Abstract

The lesion volume assessed from diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) within the first six hours to first week following stroke onset has been proposed as a predictor of functional outcome in clinical studies. However, the prediction accuracy decreases when the DWI lesion volume is measured during the earliest stages of patient evaluation. In this study, our hypothesis was that the combination of lesion location (motor-related regions) and diffusivity measures (such as Apparent Diffusion Coefficient [ADC]) at the acute stage of stroke predict clinical outcome. Seventy-nine consecutive acute carotid territory stroke patients (median age: 62 years) were included in the study and outcome at three months was assessed using the modified Rankin scale (good outcome: mRS 0-2; poor outcome: mRS 3-5). DWI was acquired within the first six hours of stroke onset (H2) and the following day (D1). Apparent Diffusion Coefficient (ADC) values were measured in the corticospinal tract (CST), the primary motor cortex (M1), the supplementary motor area (SMA), the putamen in the affected hemisphere, and in the contralateral cerebellum to predict stroke outcome. Prediction of poor vs. good outcome at the individual level at H2 (D1, respectively) was achieved with 74% accuracy, 95%CI: 53-89% (75%, 95% CI: 61-89%, respectively) when patients were classified from ADC values measured in the putamen and CST. Prediction accuracy from DWI volumes reached only 62% (95%CI: 42-79%) at H2 and 69% (95%CI: 50-85%) at D1. We therefore show that measures of ADC at the acute stage in deeper motor structures (putamen and CST) are better predictors of stroke outcome than DWI lesion volume.

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