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News / Health / Health Wire

Deadline for stroke treatment expanded

By David Templeton, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Published: May 22, 2017, 6:00am

PITTSBURGH — When a stroke occurs, a harsh deadline looms. The quicker the clot is removed from the major blood vessel in the brain, the more brain function is salvaged.

For that reason, when it comes to ischemic strokes, the medical mantra is “time is brain,” with the current guidelines saying treatment should occur within six hours.

Now, the randomized clinical DAWN study involving the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, or UPMC, and presented during the European Stroke Organization Conference 2017 in Prague, argues against a time limit for treatment by showing that a brain scan can determine well after the six-hour deadline whether endovascular treatment can save brain function and limit disability.

The procedure involves inserting a micro-catheter into the affected blood vessel, using a stent to expand it then removing the clot. Earlier always is better, but benefits actually can occur six to 24 hours after the stroke — and even longer.

The study is being called a “game-changer” by the past president of the American Heart Association.

“This still means that you need to be rushed to the hospital as soon as possible after a stroke has occurred because the mantra — ‘time is brain’ — still holds. However, our study shows that even if treated outside the time window, patients will have significantly reduced disability with clot removal,” said trial co-author Tudor Jovin, director of the UPMC Stroke Institute and University of Pittsburgh professor of neurology and neurosurgery.

Key is the “clinical core mismatch” — a smaller portion of permanent damage in the area of the brain served by the clogged vessel, as compared with a larger area or “penumbra” that’s under immediate threat but still is alive.

The study found that beyond the six-hour deadline, about one-third of the patients who qualified for the treatment still showed enough of a mismatch to merit the endovascular procedure.

Study results show why: About 49 percent of the patients in the study who received endovascular therapy after the standard deadline were shown to have independent levels of functioning 90 days after treatment, compared with only 13 percent in the control group. There were no differences in mortality levels between the two groups.

“You can salvage the penumbra, bring back the brain and prevent if from dying,” said Dr. Jovin, in a phone interview from Prague. “So you end up with a small area of damage rather than a larger area of permanent damage, regardless of the point in time when the stroke occurred.” If the scan shows potential, the procedure should be done.

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