Abstract

Background: Increases in FLAIR MRI signal intensity (SI) after acute ischemic stroke (AIS) have been proposed as “tissue clocks”, reflecting the degree of ischemic injury and potential for recovery in brain tissue. We hypothesize that lower SI increases will be a biomarker for less severe tissue injury and hence is potentially salvageable. To test this, we investigated patients who were treated with tPA to determine whether better outcomes were associated with lower FLAIR SI. Methods: Using our Get with the Guidelines database, we retrospectively analyzed AIS patients admitted between 2011 to 2013 who received full-dose tPA based on institutional protocols. Patients were included if they received a CT scan at our hospital before tPA therapy, and MRI performed < 1 h post CT included a usable FLAIR scan and evidence of stroke on acute DWI. SI ratio (SIR) was calculated on the FLAIR by selecting region of interests in hyperintense FLAIR areas that coincided with the acute DWI lesion and matching contralateral regions. Logistic regression analysis was performed using forward stepwise analysis to combine age, sex, admission NIHSS, SIR and onset-to-treatment (OTT) time to predict discharge outcome. Good outcome was defined as discharge to home or in-patient rehabilitation hospital. Results: There were 129 AIS patients who received tPA, and 57 met our imaging criteria. Patient characteristics were: mean±SD age 70±15 years, median [IQR] NIHSS 13 [7-18], OTT 2.1±1.1 h, time-to-MRI 2.1±1.0 h, 58% female and median SIR 1.13 [1.05-1.26]. On a univariate basis, only age (P<0.0001) and NIHSS (P=0.005) were significant predictors of outcome. However, multivariate analysis showed that combining age (P=0.019), NIHSS (P=0.022), and SIR (P=0.018) was able to predict good discharge outcome with 100% [95% CI 63-100%] specificity and 90% [77-96%] sensitivity. Using age and NIHSS alone, resulted in the same specificity but only 71% [56-83%] sensitivity. Discussion: Controlling for age and admission NIHSS, we found that lower FLAIR SIR was a significant predictor of discharge outcome while OTT was not. This suggests that “tissue clocks” may be more accurate than “time clocks” for predicting tissue outcome, and ultimately functional outcome.

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