4.7 Article

Machine-learning-based outcome prediction in stroke patients with middle cerebral artery-M1 occlusions and early thrombectomy

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 4, Pages 1234-1243

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ene.14651

Keywords

machine learning; stroke outcome prediction

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [SNSF PP00P3_170683]
  2. Clinical Research Priority Program stroke (University of Zurich)

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This study investigated the prediction of functional outcomes in LVO stroke patients after early EVT, finding that a small infarct core was associated with favorable outcomes and adding imaging variables to clinical predictors only slightly improved outcome prediction. Age, specifically above 78 years old, was a significant factor affecting the likelihood of favorable functional outcomes.
Background and purpose Clinical outcomes vary substantially among individuals with large vessel occlusion (LVO) stroke. A small infarct core and large imaging mismatch were found to be associated with good recovery. The aim of this study was to investigate whether those imaging variables would improve individual prediction of functional outcome after early (<6 h) endovascular treatment (EVT) in LVO stroke. Methods We included 222 patients with acute ischemic stroke due to middle cerebral artery (MCA)-M1 occlusion who received EVT. As predictors, we used clinical variables and region of interest (ROI)-based magnetic resonance imaging features. We developed different machine-learning models and quantified their prediction performance according to the area under the receiver-operating characteristic curves and the Brier score. Results The rate of successful recanalization was 78%, with 54% patients having a favorable outcome (modified Rankin scale score 0-2). Small infarct core was associated with favorable functional outcome. Outcome prediction improved only slightly when imaging was added to patient variables. Age was the driving factor, with a sharp decrease in likelihood of favorable functional outcome above the age of 78 years. Conclusions In patients with MCA-M1 occlusion strokes referred to EVT within 6 h of symptom onset, infarct core volume was associated with outcome. However, ROI-based imaging variables led to no significant improvement in outcome prediction at an individual patient level when added to a set of clinical predictors. Our study is in concordance with current practice, where imaging mismatch or collateral readouts are not recommended as factors for excluding patients with MCA-M1 occlusion for early EVT.

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