Abstract

Endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) has been validated in several randomized controlled trials in recent years for its efficacy in the treatment of acute ischemic strokes (AIS) and is now the standard of care according to international guidelines. However, in about 20% of EVT procedures, recanalization is not achieved, and over 50% of patients who undergo EVT still do not have good functional outcome. In this article, we provide an extensive review of the latest evidence and developments in the field of EVT, with particular focus on the factors that improve patient outcomes. These factors include new and adjunctive techniques such as combination of direct aspiration and stent retriever, intra-arterial urokinase or 2b/3a inhibitors, rescue stenting, as well as novel devices including balloon guide catheters and the newer generations of aspiration catheters and stent retrievers. We also examined the latest notion of using first-pass effect (FPE) as the target to achieve during EVT, which has been associated with an improved functional outcome. While the field of EVT has been rapidly evolving, further research is required in specific AIS patient populations such as those with large ischemic core, late presentation beyond 24 h, posterior circulation strokes, and with distal medium vessel occlusion or tandem lesions to better assess its efficacy and safety.

Highlights

  • In recent years, several randomized clinical trials in acute ischemic stroke (AIS) have validated and cemented the efficacy of endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) in proximal anterior circulation occlusions [1,2,3,4,5,6]

  • Thrombectomy in many centers are performed with the combination of a stent retriever and a distal aspiration catheter as well as a balloon guide catheter. These range from the stent retriever-assisted vacuum-locked extraction (SAVE) technique, the BAlloon guiDe with large bore Distal Access catheter with dual aspiration with Stent Retriever as Standard (BADDASS) approach, the aspiration–retriever technique for stroke (ARTS), a stent retrieving into an aspiration catheter with proximal balloon technique (ASAP), or proximal balloon occlusion together with direct thrombus aspiration during stent retriever thrombectomy (PROTECT-PLUS) [19,20,21,22,23,24]

  • While the advent of the latest stent retrievers and large bore aspiration catheters have an increase of 90% reperfusion rates in LVO thrombectomy (Figure 7), there still exists a subset of patients whereby the Endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) procedure fails to recanalize the vessel

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Several randomized clinical trials in acute ischemic stroke (AIS) have validated and cemented the efficacy of endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) in proximal anterior circulation occlusions [1,2,3,4,5,6]. This revolutionary treatment modality has emerged as the standard of care in international guidelines and is considered level 1 class A evidence [7, 8]. Evidence Based Updates to Thrombectomy attempt to summarize the latest evidence-based developments to the field of EVT in the context of AIS, in an attempt to determine what will allow us to improve patient outcomes

TARGETS eTICI as Measurement of Success in Thrombectomy
Combined Techniques
Balloon Guide Catheter
New Aspiration Catheters
Cyclical Aspiration Pumps
Rescue Stenting
Fibrin Capsule of a Clot Broken by the
Large Ischemic Core
Clinically Mild Strokes With LVO
EVT in Posterior Circulation Strokes
Stroke Secondary to Distal Medium Vessel
Tandem Occlusions
Type of Anesthesia for Thrombectomy
CONCLUSION
Findings
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
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