Intended Bridging Therapy or Intravenous Thrombolysis Alone in Minor Stroke With Basilar Artery Occlusion.

  • Pierre Seners
  • Cyril Dargazanli
  • Michel Piotin
  • Denis Sablot
  • Serge Bracard
  • Philippe Niclot
  • Jean-Claude Baron
  • Guillaume Turc
  • Claire Perrin
  • Caroline Arquizan
  • Chantal Lamy
  • Igor Sibon
  • Michael Obadia
  • Jérémie Papassin
  • Hilde Henon
  • Cécile Preterre
  • Laurent Suissa
  • Séverine Debiais
  • Aïcha Lyoubi
  • Pierre Garnier
  • Isabelle Girard-Buttaz
  • Bertrand Lapergue
  • Aude Triquenot
  • Duc-Long Duong
  • Nadia Laksiri
  • Gioia Mione
  • Jean-Louis Mas

Source: Stroke

Publié le

Résumé

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Whether bridging therapy (intravenous thrombolysis [IVT] followed by mechanical thrombectomy) is superior to IVT alone in minor stroke with basilar artery occlusion remains uncertain. | METHODS: Multicentric retrospective observational study of consecutive minor stroke patients (National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score ≤5) with basilar artery occlusion intended for IVT alone or bridging therapy. Propensity-score weighting was used to reduce baseline between-groups differences, and residual imbalance was addressed through adjusted logistic regression, with excellent outcome (3-month modified Rankin Scale score 0-1) as the dependent variable. | RESULTS: Fifty-seven patients were included (28 and 29 in the bridging therapy and IVT alone groups, respectively). Following propensity-score weighting, the distribution of baseline clinical and radiological variables was similar across the 2 patient groups, except age, posterior circulation Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score, history of hypertension and smoking, and onset-to-IVT time. Compared with IVT alone, bridging therapy was associated with excellent outcome (adjusted odds ratio=3.37 [95% CI, 1.13-10.03]; P=0.03). No patient experienced symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage. | CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that bridging therapy may be superior to IVT alone in minor stroke with basilar artery occlusion.