Abstract Background and aims A substantial proportion of large vessel strokes remain untreated worldwide due to limited access to specialized neuroendovascular care. Remote robotic neuroendovascular thrombectomy performed by expert interventionalists from a distant hub has been proposed as one solution to address these disparities. In this study, we test the feasibility of remote robotic thrombectomy in a live animal model. Methods Two live porcine experiments were conducted, involving Mayo Clinic Arizona (MCA), University Hospital Zurich (USZ), and Inselspital—Bern University Hospital (USB), Switzerland. Aspiration thrombectomy at USB was performed remotely from USZ (regional hub, 95 km; two experiments) and MCA (international hub, one experiment). Five aspiration thrombectomies were completed using a proprietary robotic magnetic navigation system consisting of a mobile magnetic field generator, a three-axis robotic advancer, controlling an 80 cm 6f sheath, a 6f aspiration catheter and a 0.035″ magnetically trackable guidewire, and a teleoperated console. The primary endpoint was the feasibility of successful clot aspiration using the robotic magnetic navigation system. Results Five out of seven thrombectomy procedures were successfully completed, achieving full clot retrieval. In the remaining two procedures, more distal clots were targeted, which could not be reached due to the limited catheter length. Magnetic navigation was successful in all cases. Image quality was excellent to acceptable. Conclusions Remote robotic thrombectomy using robotic magnetic navigation technology is technically feasible over both regional and transcontinental distances. This first-in-vivo regional and transatlantic study establishes a potential model of stroke intervention that may one day bridge access to endovascular stroke treatment. Conflict of interest Patrick Thurner and Tilman Schubert have consulting agreements with Nanoflex Robotics.
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Patrick Thurner
Christian Zielasek
Tomas Dobrocky
European Stroke Journal
Mayo Clinic in Arizona
University Hospital of Zurich
University Hospital of Bern
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Thurner et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69fd7fb8bfa21ec5bbf0840a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/esj/aakag023.134