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Large vessel occlusive stroke with milder baseline severity show better collaterals and reduced harm from thrombectomy transfer delays.

BACKGROUND: Patients with large vessel occlusion (LVO) stroke presenting with milder baseline clinical severity are common and require endovascular thrombectomy. However, such patients are difficult to recognize using pre-hospital severity-based triage tools and therefore are likely to require a secondary inter-hospital transfer if transported to a non-thrombectomy center. Given the potential for milder severity to represent better underlying cerebrovascular collateral circulation, it is unknown whether transfer delays are still associated with poorer post-stroke outcomes in this patient group.

AIMS: We primarily aimed to examine whether the harmful effect of inter-hospital transfer delay for thrombectomy was different for LVO patients with mild or severe deficits. Secondarily, we also investigated whether imaging markers of collateral circulation were different between severity groups.

METHODS: Registry data from two large Australian thrombectomy centers was used to identify all directly presenting and secondarily transferred LVO patients undergoing thrombectomy, divided into those with lower (NIHSS <10) and higher (NIHSS ≥10) baseline deficits. The primary outcome was functional independence or return to baseline defined as modified Rankin Scale 0-2 or baseline at 90-days. Patients with complete baseline CT-perfusion data were analyzed for imaging markers of collateral circulation by baseline severity group.

RESULTS: A total of n=1210 LVO patients undergoing thrombectomy were included, of which 273 (22.6%) had lower baseline severity. Despite similar thrombolysis and recanalization rates, transferred patients had lower odds of achieving the primary outcome compared to primary presentation to a thrombectomy-center, where baseline severity was higher (aOR 0.759 [95% CI 0.576-0.999]), but not when severity was lower (aOR 1.357 [95% CI 0.764-2.409], p-interaction=0.122). In the imaging analysis of n=436 patients, those with milder severity showed smaller median ischemic core volumes (12.6 [IQR 0.0-17.9] vs 27.5 [IQR 6.5-37.1] mL, p<0.001)), higher median perfusion mismatch ratio (10.8 [IQR 4.8-54.5] vs 6.6 [IQR 3.5-16.5], p<0.001) and lower median hypoperfusion intensity ratio (0.25 [IQR 0.18-0.38] vs 0.40 [IQR 0.22-0.57], p<0.001).

DISCUSSION: Patients receiving secondary inter-hospital transfer for thrombectomy had poorer outcomes compared to those presenting directly to a thrombectomy-center if baseline deficits were severe, but this difference was not observed when baseline deficits were milder. This result may potentially be due to our secondary findings of significantly improved collateral circulation markers in lower severity LVO patients. As such, failure of pre-hospital screening tools to detect lower-severity LVO patients for pre-hospital bypass to a thrombectomy center may not necessarily deleteriously affect outcome.

DATA ACCESS STATEMENT: Anonymized data not published within this article will be made available by request from any qualified investigator.

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