Abstract

Introduction: Delayed cerebral ischemia (DCI) occurs during a risk period of 3–21 days following aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) and is associated with worse outcomes. The identification of patients at low risk for DCI might permit triage to less intense monitoring and management. While large-vessel vasospasm (LVV) is a distinct clinical entity from DCI, the presence of moderate-to-severe LVV is associated with a higher risk of DCI. Our hypothesis was that the absence of moderate-to-severe LVV on screening computed tomographic angiography (CTA) performed within the first few days of the DCI risk period will accurately identify patients at low risk for subsequent DCI.Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study. Our institutional SAH outcomes registry was queried for all aSAH patients admitted in 2016–2019 who underwent screening CTA brain between days 4 and 8 following ictus. We excluded patients diagnosed with DCI prior to the first CTA performed during this time period. All variables are prospectively entered into the registry, and outcomes including DCI and LVV are prospectively adjudicated. We evaluated the predictive value and accuracy of moderate-to-severe LVV on CTA performed 4–8 days following ictus for the prediction of subsequent DCI.Results: A total of 243 aSAH patients were admitted during the study timeframe. Of the 54 patients meeting the eligibility criteria, 11 (20%) had moderate-to-severe LVV on the screening CTA study performed during the risk period. Seven of the 11 (64%) patients with moderate-to-severe LVV on the days 4–8 screening CTA vs. six of 43 (14%) patients without, subsequently developed DCI. On multivariate analysis, the presence of LVV on days 4–8 screening CTA was an independent predictor of DCI (odds ratio 10.26, 95% CI 1.69–62.24, p = 0.011). NPV for the subsequent development of DCI was 86% (95% CI 77–92%). Sensitivity was 54% (25–81%), specificity 90% (77–97%), and positive predictive value 64% (38–83%).Conclusions: The presence of moderate-to-severe LVV on screening CTA performed between days 4 and 8 following aSAH was an independent predictor of DCI, but achieved only moderate diagnostic accuracy, with NPV 86% and sensitivity 54%. Complementary risk-stratification strategies are likely necessary.

Highlights

  • Delayed cerebral ischemia (DCI) occurs during a risk period of 3–21 days following aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage and is associated with worse outcomes

  • Of the 54 patients meeting eligibility criteria, 11 (20%) had moderate-to-severe large-vessel vasospasm (LVV) on a screening computed tomographic angiography (CTA) study performed during the risk period, and a total of 13 (24%) developed DCI

  • The presence of LVV on days 4–8 screening CTA was an independent predictor of DCI

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Summary

Introduction

Delayed cerebral ischemia (DCI) occurs during a risk period of 3–21 days following aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) and is associated with worse outcomes. Several studies suggest that while DCI may occur in vascular territories without evidence of moderateto-severe LVV, it is relatively uncommon in patients without significant LVV anywhere This association between LVV and DCI is often leveraged to stratify DCI risk in asymptomatic patients, with patients at high risk receiving more intense monitoring in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), and those at lower risk, without other indications for ICU care, potentially managed in lower intensity settings, such as moderate care [3]. Such risk stratification may permit more cost-effective care and optimize ICU capacity for critically-ill patients. While this practice is popular at several centers, and CTA is highly accurate for the detection of vasospasm outside the distal vasculature [4], the value of CTA performed on asymptomatic patients during the 4–8-day period has not been studied

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