Journal article
Critical Care Decisions After Large Core Cerebral Infarctions: A Secondary Analysis From the SELECT2 Trial
Annals of neurology, Vol.97(4), pp.698-708
04/2025
DOI: 10.1002/ana.27151
PMID: 39648975
Abstract
Among patients with large vessel occlusion (LVO) and large ischemic cores, critical decisions often need to be made about decompressive hemicraniectomy (DHC) or early withdrawal of life-sustaining therapy (WLST). In this study, we aimed to evaluate utilization of DHC and early WLST and factors associated with them in patients with large strokes from the SELECT2 trial.
We analyzed the entire SELECT2 trial population, which randomized 352 patients with stroke due to LVO and large ischemic cores to endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) or medical management. We used the as-treated principle to compare the use of DHC and early WLST within 7 days after randomization. We further assessed functional outcomes (modified Rankin Score) after these decisions.
Of 352 patients enrolled in this study, 55 received DHC and 81 transitioned to early WLST. Patients treated with EVT were as likely to undergo DHC (16% vs 15%, adjusted relative risk [aRR] = 1.19, 95% CI:0.75-1.88, p = 0.46) or WLST (22% vs 24%, aRR = 0.94, 95% CI: 0.66-1.34, p = 0.72) as those given medical management. DHC was used more frequently in younger patients and WLST more in older patients. EVT efficacy was maintained after adjusting for DHC (adjusted generalized odds ratio [aGenOR] = 1.68, 95% CI: 1.24-2.11, p < 0.001), with no interaction between DHC and treatment (p-interaction = 0.93). At 1 year, 21% of DHC-treated patients were ambulatory; the outcomes were universally poor after early WLST.
In the SELECT2 trial of patients with large ischemic core, DHC was performed in ~1 of 6 patients and early WLST in ~1 of 5 patients, without differences based on treatment with EVT or medical management, nor successful reperfusion. DHC or WLST did not detract from thrombectomy treatment benefit. Additionally, ~20% of patients achieved independent ambulation despite receiving DHC by the 1-year follow-up. The similar distribution of these critical care decisions provides reassurance that the overall trial outcomes were not biased by open-label treatment allocation. ANN NEUROL 2024.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Critical Care Decisions After Large Core Cerebral Infarctions: A Secondary Analysis From the SELECT2 Trial
- Creators
- Scott E Kasner - University of PennsylvaniaMichael T Mullen - Temple UniversityMichael DeGeorgia - Case Western Reserve UniversitySpiros Blackburn - The University of Texas Health Science Center at HoustonDonna K George - University of PennsylvaniaMonisha Kumar - University of PennsylvaniaSteven Messe - University of PennsylvaniaMichael G Abraham - University of Kansas Medical CenterMichael Chen - Rush University Medical CenterSantiago Ortega-Gutierrez - University of IowaClark W Sitton - The University of Texas Health Science Center at HoustonJan-Karl Burkhardt - University of PennsylvaniaMuhammad Shazam Hussain - Cleveland ClinicLeonid Churilov - The Royal Melbourne HospitalSophia Sundararajan - Case Western Reserve UniversityYin C Hu - Case Western Reserve UniversityNabeel A Herial - Thomas Jefferson University HospitalPascal Jabbour - Thomas Jefferson University HospitalDaniel Gibson - Columbia St. Mary's HospitalJuan F Arenillas - Hospital Clínico Universitario de ValladolidJenny P Tsai - Corewell Health Blodgett HospitalRonald F Budzik - Riverside Methodist HospitalWilliam J Hicks - Riverside Methodist HospitalOsman Kozak - Thomas Jefferson University HospitalBernard Yan - The Royal Melbourne HospitalDennis J Cordato - Liverpool HospitalNathan W Manning - Liverpool HospitalMark W Parsons - UNSW SydneyRicardo A Hanel - Baptist Medical Center JacksonvilleAmin N Aghaebrahim - Baptist Medical Center JacksonvilleTeddy Y Wu - Christchurch HospitalPere Cardona Portela - Bellvitge University HospitalNatalia Perez de la Ossa - Hospital Universitari Germans Trias i PujolJoanna D Schaafsma - Toronto Western HospitalJordi Blasco - Hospital Clínic de BarcelonaNavdeep Sangha - Kaiser PermanenteSteven Warach - The University of Texas at AustinChirag D Gandhi - Westchester Medical CenterTimothy J Kleinig - Royal Adelaide HospitalDaniel SahleinEdgar A Samaniego - University of IowaLaith Maali - University of Kansas Medical CenterMohammad A Abdulrazzak - Cleveland ClinicKrishna AmuluruDeep K Pujara - Case Western Reserve UniversityFaris Shaker - The University of Texas Health Science Center at HoustonHannah Johns - The Royal Melbourne HospitalRami Moussa - Case Western Reserve UniversityFaisal Al-Shaibi - Case Western Reserve UniversityKelsey R Duncan - Case Western Reserve UniversityStavropoula Tjoumakaris - Thomas Jefferson University HospitalAmanda Opaskar - Case Western Reserve UniversityWei Xiong - Case Western Reserve UniversityAbhishek Ray - Case Western Reserve UniversitySepideh Amin-Hanjani - Case Western Reserve UniversityThanh N Nguyen - Boston Medical CenterJohanna T Fifi - Icahn School of Medicine at Mount SinaiStephen Davis - The Royal Melbourne HospitalLawrence Wechsler - University of PennsylvaniaAnthony Furlan - Case Western Reserve UniversityCathy Sila - Case Western Reserve UniversityNicholas Bambakidis - Case Western Reserve UniversityMichael D Hill - University of CalgaryVitor Mendes Pereira - St. Michael's HospitalMaarten G Lansberg - Stanford UniversityJames C Grotta - Memorial HermannMarc Ribo - Vall d'Hebron Hospital UniversitariGreg W Albers - Stanford UniversityBruce C Campbell - The University of MelbourneAmeer E Hassan - Valley Baptist Medical CenterAmrou Sarraj - Case Western Reserve UniversitySELECT2 Investigators
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Annals of neurology, Vol.97(4), pp.698-708
- DOI
- 10.1002/ana.27151
- PMID
- 39648975
- NLM abbreviation
- Ann Neurol
- ISSN
- 0364-5134
- eISSN
- 1531-8249
- Publisher
- Wiley
- Grant note
- Stryker Neurovascular
- Language
- English
- Electronic publication date
- 12/09/2024
- Date published
- 04/2025
- Academic Unit
- Neurology; Radiology; Iowa Neuroscience Institute; Neurosurgery
- Record Identifier
- 9984757267902771
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