Abstract

Following reperfusion treatment in ischemic stroke, computed tomography (CT) imaging at 24 h is widely used to assess radiological outcomes. Even without visible hyperattenuation, occult angiographic contrast may persist in the brain and confound Hounsfield unit-based imaging metrics, such as net water uptake (NWU). We aimed to assess the presence and factors associated with retained contrast post-thrombectomy on 24-h imaging using dual-energy CT (DECT), and its impact on the accuracy of NWU as a measure of cerebral edema. Consecutive patients with anterior circulation large vessel occlusion who had post-thrombectomy DECT performed 24-h post-treatment from two thrombectomy stroke centers were retrospectively studied. NWU was calculated by interside comparison of HUs of the infarct lesion and its mirror homolog. Retained contrast was quantified by the difference in NWU values with and without adjustment for iodine. Patients with visible hyperdensities from hemorrhagic transformation or visible contrast retention and bilateral infarcts were excluded. Cerebral edema was measured by relative hemispheric volume (rHV) and midline shift (MLS). Of 125 patients analyzed (median age 71 (IQR = 61-80), baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) 16 (IQR = 9.75-21)), reperfusion (defined as extended-Thrombolysis-In-Cerebral-Infarction 2b-3) was achieved in 113 patients (90.4%). Iodine-subtracted NWU was significantly higher than unadjusted NWU (17.1% vs 10.8%, p < 0.001). In multivariable median regression analysis, increased age (p = 0.024), number of passes (p = 0.006), final infarct volume (p = 0.023), and study site (p = 0.021) were independently associated with amount of retained contrast. Iodine-subtracted NWU correlated with rHV (rho = 0.154, p = 0.043) and MLS (rho = 0.165, p = 0.033) but unadjusted NWU did not (rHV rho = -0.035, p = 0.35; MLS rho = 0.035, p = 0.347). Angiographic iodine contrast is retained in brain parenchyma 24-h post-thrombectomy, even without visually obvious hyperdensities on CT, and significantly affects NWU measurements. Adjustment for retained iodine using DECT is required for accurate NWU measurements post-thrombectomy. Future quantitative studies analyzing CT after thrombectomy should consider occult contrast retention.

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