4.7 Article

Impact of edema formation on functional outcome in pediatric stroke patients

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY
Volume 30, Issue 1, Pages 150-154

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ene.15576

Keywords

childhood stroke; lesion water uptake; pediatric stroke

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This study found that children may have higher edema formation measured by net water uptake (NWU) compared to adults, but despite this, children had better functional outcomes. The results suggest that the degree of early ischemic changes and edema progression rate may not be a reason to exclude children from endovascular thrombectomy.
Background Quantitative lesion net water uptake (NWU) has been described as an imaging biomarker reflecting vasogenic edema as an early indicator of infarct progression. We hypothesized that edema formation measured by NWU is higher in children compared to adults but despite this functional outcome may be better in children. Methods This study analyzed children enrolled in the Save ChildS Study who had baseline and follow-up computed tomography available and the data were compared to adult patients. Results Some 207 patients, of whom 13 were children and 194 were adults, were analyzed. Median NWU at baseline was 7.8% (IQR: 4.3-11.3), and there were no significant differences between children and adults (7.5% vs. 7.8%; p = 0.87). The early edema progression rate was 3.0%/h in children and 2.3%/h in adults. Median Delta NWU was 15.1% in children and 10.5% in adults. Children had significantly more often excellent (mRS 0-1; children 10/13 = 77% vs. adults 28/196 = 14%; p < 0.0001) and favorable clinical outcomes (mRS 0-2, 12/13 = 92% vs. 39/196 = 20%; p < 0.0001). Conclusions In this study, clinical outcomes in children with large vessel occlusion strokes were better than in adults despite similar clinical and imaging characteristics and similar edema formation. This may be impacted by the generally better outcomes of children after strokes but may demonstrate that the degree of early ischemic changes using Alberta Stroke Program Early Computed Tomography Score (ASPECTS) and edema progression rate may not be a reason for exclusion from endovascular thrombectomy.

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