IMPORTANCE: In several randomized clinical trials, endovascular thrombectomy led to better functional outcomes than conventional treatment at 90 days poststroke in patients with acute basilar artery occlusion. However, the long-term clinical outcomes of these patients have not been well delineated.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate 1-year clinical outcomes in patients with acute basilar artery occlusion following endovascular thrombectomy vs control.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This study is an extension of the ATTENTION trial, a multicenter, randomized clinical trial. Patients were included between February 2021 and January 2022, with 1-year follow-up through April 2023. This multicenter, population-based study was conducted at 36 comprehensive stroke sites. Patients with acute basilar artery occlusion within 12 hours of estimated symptom onset were included. Of the 342 patients randomized in the ATTENTION trial, 330 (96.5%) had 1-year follow-up information available.
EXPOSURES: Endovascular thrombectomy (thrombectomy group) vs best medical treatment (control group).
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The primary outcome was defined as a score of 0 to 3 on the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) at 1 year. Secondary outcomes were functional independence (mRS score 0-2), excellent outcome (mRS score 0-1), level of disability (distribution of all 7 mRS scores), mortality, and health-related quality of life at 1 year.
RESULTS: Among 330 patients who had 1-year follow-up data, 227 (68.8%) were male, and the mean (SD) age was 67.0 (10.7) years. An mRS score 0 to 3 at 1 year was achieved by 99 of 222 patients (44.6%) in the thrombectomy group and 21 of 108 (19.4%) in the control group (adjusted rate ratio, 2.23; 95% CI, 1.51-3.29). Mortality at 1 year compared with 90 days was more frequent in both the thrombectomy group (101 of 222 [45.5%] vs 83 of 226 [36.7%]) and the control group (69 of 108 [63.9%] vs 63 of 114 [55.3%]). Excellent outcome (mRS score 0-1) at 1 year compared with 90 days increased in the thrombectomy group (62 of 222 [27.9%] vs 45 of 226 [19.9%]) but not in the control group (9 of 108 [8.3%] vs 9 of 114 [7.9%]) resulting in a magnified treatment benefit.
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Among patients with basilar artery occlusion within 12 hours of onset, the benefits of endovascular thrombectomy at 1 year compared with 90 days were sustained for favorable (mRS score 0-3) outcome and enhanced for excellent (mRS score 0-1) outcome.
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Emergency Medicine | |
Hospital Doctor/Hospitalists | |
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Neurology |
As an ED physician, I found this article useful and significant for everyday clinical practice.
Thrombolytics for stroke-like symptoms has been controversial for several decades. The studied patients had proven basilar artery occlusion. This study suggests that both short- and long-term outcomes were better with thrombectomy for basilar artery occlusion. 90-day outcomes modified Rankin score (MRS) 0-3: 44% vs 19% thrombectomy vs usual care. 1-year outcomes of MRS 0-1: MRS 0-1 with thrombectomy vs usual care: 28% vs 8%. However, because this was a secondary analysis of outcomes (not the primary study design), it requires testing as a primary outcome.
Wonderful to note that this secondary analysis of an RCT revealed the long-term benefits in terms of functional independence, survival, and quality-of-life. This will help me in my discussion with surgical colleagues on the better option (i.e., risk/benefit ratio and long-term cost-effectiveness for endovascular thrombectomy. However, I am concerned that the study involved only Chinese patients and I feel follow-up for longer than 1 year would have provided better data.