4.4 Article

Feasibility and diagnostic accuracy of using brain attenuation changes on CT to estimate time of ischemic stroke onset

Journal

NEURORADIOLOGY
Volume 63, Issue 6, Pages 869-878

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00234-020-02591-w

Keywords

Stroke; Ischemia; CT; Attenuation

Funding

  1. UK Medical Research Council [MRC G0400069, EME 09-800-15]
  2. NHS Lothian Research Development
  3. Stroke Association Edith Murphy Foundation Senior Clinical Lectureship for Medical Professionals [SA L-SMP 18\1000]
  4. Guarantors of Brain
  5. MRC [G0400069, UKDRI-4002] Funding Source: UKRI

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It is feasible to accurately estimate stroke onset time using simple attenuation measures of ischemic brain. Our method was most accurate 0-9 h from onset and may be useful for treatment eligibility assessment, especially where imaging resources are limited.
Purpose CT attenuation of ischemic brain reduces with time after stroke onset. We aimed to quantify this relationship and test the feasibility and accuracy of estimating stroke onset time using only CT attenuation of visible ischemic lesions, the CT-Clock Tool. Methods We selected CT scans with ischemic lesions representing a range of stroke-onset-to-scan times (elapsed time) from a well-defined stroke trial. We measured the attenuation of ischemic lesions and contralateral normal brain to derive attenuation ratio. We assigned scans to development (75%) or test (25%) datasets. We plotted the relationship between attenuation ratio and elapsed time in the development dataset and derived a best-fit curve. We calculated estimated time in the test dataset using only the attenuation ratio curve. We compared estimated time to elapsed time and derived absolute error for estimated time. We assessed area under the receiver operating characteristic (AUROC) curve for identifying scans <= 4.5 h elapsed time. Results We included 342 scans from 200 patients (41% male, median age 83 years). Elapsed time range: 22 min to 36 days. Estimation errors were least at early elapsed times (r = 0.82, p < 0.0001): median absolute error was 23, 106, 1030 and 1933 min for scans acquired <= 3, > 3-9, > 9-30 and > 30 h from stroke onset, respectively. AUROC was high at 0.955. Conclusions It is feasible to accurately estimate stroke onset time using simple attenuation measures of ischemic brain. Our method was most accurate 0-9 h from onset and may be useful for treatment eligibility assessment, especially where imaging resources are limited.

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