Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The importance of time in acute stroke is well-established. Using the Interventional Management of Stroke III trial data, we explored the effect of multimodal imaging (CT perfusion and/or CT angiography) versus noncontrast CT alone on time to treatment and outcomes. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We examined 3 groups: 1) subjects with baseline CTP and CTA (CTP-CTA), 2) subjects with baseline CTA without CTP (CTA), and 3) subjects with noncontrast head CT alone. The demographics, treatment time intervals, and clinical outcomes in these groups were studied. RESULTS: Of 656 subjects enrolled in the Interventional Management of Stroke III trial, 90 (13.7%) received CTP and CTA, 216 (32.9%) received CTA (without CTP), and 342 (52.1%) received NCCT alone. Median times for the CTP-CTA, CTA, and NCCT groups were as follows: stroke onset to IV tPA (120.5 versus 117.5 versus 120 minutes; P=.5762), IV tPA to groin puncture (77.5 versus 81 versus 91 minutes; P=.0043), groin puncture to endovascular therapy start (30 versus 38 versus 44 minutes; P
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CITATION STYLE
Vagal, A., Foster, L. D., Menon, B., Livorine, A., Shi, J., Qazi, E., … Goyal, M. (2016). Multimodal CT Imaging: Time to treatment and outcomes in the IMS III Trial. American Journal of Neuroradiology, 37(8), 1393–1398. https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4751
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