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Research ArticleInterventionalE
Open Access

Higher Rates of Mortality but Not Morbidity Follow Intracranial Mechanical Thrombectomy in the Elderly

Y. Loh, D. Kim, Z.-S. Shi, S. Tateshima, P.M. Vespa, N.R. Gonzalez, S. Starkman, J.L. Saver, R. Jahan, D.S. Liebeskind, G.R. Duckwiler and F. Viñuela
American Journal of Neuroradiology August 2010, 31 (7) 1181-1185; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A2079
Y. Loh
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D. Kim
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Z.-S. Shi
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S. Tateshima
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P.M. Vespa
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N.R. Gonzalez
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S. Starkman
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J.L. Saver
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R. Jahan
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D.S. Liebeskind
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G.R. Duckwiler
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F. Viñuela
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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Mechanical thrombectomy is a promising means of recanalizing acute cerebrovascular occlusions in certain situations. We sought to determine if increasing age adversely affects prognosis.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: We reviewed all Merci thrombectomy cases and compared patients younger than 80 years of age with older individuals. We compared these 2 age groups with respect to recanalization rates, hospital LOS, hemorrhagic transformation, and death and disability on discharge.

RESULTS: Elderly patients were more likely to die from their stroke than those younger than 80 years of age, regardless of recanalization success (48% versus 15%; OR, 5.5; 95% CI, 2.1–14.1). Among survivors, there was no difference in the probability of having a good functional outcome (mRS, ≤2) by discharge (38% versus 40%; OR, 0.9; 95% CI, 0.3–2.8). Hemorrhagic transformation did not vary between age groups.

CONCLUSIONS: Among patients undergoing mechanical thrombectomy for acute cerebrovascular occlusions, increased age conveys a higher rate of stroke-related death, but disability at discharge in this group is similar to that of younger survivors.

Abbreviations

AOL
arterial occlusive lesion
CI
confidence interval
HT
hemorrhagic transformation
IA
intra-arterial
ICA
internal carotid artery
LOS
length of stay
MCA
middle cerebral artery
MERCI
Mechanical Embolus Removal in Cerebral Ischemia
mRS
modified Rankin Scale
NIHSS
National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale
OR
odds ratio
PH
parenchymal hematoma
PTA
percutaneous transluminal angioplasty
rtPA
recombinant tissue plasminogen activator
TIA
transient ischemic attack

Intracranial mechanical thrombectomy is a promising ischemic stroke treatment. Since the introduction and US Food and Drug Administration clearance of the Merci retriever system (Concentric Medical, Mountain View, California) for recanalization of large-vessel thomboembolic occlusions, its use is ever-increasing.1,2 There is ongoing interest in the selection of appropriate candidates because it remains unclear which patients benefit the most.

The elderly population is predicted to double in a half century, and it is well established that older persons have a higher risk of stroke.3,4 Advanced age also carries with it the burden of decreased neuronal plasticity and an ever-decreasing pool of healthy neurons. A large intracranial vessel occlusion may irreversibly injure a higher proportion of neurons in an elderly patient than it would in a younger patient under similar circumstances, substantially impeding recovery of neurologic function.5 Thus, elderly patients may incur more disability regardless of treatment technique.6

The safety and effectiveness of acute stroke therapies, including intravenous and IA thrombolysis, have been studied in the older population.7,8 However, the efficacy of intracranial mechanical thrombectomy in this population is poorly explored. The purpose of this study was to examine, with respect to increasing age, our single-center experience with intracranial mechanical thrombectomy by using the Merci retriever.

Materials and Methods

Patients and Techniques

All consecutive patients undergoing Merci clot retrieval for large arterial occlusions from August 2002 to December 2007 were prospectively entered into the data base of our institution according to protocol approved by our local institutional review board. We retrospectively reviewed all anterior circulation occlusions involving the intracranial ICA and/or the M1 segment of the MCA. All posterior circulation occlusions were included. Tandem lesions were included if at least 1 of the occlusions involved any of the mentioned vessels.

In all cases, transfemoral cerebral angiography was performed to document arterial occlusion. Next, the diagnostic catheter was exchanged for an 8F or 9F balloon guiding catheter, or the guiding catheter was advanced coaxially over it. After angiographic visualization of the cervical internal carotid or vertebral origin, the artery was catheterized, if the procedure was safe. Once the guide catheter was in a stable position, it was attached and connected to continuous heparinized saline flush. A microcatheter and microwire was then advanced coaxially up to the occlusion. The microcatheter was positioned distal to the thrombus, and contrast was injected to confirm positioning and vessel diameter. Typically, the proximal balloon catheter tip was then inflated to arrest antegrade flow. The Merci retriever was then advanced into the microcatheter, and all loops were deployed distal to the thrombus. Next, a slow pull was applied to the entire microsystem under fluoroscopy. Gentle aspiration was made through the lumen of the guiding catheter during active extraction. Once the retriever began moving freely, blood was vigorously aspirated from the guiding catheter. The balloon catheter tip was deflated, and control angiography was performed. The procedure was concluded if satisfactory recanalization was achieved. If occlusion persisted, this procedure was repeated and was aborted if the surgeon thought that the clot could not be extracted or a maximum of 6 attempts was made. The angiographic result was graded according to the previously described AOL scale.9

We separated patients into 2 groups: those 80 years of age or older, and those younger. We compared the 2 groups with regard to demographic data, the presence of premorbid conditions, and aspects of the intervention. We also noted concomitant use of an IA thrombolytic or preintervention administration of an intravenous thrombolytic.

Patients underwent pre-Merci MR imaging to include diffusion-weighted, fluid-attenuated inversion recovery, and gradient recalled- echo sequences; intracranial time-of-flight MR angiography; and perfusion-weighted imaging. In patients unable to undergo MR imaging, CT including CT angiography and perfusion sequences was performed. Patients were typically selected for thrombectomy if the infarct volume was subjectively small and there was salvageable penumbra. All patients underwent noncontrast head CT immediately after the procedure. Multimodal MR or CT imaging similar to that in the pre-Merci study was performed from mostly 5 but up to 24 hours after thrombectomy.

In our primary analysis, we compared clinical outcome measures including preintervention and discharge NIHSS scores, hospital LOS, change in NIHSS score by discharge, discharge mRS score, and rate of stroke-related death. For these NIHSS comparisons, patients who died from their stroke were assigned the maximum NIHSS score.

As a secondary analysis, we compared the discharge NIHSS score, change in NIHSS score by discharge, and the probability of a good outcome (mRS score, ≤2) in survivors. We also examined the proportions of all types of HT according to the European Cooperative Acute Stroke Study definition.10 We then assessed rates of PH (defined as both types of PHs, PH1 and PH2). We also compared the distribution of symptomatic HT, defined as a decrease in NIHSS score by ≥4 points or prompting surgical intervention.

We also conducted several post hoc analyses based on the results of our primary comparison. We first sought to determine if the cardioembolic stroke source had an independent impact on clinical outcome and stroke-related death. As another post hoc analysis, we selected a more homogenously aged subgroup from the younger population (65–79 years of age) to compare with the octogenarian and older cohort to exclude stroke in the younger population. This was aimed at approximating a more typical acute ischemic stroke patient population. We compared this subgroup with the group 80 years of age and older with regard to clinical outcome measures.

Statistical analyses for categoric variables included the χ2 and Fisher exact tests when cell sizes were small and ORs for selected dichotomous comparisons. We examined continuous variables by using analysis of variance, and applied the Mann-Whitney U test to measures with uneven distributions.

Results

A total of 106 patients met inclusion criteria. Among these patients, 75 were younger than of 80 years of age (median, 59 years; interquartile range, 46.5–71.5 years), while 31 were 80 years of age or older (median, 85 years; interquartile range, 83–89). Forty-five percent were men, and the median pretreatment NIHSS score was 19. Because of premorbid disability, 2 patients were excluded solely from the mRS analysis. One patient had a prolonged hospital stay from a nonstroke-related condition diagnosed during hospitalization and was excluded solely from the hospital LOS comparison. Eight patients younger than 80 years of age and 2 elderly patients did not have interpretable post-Merci perfusion images to determine whether there was persistent ischemic penumbra following thrombectomy. Three patients in each group had either contrast staining, early petechial HT, or both on postintervention CT imaging but did not undergo sufficient imaging to determine the exact nature and were thus excluded from secondary HT analyses. The age distribution of the study cohort is displayed by decile in Table 1.

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Table 1:

Cohort age distribution by deciles in patients undergoing Merci thrombectomy for acute ischemic stroke

Baseline demographics and aspects of the intervention were similar between groups (Table 2). More elderly patients had a cardioembolic source of their stroke (81% versus 55%, P = .02). The distribution of anterior circulation strokes was similar between groups, as was the proportion affecting the dominant hemisphere.

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Table 2:

Baseline characteristics of patients undergoing Merci thrombectomy for acute ischemic strokea

The rates of good recanalization, time to the first Merci pass, and the use of adjuvant therapies and concomitant intravenous or IA rtPA were similar between groups. In the younger patients, 2 underwent adjuvant PTA in the involved intracranial artery, 1 received IA abciximab, and 2 had tandem cervical ICA lesions, which were treated with carotid angioplasty and stenting, while 2 older patients underwent adjuvant intracranial PTA. Postintervention diffusion-perfusion mismatch was distributed evenly between both age groups.

Although pre-Merci NIHSS scores were similar between groups, older patients fared worse than the younger cohort on multiple clinical outcomes at discharge, including discharge NIHSS score (median, 42 versus 6.5; P = .006), mRS score (median, 5 versus 4; P = .006), and NIHSS improvement by discharge (−4.9 [decline] versus 4.2, P = .01). Stroke-related deaths occurred more frequently in the elderly cohort (48% versus 15%, P = .0002). Table 3 displays clinical outcomes of patients by age.

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Table 3:

Clinical outcomes, secondary end points, and HT in patients undergoing Merci thrombectomy for acute ischemic strokea

In the secondary analysis, with deaths excluded, all comparisons were similar among the survivors of both groups (Table 3). The distribution of good outcomes at discharge (mRS score, ≤2) was even among survivors of both ages (38% versus 40%; OR, 0.9; 95% CI, 0.3–2.8). Figure 1 displays the distribution of mRS scores sorted by the 2 age groupings. Rates of varying types of HT and the hospital LOS did not vary by age.

Fig 1.
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Fig 1.

Discharge modified mRS scores in patients ≥80 years of age versus younger patients.

Table 3 also shows the results of the post hoc comparison of the subgroup 65–79 years of age. The rate of stroke-related death remained higher in the patients 80 years of age and older compared with this post hoc subgroup (48% versus 24%; OR, 2.9; 95% CI, 1.0–8.5). Similar to the primary analysis, the clinical outcomes in survivors were also equivalent (discharge NIHSS score, P = .8; discharge mRS score ≤2, 38% versus 48%; OR, 0.7; 95% CI, 0.2–2.4).

An unexpected baseline difference in the 2 cohorts was the uneven distribution of cardioembolic stroke source, which we further investigated post hoc. After pooling both cohorts and separating them according to whether the stroke source was cardioembolic in origin, we detected no differences in the proportion of stroke-related deaths (27% [18/67] versus 22% [8/37]; OR, 1.3; 95% CI, 0.5–3.4) and good clinical outcome at discharge in survivors (30% [20/67] versus 30% [11/37]; OR, 1.0; 95% CI, 0.4–2.4).

Discussion

Recent effort to optimize patient selection for Merci thrombectomy is beginning to discriminate factors affecting outcome. Our series demonstrates that advanced age predicts overall poor outcome following Merci thrombectomy. This disadvantage is nearly entirely due to the higher rate of stroke-related death, which occurred in nearly half of all patients 80 years of age or older. Nearly all of the clinical variables used in our study incorporate death into their measurement, namely discharge NIHSS score, change in NIHSS score, and mRS score.

Most interesting, if a patient survived the stroke, the probability of good outcome by discharge did not vary according to age. By secondarily analyzing clinical outcomes in such a dichotomized fashion, we were able to account for the impact made by family influence on decisions to withdraw care due to poor prognosis. These family variations confound all analyses incorporating mortality.

Contrary to our initial expectations, the burden of decreased neuronal plasticity accompanying advanced age does not substantially impede neurologic recovery in survivors. This may be more dependent on the fact that, in select patients with salvageable tissue, the success of recanalization has a more significant impact on outcome than age. In fact, all elderly survivors with good clinical outcomes at discharge were successfully recanalized (6/6) compared with 76% of the younger cohort (19/25, P = .3).

By analyzing the stroke survivors separately, however, we significantly limited further comparison in our study by reducing the sample size. Because half of the elderly group was not further analyzed in a number of comparisons, our ability to detect intergroup differences was substantially limited in these instances. However, with nearly similar rates of good outcome among survivors, it appears that functional recovery is similar among differing age groups, even though the good outcome subgroup is composed solely of 6 elderly survivors. Larger samples are clearly needed to substantiate this finding.

These observations are somewhat comparable with findings in the similarly aged cohort receiving IA thrombolysis for acute ischemic stroke.7 Both groups in our study had significantly higher mortality rates by discharge (48% and 15%) than their counterparts in the IA rtPA group (18% and 10%, respectively, reported at 7 days). This finding is likely due to the presumably higher proportion of proximal occlusions in our Merci group. Alternatively, there may be some outcome effect from the greater delay in time from symptom onset to intervention in our study, 383 minutes compared with the 259 minutes average delay in our previous IA rtPA report. Similar to the current study, however, previous IA rtPA data showed that age as a dichotomous variable was not a predictor of good (mRS score, ≤2) outcome, though surviving patients were not exclusively compared in a separate analysis and disability at 90 days was the outcome measure used in the IA rtPA cohort. Preliminary analysis of the MERCI and multi MERCI cohort stratified by age has yielded similar results.11

Although IA thrombolysis is a markedly different mechanism of recanalization from mechanical thrombectomy, we found a similar recanalization rate between age groups, which is consistent with previous reports of IA thrombolytic therapy.6,7,12 Also similar to previous analyses of patients receiving IA rtPA, the rate of HT was no different between age groups,5,6,13,14 despite the fact that increased age is an independent risk factor for HT following intravenous thrombolysis.15,16 As with patients receiving IA thombolytics, this finding likely stems from a more rigorous patient selection process and the systemic absence of thrombolytic agents in most cases.

Although no longer significant when including stroke-related deaths, the differences in clinical outcome between the 65- and 79-year-old post hoc subgroup and those 80 years of age or older still trended in the same direction as the primary group comparisons of NIHSS score change, discharge NIHSS score, and discharge mRS score. Although this likely reflects the decrease in the size of the younger cohort from 75 to 33, the clinical outcomes in patients younger than 65 years of age may be worse than those the 65–79 years of age. For instance, younger patients are very likely treated aggressively despite large preintervention core infarct volumes and are less likely to be treated palliatively following failed intervention.

A limitation of this study is that it is a retrospective single-center observation. In addition, there were several radiographic variables that have established relationships with functional outcome that were not considered in our study, such as the angiographic collateral grade17,18 or the final infarct core volume.19,20 We admittedly report the AOL score, representing the final recanalization, which does not entirely reflect reperfusion. We chose the AOL scale because its definition is more constant across studies and is more applicable to the cerebral vasculature than the Thrombolysis in Myocardial Ischemia Scale, which has led to contradictory applications in past clinical trials.21,22 Several other clinical aspects such as systolic blood pressure and temperature during the hospitalization impact overall outcome,23–25 though they were beyond the scope of our study. Finally, because this study only compared the immediate neurologic outcomes and disability on discharge, long-term applicability is yet to be determined.

Although we have shown that older patients are more likely to die following Merci thrombectomy regardless of recanalization success, this treatment option should not be denied purely on the basis of age considerations. Approximately 38% of elderly survivors (6/16) or nearly 20% of the total number of the elderly cohort (6/31) had good functional outcomes by discharge. In our opinion, this measures well against the invariably fatal or severely disabled outcome anticipated in comparably aged patients with untreated large-vessel occlusions.

Until a randomized trial can establish whether age should be a discriminating factor for selection, thrombectomy should remain an alternative for the elderly patient, with careful consideration of all aspects of the patient's condition. Our case series suggests, though, that older age as a variable should help guide family discussions concerning patient prognosis and should be a consideration in the design of any future trial of thrombectomy for acute stroke.

Conclusions

Increasing age predicts worse outcome, though functional recovery in survivors matches that of younger patients. Future clinical studies of acute mechanical thrombectomy should account for such age-related differences.

Footnotes

  • All authors are or have been employees of the University of California, which holds several patents on retriever devices for stroke. Dr Duckwiler is a Scientific Advisor for and shareholder in Concentric Medical. Dr Liebeskind is a consultant for Concentric Medical. Dr Starkman has received grant funding for clinical trials from Concentric Medical and Genentech. Dr Saver is a scientific consultant for CoAxia, Concentric Medical, Talecris, Ferrer, AGA Medical, BrainsGate, PhotoThera, and Cygnis; has received lecture honoraria from Ferrer and Boehringer Ingelheim; has received support for clinical trials from Concentric Medical; and is a site investigator in multicenter trials sponsored by AGA Medical and the National Institutes of Health for which the University of California Regents received payments based on the number of subjects enrolled.

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  • The views expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not reflect the official policy or position of the Department of the Army, the Department of Defense, or the US Government.

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  • Received October 29, 2009.
  • Accepted after revision January 9, 2010.
  • Copyright © American Society of Neuroradiology
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American Journal of Neuroradiology: 31 (7)
American Journal of Neuroradiology
Vol. 31, Issue 7
1 Aug 2010
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Higher Rates of Mortality but Not Morbidity Follow Intracranial Mechanical Thrombectomy in the Elderly
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Cite this article
Y. Loh, D. Kim, Z.-S. Shi, S. Tateshima, P.M. Vespa, N.R. Gonzalez, S. Starkman, J.L. Saver, R. Jahan, D.S. Liebeskind, G.R. Duckwiler, F. Viñuela
Higher Rates of Mortality but Not Morbidity Follow Intracranial Mechanical Thrombectomy in the Elderly
American Journal of Neuroradiology Aug 2010, 31 (7) 1181-1185; DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A2079

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Higher Rates of Mortality but Not Morbidity Follow Intracranial Mechanical Thrombectomy in the Elderly
Y. Loh, D. Kim, Z.-S. Shi, S. Tateshima, P.M. Vespa, N.R. Gonzalez, S. Starkman, J.L. Saver, R. Jahan, D.S. Liebeskind, G.R. Duckwiler, F. Viñuela
American Journal of Neuroradiology Aug 2010, 31 (7) 1181-1185; DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A2079
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