we do this storm back to me procedure. So

30:28

the first thing we do is we actually cross the clot with our equipment. Here's

30:31

a micro wire and a micro catheter. That's Traverse

30:34

the area of occlusion inside the middle cerebral artery and

30:37

this gives us a conduit to introduce them back to

30:40

me devices. So now we

30:42

Of the wired here. We are introducing a stent retriever device inside that

30:45

micro catheter and you can see that we're across

30:48

the clot with a little bit of device that will be past the

30:51

clot to make sure it helps to drag it out.

30:53

Next thing we do is we unsheath our stent

30:56

retriever device here. It is kind of opening up as we pull the micro catheter

30:59

out and this will pin the clot between the

31:02

outside of the stent Retriever and the inner wall of the artery and

31:05

the stent kind of pushes into the clot to

31:08

grip it.

31:09

Then what we can do is we could Advance this aspiration catheter

31:12

right up to the clot interface. And once

31:15

we get up to the claw interface, we can hook on suction

31:18

to really kind of suck the clot into this catheter and

31:21

pin it with the stent helping to drag it out.

31:24

Now. This is something that we've started doing

31:27

now with this is a balloon guide catheter that

31:30

arrests flow proximately so that as you're pulling the

31:33

cloud out the blood pressure is not pushing it away from you and this

31:36

really seems to be something that's helpful for more complete removal

31:39

of the clot and there's a lot of variations that

31:42

are going on and trying to determine what the optimal thrombectomy

31:45

procedure should look like, but this is something that

31:48

we do pretty commonly here after the balloons inflated. We

31:51

can remove the clot in this manner here. It is

31:54

being pulled out of the patient and you can see do a

31:57

nice slow pull the clot should be pinned right here if you're

32:00

lucky and then you can defeat the balloon and you

32:03

can do an angiographic run and

32:06

you can see that you go from a blocked vessel.

32:09

to Restoration of flow

32:11

All right, and then here's the lateral angiogram just to show

32:14

you that we've really revascularized the entirety of the

32:17

MCA territory in this patient. And that's exactly what

32:20

you want to see happen. And if you're successful, here's this

32:23

patient's initial perfusion. Imaging again. It

32:26

didn't call a core because of the thresholding but here's

32:29

where you would expect to see some infarct in the posterior insula the

32:32

fall of MRI confirms that that injury stays

32:35

about the same size.

32:37

This was the initial CTA where the M1 occlusion is located.

32:40

Here's the MRI after thrombectomy, you can see now the vessel

32:43

is wide open and then the profusion Imaging

32:46

goes in a normalizes on the arterial spin

32:49

label perfusion sequence. And so this is

32:52

the patient who did very well and this is an illustration of how

32:55

we would bring a patient in from an outside hospital to Stanford

32:58

for thrombectomy treatment. So in general a

33:01

stroke will be identified. Typically an outside hospital is going

33:04

to at least do a head CT make a decision about giving TPA

33:07

or TMK if they're eligible and then they're going

33:10

to do additional Imaging and clinical evaluation to determine

33:13

if there are neuro Interventional thrombectomy candidate if they

33:16

are you call a comprehensive stroke center and you request

33:19

transfer the patient gets transferred right now.

33:22

We do a lot of repeat Imaging because our

33:25

transfer times are often quite lengthy given the large geographic

33:28

area we cover this is something that other

33:31

places don't necessarily need to do if they can transfer patients quickly

33:34

and then the patient good and go for thrombectomy treatment.

33:38

All right. So how does that differ compared to a patient who

33:41

comes in through our emergency department? Well, here's the Stanford hospital

33:44

about a year ago or two years ago now, I guess from the

33:47

Christmas lights are up. So getting close to the holidays and a patient

33:50

will be brought by an ambulance into the Ed here

33:53

and ideally you get a heads up from the ambulance that this is

33:56

someone who may have a stroke and you can bypass the evaluation

33:59

area and go straight to the scanner and evaluate the

34:02

patient at the time your Expediting the

34:05

Imaging sometimes my fellows here

34:08

about these cases before I do and they shoot me a text. They look

34:11

like this and if you open up I just get the bat signal which is kind of

34:14

fun. And then other times we will just be activated through

34:17

our Transfer Center in a similar way and sometimes there

34:20

are a whole lot of patients with Strokes that we get activated for

34:23

and a single day but we're gonna do the same

34:26

thing. We want to keep our Imaging consistent. That's how we practice at

34:29

Stanford. So this is a 59 year old with afib who came

34:32

into our edu with the left facial group and was Hemi product

34:35

on the left side. And here's the patient.

34:38

Sign Imaging so a small estimated core on the perfusion here.

34:41

We can see that there's a larger penumbra surrounding

34:44

this small core and we can see that

34:47

there's a right M1 occlusion on the CTA. So this is

34:50

this is a go case we got a small core large penumbra and

34:53

a large vessel occlusion.

34:55

So here's the patient's first picture in

34:58

the cath lab where we're injecting the right internal credit artery and

35:01

you can see that sure enough on this patient there. Is

35:04

that right M1 occlusion. So we were

35:07

very quickly able to go up and aspirate

35:10

this clot out and here's the picture right after we

35:13

did that and now you can see that we've really restored all

35:16

the blood flow with that vessel being widely open

35:19

and that's what you're trying to do. And if you have a really

35:22

efficient system you can do this exceptionally fast

35:25

and the time in this patient from arterial puncture

35:28

to when we're able to completely restore the

35:31

blood flow here was four minutes. Okay, and not that's really really

35:34

quick that we're able to do that but with a highly trained

35:37

team and a very streamlined workflow, you can

35:40

potentially revasculars patients and really really

35:43

quick time frames. Sometimes it takes longer

35:46

and this is certainly I'm showing you the faster and of

35:49

things but I just want to point out that you can do this stuff very efficiently.

35:53

So this was the estimated core before we took the

35:56

patient and here is his follow PET CT the following

35:59

day and you could see there's no growth in the amount

36:02

of the core and this patient actually walked out of the hospital with only

36:05

the mildest official troops two days later and was

36:08

changed on and his anticoagulation regiment.

36:11

So here's a kind of a schematic

36:14

of our in-house stroke workflow. So again, we'd

36:17

like to get a heads up from the EMS if they are suspecting a

36:20

stroke they get put on the gurney and wield in straight

36:23

to the CT scanner. We're checking things like glucose. We do a non-con

36:26

to make sure there's no Hemorrhage if they are eligible. We

36:29

will you know, grab our IV send in lab work make it

36:32

just determination about TPA after

36:35

we've assigned a stroke scale and made sure we think it is a stroke while

36:38

the non-con is being interpreted and then if

36:41

they're severely impaired, you know, we will do a CTA and CTP to

36:44

determine whether they're potentially a throne back to

36:47

me Canada. So really you're kind of doing things overall relatively

36:50

similarly. It's just how they're getting to

36:53

The Imaging Suite that differs just slightly. So where

36:56

does that leave us? Well, we have a pretty good sense of

36:59

whom we should be treating. And again, this is a

37:02

moving Target. There are a lot of active studies going

37:05

on that are looking to continue to expand the indications for

37:08

thrombectomy. And I think we're going to continue to learn

37:11

more in the coming years, which is great because I

37:14

expect we'll be expanding our eligibility. We

37:17

know how to treat them pretty well. So we've got good

37:20

techniques. There's a lot of work on the Interventional side to sort

37:23

out. What's the best thing to do? But we've made a lot of progress and

37:26

we're getting better at having systems in place

37:29

to perform back to me quickly and there's still I think room to you know,

37:33

Interstate level and even perhaps a national level to really optimize

37:36

this

37:38

So what are the challenges and how can we leverage technology

37:41

to help us out? Well, after these late window Trials of

37:44

Dawn and diffuse 3. We suddenly had

37:47

a market increase in thrombectomy treatment

37:50

because now large vessel occlusions could be treated up to

37:53

16 to 24 hours since patients were last known

37:56

to be well, so that's suddenly opens up the floodgates of

37:59

people who could potentially be treated which is a great problem to

38:02

have and this is what happened afterwards to

38:05

our stroke volumes and just kept going up and up and

38:08

up but this creates some real workflow challenges, right? How do

38:11

we evaluate all these patients? Well, we're gonna

38:14

have to figure out a way to deal with this because you can't just

38:17

transfer everybody to these comprehensive centers without

38:20

having a better sense of whether they actually are potentially

38:23

a treatment Canada and that's really meant that

38:26

it's been a little bit more up to the Community Hospitals to help

38:29

identify who could be a treatment Canada. All

38:32

right, and that's at least going to be identifying the

38:35

presence of a large vessel Collision. We'll talk about this in a minute.

38:38

And then you'd be really great. If we have these long transfer times

38:41

because they're coming from far away if we can kind

38:44

of predict. Well, what's going to happen after we transfer it and then how

38:47

can we use automated Imaging and artificial intelligence to help

38:50

us manage this increasingly complex workflow. Well,

38:53

let's talk about the possibility of doing profusion Imaging

38:56

in the community. So you're still kind of

38:59

now asking Community Hospitals to ideally identify

39:02

a thrombectomy candidate, which means can they tell

39:05

us if there's a small core a salvageable penumbra and

39:08

a large vessel occlusion. Well, what used

39:11

to happen was an outside hospital with you

39:14

know, admittedly fewer resources in a place like Stanford,

39:17

they would be able to get a non-con CT and they would

39:20

be able to do Stroke Scale. And so you would be able to hear well, you

39:23

know, there's maybe some subtle hypodensity on the left

39:26

MCA territory and I've got a patient who's very severely impaired

39:29

symptomatically, so I'm inferring that. There's probably

39:32

a large vessel inclusion and that's okay, but

39:35

it turns out there are a lot of patients where you're getting fooled by.

39:38

Mimic or where you're looking at a chronic infarct

39:41

or where it just doesn't quite make sense. And so then

39:44

we started asking pay outside hospitals. Well, can you

39:47

at least get us a CTA so that you can really demonstrate that

39:50

they do have a large vessel inclusion because that's

39:53

the patient we want to bring over and potentially help. And so now this

39:56

is sort of the minimum that people should be doing

39:59

as a non-concy Tina CTA to help

40:02

us make a transfer decision along with of course a

40:05

clinical evaluation.

40:07

So what about if a community hospital is able

40:10

to do perfusion? Well, then you can say well we know what the

40:13

core looks like. We know if there's a salvageable penumbra.

40:16

So that's really helpful. And then if they're all doing

40:19

a CTA great, you can see that there's a large vessel occlusion. This

40:22

is a lot of Imaging for smaller hospitals

40:25

to do and and I think we all recognize that and

40:28

want to try to minimize that so what could you

40:31

do to simplify things? Well instead of using a

40:34

CTA to identify lvo. Could you use profusion to

40:37

identify the presence of an LDL and it

40:40

turns out that that may be a valid strategy. This is something that we're

40:43

interested in testing. And so if you look at these T-Max images,

40:46

I think anyone looking at this you can

40:49

probably discern that these are patients with large vessel occlusions,

40:52

or at least thrombectomy eligible occlusion. So

40:55

this first one, you know, the whole MCA territoring

40:58

the left side has a perfusion delay. So that's an M1

41:01

or potentially an internal credit artery occlusion.

41:04

This patient we can look at this and say well that's not the whole

41:07

MCA territory, but certainly disappear division

41:10

looks like it has a perfusion delay and that's often a good

41:13

Target for neuron eventualists, but we can discern that

41:16

there's an M2 Superior division occlusion. And in

41:19

this patient that perfusion delays most more posteriorly

41:22

located. So this is a patient with an inferior M2

41:25

occlusion. So all of these patients you can identify,

41:28

you know where their vessel occlusion is likely to be

41:31

and that's really helpful without even doing a CTA that

41:34

we can potentially discern the presence of that blockage. We

41:37

looked at this in a slightly different

41:40

form here, but we're able to identify with just perfusion

41:43

alone that we were extremely sensitive and specific for

41:46

making an accurate thrombectomy triage. You see

41:49

our sensitivity was 97% and our specificity was

41:52

almost 99% And so that was I think

41:55

good evidence at least in a retrospective manner that should

41:58

be validated prospectively.

42:01

Okay, so does this work in the real world? Well, we actually

42:04

have a lot of our partner hospitals that do perfusion and we're

42:07

able to see their Imaging via some of these remote

42:10

apps on our phone. And so but let's look at

42:13

this. How do we think about that? Well, what if you had this image here

42:16

and you're looking you're saying okay, they're telling you it's patient with

42:19

stroke symptoms. Well, it looks like there's a small core. It looks

42:22

like there's a salvageable penumbra so that certainly sounds

42:25

like thrombectomy maybe indicated but can we discern

42:28

that? There's an lvo. Well this perfusion pattern

42:31

here in green and the penumbra that really looks like

42:34

an M1 pattern and sure enough when a CTA is

42:37

obtained. This patient has a left and one occlusion so that

42:40

certainly was correct. How about this patient? You're

42:43

being described to patient with a modest Stroke

42:46

Scale around sex to eight and you

42:49

know, it sounds like they could have a large vessel occlusion. Here's their

42:52

perfusion imaging so there's no ischemic core that's being

42:55

identified and there's no penumbra.

42:58

So we would based on this say well, we don't

43:01

think they have a large vessel occlusion and sure enough. There's CTA was

43:04

normal. So you know that you don't need to activate your

43:07

cath lab team for this patient because there's not a large vessel

43:10

occlusion.

43:11

How about this patient? Well, number one. We know that we're

43:14

dealing with a patient with a quite large core and again

43:17

right now. I don't know that we have evidence that this patient would likely

43:20

benefit. I think that that'll be an area that we may

43:23

have evidence for soon. Even though there is a mismatch and

43:26

that's something we have to look into so, you know, they have

43:29

a large Baseline core. They may have some salvageable penumbra

43:32

and if we look at this perfusion pattern you see how medial and

43:35

hide this goes. That's something you often see in

43:38

a patient with an internal crowded artery occlusion and

43:41

sure enough. This patient has a right ICA occlusion with relatively

43:44

poor collaterals, which probably accounts for

43:47

the size of their infart. Here's another

43:50

patient you're being called about transferring and you

43:53

know, you can look at their Imaging and you say okay. I see that there's a core here.

43:56

I see that there's a penumbra but you know

43:59

what? I'm looking at these areas and they look like they're kind of

44:02

the same and even volumetrically, you

44:05

know, the core is being called as larger than the penumbra.

44:08

So even though you can look at this pattern and

44:11

It looks like there's you know, probably excuse me.

44:14

Probably a large vessel occlusion. This is someone with a match

44:17

deficit. That's probably not likely to benefit from a

44:20

thrombectomy procedure.

44:22

Okay, so can we use Imaging to predict the

44:25

future? This would be really great. Right? And how do we start to

44:28

think about that? Well, what if a patient you do the Imaging

44:31

at referring hospital and they're a candidate but are they still likely to be

44:34

a candidate after you transfer them?

44:36

Well collateral blood flow is really what determines

44:39

whether patient's ischemic core stays the

44:42

same size or whether it grows. If you have good collaterals, you

44:45

would expect that their core will stay similarly sized at

44:48

the outside hospital to what it would be after transfer to

44:51

a place like Stanford. Whereas patients with poor collaterals are

44:54

likely to experience core growth and may no longer be

44:57

a treatment candidate.

44:58

So we often think about collaterals based on CTA and

45:01

these are two different patients and you can see here that there are

45:04

very few collaterals. In fact, perhaps no

45:07

collaterals being identified in this patient. These are poor

45:10

collaterals, whereas this patient here has very

45:13

good collaterals past this M1 occlusion. And so

45:16

what you do is you say this is someone sorry.

45:19

This is someone that's likely to keep their core small

45:22

and still be a treatment candidate. Whereas this patient you'd be worried that

45:25

they're experiencing a very rapid growth in their ischemic core.

45:29

So if we have CTP, how do we judge whether

45:32

they have good collaterals? We don't

45:35

usually think about profusion and collaterals. So is there a way

45:38

to do that? Well one way to do that is to use something called

45:41

the hir or hypoperfusion intensity ratio. So

45:44

if you divide the volume of brain tissue with

45:47

a T-Max greater than 10 seconds divided by the volume of tissue

45:50

at the TMax greater than six seconds that gives you

45:53

hir what you want to have is less severe blood

45:56

flow delay. So you want to have a bigger denominator and so

45:59

patients with a lower HR are people

46:02

with presumably good blood flow delivery to the brain and

46:05

that implies the presence of good collaterals. And so

46:08

sure enough around an hir of 0.4 is

46:11

0.5 is a good threshold less than that.

46:14

Usually indicates favorable collaterals greater than that number

46:17

indicates relatively poor collaterals. So visually,

46:20

what does that look like? Well, you want to see less severe blood

46:23

flow. So a lot of red on a TMax map is bad

46:26

less red is good.

46:29

And so we've published several papers to really look at

46:32

this and it's now undergoing prospective validation. So

46:35

how do we leverage this in terms of predicting core

46:38

growth? Well, look at this patient 56 year old

46:41

male left hemiplegia right gaze preference Stroke Scale is 11.

46:44

We're not seeing a ischemic core being

46:47

measured by the automated software, but we're seeing a large right

46:50

MCA territory a number.

46:53

All right. This patient is located a hundred and

46:56

seventy five miles away from Stanford and Fresno. That's

46:59

a pretty long flight, but it's doable. So

47:02

let's delve into their penumbra a

47:05

little bit more and think about this hir. So here is sort of a you

47:08

know, looking in more detail at the severity of blood flow

47:11

delay and there is some red but there's a lot more tissue that's

47:14

not red. And this patient has an hir of 0.3. And

47:17

again, we're taking that team x 10

47:20

volume divided by the team X6 lime. So this divided by

47:23

that to get this 0.3 ratio. And so

47:26

if you look at this, can you predict core growth?

47:29

Well, we studied this. This is a paper on the Adrian Road

47:32

and annals of Neurology a few years ago. And this is

47:35

what we found in fact growth seem to be related

47:38

to what their hir is at the

47:41

referring hospital and right around 0.5. There really

47:44

is an inflection or patients after that experience a

47:47

pretty rapid growth in their scheme and core that often rendered them

47:50

not treatment candidates by the time they got to Standford.

47:53

All right. So here's the helicopter. It's about to

47:56

land on the roof. It's you know more than five hours after we

47:59

had that outside Hospital. Imaging we go straight down to the MRI

48:02

suite. This is what the outside Hospital CTP looks

48:05

like and here's our DWI at Stanford. So the

48:08

core is now 28 and if you look at this, it looks

48:11

like it's pretty well confined to this red area where the

48:14

most severe hypoperfusion was located but still

48:17

fortunately there is a large mismatch in

48:20

this patient. So this is someone that's still thrown back

48:23

to me Canada. They were taken to the cath lab and this internal

48:26

crowded artery occlusion was opened and

48:29

the patient had restoration of blood flow to the right cerebral hemisphere.

48:33

So we think that this

48:36

could potentially be very useful. So HR

48:39

is really measuring tissue level collateral blood flow and it's

48:42

it seems that it's going to be a very good predictive core

48:45

growth and this is really going on undergoing perspective validation

48:48

at stand for right now with Martin landsberg's Chris

48:51

to study.

48:53

Okay, so I want to now pivot toward the end and

48:56

just review some general stroke Imaging algorithms that

48:59

you might consider using and this is just meant to be a general

49:02

overview and it's really important that whatever Imaging

49:05

algorithm you set up at your Center. It is

49:08

something that you can do within your resources. That's

49:11

really really important. So again, we're looking for patients

49:14

with a large vessel occlusion a small core and a

49:17

large pin number. All right, but we can use a whole host of strategies to

49:20

identify these patients. So let's start with what I

49:23

would call the minimalist approach and that is a head

49:26

CT and a CTA and this was the approach that

49:29

was used by the Mr. Clean trial which was the first randomized trial

49:32

showing a benefit of thrombectomy in 2015.

49:35

And so it would do you would do something like this.

49:38

There's an 86 year old with left side of paralysis a very

49:41

high Stroke Scale. We have a non-con CT

49:44

and we have a CTA. So our CTA is

49:47

showing us an internal crowded artery inclusion on the right. So there is a large

49:50

vessel occlusion and on the left we're saying well, you know.

49:53

We don't see a huge amount of ischemic injury, like maybe there's

49:56

some subtle like loss of density here because

49:59

the cell loss of density here and the basal ganglia on

50:02

the right, but it doesn't look that bad. Maybe the internal capsule posterior lens

50:05

a little bit more hypoense, but certainly there's no large

50:08

area of obvious injury that seems to be favorable and

50:11

their symptoms are clearly much

50:14

more impaired than any hypodensity that we're seeing here. So

50:17

that's a good treatment candidate. Here's their AP

50:20

and lateral angiogram showing you internal crowded

50:23

artery inclusion. Just past the abhalmic artery and this

50:26

patient gets successfully revascularized and that's

50:29

a very valid treatment strategy and it works.

50:33

What if you want to be a little bit more discriminatory and

50:36

you want to include a little bit more nuanced information

50:39

about how much ischemic injury there

50:42

is on a head CT. Well, then you could talk about using aspects

50:45

as well as a CTA. And this was the approach

50:48

that was used by the ravasket trial which was also published in

50:51

the New England Journal of Medicine. And so aspects is

50:54

an attempt to quantify the

50:57

degree of ischemic injury on non-con CT. And so

51:00

this is from the folks that Alberta and what you do is you look at

51:03

these 10 stereotyped regions in the MCA territory

51:06

and you identify whether there is

51:09

significant hypodensity in each region. And if you

51:12

do have hyponency in a region, you remove a point and

51:15

there are 10 regions. So the best score you're going to get is 10,

51:18

but if you haven't aspects of six to 10

51:21

that is favorable for thrombectomy treatment, and so

51:24

here's a patient who's got a right M1 occlusion and

51:27

you want to window this to help you really discern the

51:30

presence of hypodensy and when you do that we

51:33

See that we've got hypodensity in the insula the lentiform nucleus

51:36

the caudate head and up into the M4 region.

51:39

Well, that's four points off. This aspects is

51:42

6 that is still favorable for treatment. Okay. Here's

51:45

another patient and 86 year old with left-sided paralysis.

51:48

Again, the high Stroke Scale here is the non-con CT

51:51

and when we look at this we say well

51:54

the M2 region looks hypotens the insula, the lentiform

51:57

nucleus looks typodens, and we've got an M1 occlusion. That's

52:00

someone favorable for treatment in the patient

52:03

did get a successful from Back To Me.

52:06

Okay, what if you want to incorporate some information about

52:09

collaterals and you could do that on CTA

52:12

or you could do a little more advanced collateral assessment

52:15

using multi-phase CTA and that's the

52:18

strategy that was used by the Escape trial another one

52:21

of the randomized trials that was published. And so how

52:24

does this work? Well you first are going to look at the head CT

52:27

and you're going to say okay. Well how much hypodensity is that is

52:30

there and there's a two patients where we see some hypodensity here

52:33

in the lentiform nucleus, maybe into the coding on

52:36

each patient, but overall looks like a high aspect score.

52:40

So what about the presence of an lvo? Both of these patients have

52:43

M1 occlusions this patient on the left this patient

52:46

on the right, but what about collaterals? Well, let's assess

52:49

the collateral. So this patient has very poor collaterals.

52:52

There's not a lot of contrast in the arteries past

52:55

this blockage and this patient over here has really good

52:58

collaterals, like very good filling past this blockage. And

53:01

so which one would you offer treatment to the one

53:04

with good collaterals? Okay, and this

53:07

patient goes on and gets treated successfully and that

53:10

also is a valid treatment strategy that was

53:13

worked very well in the Escape trial.

53:16

So we're getting into the more complex or Advanced sort of approach

53:19

and that's the use of perfusion imaging as well as

53:22

CT and geography and perfusion was actually used in

53:25

the bulk of the randomized trials that have been published. And so this was

53:28

in the early time Windows the Swift Prime and extend IA as

53:31

well as both late time Windows Dawn and diffuse 3.

53:34

And so that that will work something like this. This

53:37

is a patient of mine. She's an 81 year

53:40

old female with Aphasia and right-sided paralysis. She held her

53:43

Coumadin for a dental procedure and woke up with severe

53:46

stroke symptoms went to an

53:49

outside hospital was found to have these symptoms transferred to Stanford. And

53:52

here's MRI on admission to our hospital and we

53:55

can see a relatively small core on the diffusion weighted

53:58

image clearly a large penumbra here

54:01

and a pattern that looks like an ICA occlusion and sure

54:04

enough on the MRA. We see in ICA occlusion, but

54:07

clearly a mismatch here between these two the

54:10

core and the number which we quantify the course

54:13

seven the numbers 128 milliliters.

54:16

That's someone who's a good treatment candidate. So here we are treating the

54:19

patient and we see that I see

54:22

occlusion again just passed the ophthalmic artery and just passed

54:25

the anterior corital artery.

54:27

This is the clot that we removed from the patient and after

54:30

doing so we were able to restore flow

54:33

into that left anterior circulation territory. So,

54:36

you know a very good treatment a good restoration of

54:39

flow and here is the patient in the

54:42

cafeteria on the day of discharge, which is three days later and this

54:45

is my fellow former fellow Eric assessment who did the procedure

54:48

with me and I just want to point out that here's the patient.

54:51

So she looks fabulous and arguably and

54:54

better shape than her husband, and she really did remarkably. Well.

54:58

So I just want to end with a few words on

55:01

automated Imaging because this is something that is really going

55:04

on now and everyone should be aware of so AI is

55:07

here. These are some of the automated software platforms that you might have

55:10

seen you are able to get all kinds of information on

55:13

your phone, which is how the neuron eventualists and

55:16

strict neurology folks are really following these patients and triaging them.

55:19

So the Radiologists need to be aware of that you can window

55:22

things you can scroll things on your phone now, which is pretty

55:25

incredible. You can see on email whether a patient

55:28

has a mismatch and an ldo and you can

55:31

see when a patient looks like they should not be transferred even though they have

55:34

an lvo they may have a matched deficit or

55:37

a very large core. But automation is here. It's

55:40

helping already and that makes us a very exciting

55:43

time and stroke care. So just to wrap up this is a really fun

55:46

time to be taking care of stroke patients and it's a

55:49

really fun time to be Imaging them thrown back

55:52

to me is a very highly effective therapy for ischemic stroke due

55:55

to a large vessel occlusion and our stroke systems of care are really already.

55:58

Drink to this artificial intelligence is

56:01

here. That's really kind of showing up first in neuroradiology and

56:04

stroke care and I think is going to continue to expand in use

56:07

and here's just a view of the Stanford campus

56:10

from the helicopter when I when I joined them for a quick flight. It's

56:13

really beautiful here. So come visit the Bay Area sometime and

56:16

with that I will go ahead and stop my sharing

56:19

and I'm happy to answer any questions

56:22

that you all might have and

56:26

I'm going to navigate here the Q&A box. So

56:29

there's one

56:32

question here about how do we Define a small core?

56:35

And that is a bit of a moving

56:38

Target. So right now in the early window trials 50 MLS

56:42

to 70 MLS was used in the late window trials.

56:45

There was a sliding scale of core size that

56:48

went up to 70 MLS if you want to be as inclusive as

56:51

possible. What we do at Stanford is we Define the

56:54

core of 70 or less as favorable in greater

56:57

than 70. We we don't know and don't always offer treatment.

57:00

I suspect next year. We're gonna have data about

57:03

larger courses already been one trial published

57:06

out of Japan suggesting that large course can

57:09

help similarly acapca Strokes.

57:12

We just don't have a lot of data right now many people are starting to

57:15

consider treating them, but we don't have data from

57:18

randomized trials yet.

57:20

Another question here patients who

57:23

have recurrent stroke. Can you still treat them

57:26

with thrombectomy procedures so you can I

57:29

think you have to understand what's going on with the patient

57:32

and each situation can be variable. And so

57:35

for example, we had a patient a few years ago who are

57:38

one of my former fellows his first

57:41

three thrombectomy procedures. He did with me. We're

57:44

in the same patient within a 36-hour period She

57:47

had a new diagnosis of cancer and is

57:50

very hypercoagable and she kept throwing M1 clots on

57:53

the left side. And so we did a repeat, you know thrown back

57:56

to me three times in a row because her Imaging triage

57:59

every time still looked favorable and so

58:02

you can certainly still help those patients. You just have

58:05

to make sure you're taking to into account the clinical situation

58:09

of what you're doing.

58:12

So a question about hyperfine for

58:15

wake up stroke. So hyperfinds pretty interesting. We don't have

58:18

it at Stanford. I think that it would be very interesting to

58:21

have these sort of In-House Mrs. To to make

58:24

kind of triage decisions. I've just not familiar with how well

58:27

they perform but certainly you can get a DWI and

58:30

gain some information. I don't know how well other you

58:33

know sequences work on that scanner, but that would

58:36

be a very interesting way to potentially evaluate a

58:39

patient in your neuro ICU. For example, who may need a

58:42

throwback to me treatment.

58:45

So a question about chronic vessel occlusion on

58:48

CTN MRA being an issue for thrombectomy. This

58:51

can sometimes be difficult. Right a patient comes in

58:54

with a stroke and there's a large vessel occlusion and you don't

58:57

always know whether that is an acute occlusion or

59:00

a chronic occlusion. If they are

59:03

newly presenting with symptoms, I would

59:06

argue it's probably a good idea to operate under the

59:09

assumption that it is an acute occlusion. But again, you

59:12

can be wrong so you can sometimes leverage trip

59:15

tricks on the profusion to help you and so,

59:18

you know, if you're looking at Rapids MTT,

59:21

for example, which is less sensitive to

59:24

delays symmetry on the MTT map can often

59:27

indicate a more chronic inclusion. We have a paper under review about that

59:30

right now. Whereas if there's asymmetry in

59:33

the MTT that may indicate that it's an acute occlusion. But

59:36

sometimes you just need to say, you know, we don't know and take

59:39

the patient to the neuronovascular suite

59:42

and and see if you can discern based on the pattern.

59:44

Or whether you can cross it

59:47

successfully and find out that maybe you were tricked on the non-invasive Imaging.

59:52

A very timely question on posterior circulation stroke

59:55

care. So we finally have a

59:58

randomized data that doing a Basler artery

60:01

thrombectomy is beneficial. So the motion

60:04

attention trials were published within the last month and

60:07

they were both randomized trials in China and showed

60:10

a benefit for thrombectomy for basala artery occlusion,

60:13

as was asked a little bit early. We don't have data on PCA

60:16

occlusions that could be certainly a reasonable

60:19

thing. But it's it's an area where we don't have a lot

60:22

of evidence right. Now. The Imaging evaluation of

60:25

posterior circulation Strokes needs a little

60:28

bit more work. And that's one of my grants's asking that that question

60:31

but both of those positive trials use something

60:34

called the posterior circulation aspects and you had to

60:37

have a PC aspects of six or greater as well as a

60:40

CTA showing that you had a Basler artery occlusion or

60:43

occlusion of both intercranial vertebral arteries.

60:46

And so that's sort of the inclusion criteria that I

60:49

think is reasonable to be operating under right now.

60:52

But the stroke guidelines have not been updated to address that

60:55

at this time.

60:57

So I will there's a couple more and then I'll let you all go

61:00

for time. Our neuron inventional team. We currently have four

61:03

neuron eventualists. We have a three fabulous

61:06

nurse coordinators who help

61:09

operate our outpatient service, but we have a super busy inpatient

61:12

stroke team that includes, you know,

61:15

many many other folks in terms of a very robust drug neurology

61:18

team a stroke neurology fellowship program coordinators. It

61:21

takes a village to really do this this well,

61:24

and that's a really great question. And then

61:27

why don't I

61:30

For that you've got a good question. Nice to hear from you. There's

61:33

a lot of different terms for salvageable tissue that

61:36

can cause confusion so penumbra and

61:39

mismatched perfusion deficit. Yeah. So the I

61:42

think the terminology does get a little bit sloppy. So in general what

61:45

I would say is tissue at risk and penumbra are synonymous those

61:48

mean the same thing mismatch refers

61:51

to a core that is smaller than

61:54

a penumbra. So those two volumes

61:57

are mismatched if the core and the

62:00

penumbra are the same size, they are matched. And again,

62:03

that's a situation where I don't think it makes a lot

62:06

of sense to open up a large vessel occlusion. If the

62:09

core is already the same size as the salvageable tissue

62:12

perfusion deficit can refer to

62:15

any form of the penumbra certainly is

62:18

a perfusion deficit being could also have more mild profusion delays

62:21

that may reflect us to stenosis and the neck for

62:24

example

62:25

And then why don't

62:28

we end with one more question from Steven Wong here. Do I

62:31

put Stenson for intracranial arteries stenosis? So this this

62:34

is another very active and kind of tricky area a

62:37

lot of the best data are coming out of Korea and

62:40

Japan for how to handle patients with intracranial atherosclerosis. The

62:43

medical therapy is really critical. So initiation

62:46

of anti-platelet therapy is really important

62:49

in keeping these arteries open. I try to avoid acute

62:52

stunting if I can because I'd prefer to

62:55

not put metal in if I can get away with

62:58

not doing it. So I usually will try angioplasty if the

63:01

vessel is is continuing to go down after

63:04

a throne back to me. But if it doesn't respond

63:07

to angioplasty or if there's you know a dissection that

63:10

results placement of a stent is a reasonable

63:13

consideration that we have a little bit less data to

63:16

help us to guide that decision.

63:19

So last question

63:22

can MRI CT predict a stroke that might happen in

63:25

days.

63:25

Months not yet. You can that's a great

63:28

question. We can't quite predict the future that accurately but look there's

63:31

a lot of smart people on this call on this

63:34

zoom and I'm sure someone will come up with a good idea that we can

63:37

test in the future.

63:38

So, thanks again everybody. This was a lot

63:41

of fun and thanks again

63:44

to the folks at MRI online for for supporting it.

63:48

Dr. Hai, thank you so much for your lecture today and thanks to

63:51

all for your participation in our new conference a reminder

63:54

that you can access the recording of today's conference and

63:57

all our other previous named conferences by creating a free MRI online

64:00

account.

64:03

MRI online has launched a new stroke Imaging Focus membership plan

64:06

to help you gain access to help you gain confidence with stroke and

64:09

neurovascular. Imaging. Learn more at MRI

64:12

andline.com slash neurostroke. Be sure

64:15

to join us next week on Wednesday, November 9th at 12pm Eastern

64:18

time for a lecture with Dr. Donald Resnick on

64:21

the articular disorders of the peripheral. Skeleton

64:24

emphasis on morphology and Target

64:27

sites. You can register for that lecture MRI online.com and

64:30

follow us on social media for updates and reminders on upcoming

64:33

new conferences. Thanks again, and have a wonderful day.

Report

Faculty

Jeremy J. Heit, MD, PhD

Associate Professor of Radiology and Neurosurgery, Interim Chief of Neuroimaging and Neurointervention

Stanford University

Tags

Vascular Imaging

Vascular

Perfusion

Neuroradiology

Neuro

MRP

MRI

Emergency

CTP

CTA

CT

Brain

Angiography