BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The Randomized Trial of Bailout Intracranial Angioplasty or Stenting Following Thrombectomy for Acute Large Vessel Occlusion (ANGEL-REBOOT) demonstrated no overall benefit from bailout angioplasty or stenting (BAOS) following thrombectomy for acute large-vessel occlusion. Nonetheless, the heterogeneous patient population suggests potential subgroup benefits. We aimed to identify the specific subgroups that may benefit from BAOS after thrombectomy for acute large-vessel occlusion. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This is a secondary analysis of the ANGEL-REBOOT trial, a multicenter randomized controlled trial conducted in China from December 2021 to March 2023, which included participants with large-vessel occlusion within 24 hours of symptom onset who had unsuccessful recanalization or >70% residual stenosis after thrombectomy. Participants were stratified into three subgroups: (1) refractory occlusion, (2) intracranial atherosclerotic-related large-vessel occlusion with unsuccessful recanalization (ICAS-LVO-UR) after thrombectomy, and (3) ICAS-LVO with successful recanalization (ICAS-LVO-SR) after thrombectomy. Efficacy and safety outcomes were assessed in the short term (90 days) and long term (1 year). RESULTS: A total of 347 participants were included in this secondary analysis and divided into three subgroups: refractory occlusion (n=20), ICAS-LVO-UR (n=95), and ICAS-LVO-SR (n=232). For short-term efficacy, the refractory occlusion subgroup showed worse 90-day modified Rankin Scale (mRS) outcomes with BAOS versus standard therapy (common odds ratio OR, 0.14 95% CI, 0.02–0.81); the ICAS-LVO-SR and ICAS-LVO-UR subgroups showed favorable and unfavorable trends, respectively. In the long-term, BAOS significantly improved the 1-year outcomes in the ICAS-LVO-SR subgroup: better mRS distribution (generalized OR, 1.72 95% CI, 1.07–2.77), higher functional independence (OR, 2.80 95% CI, 1.59–4.92), and reduced target-vessel stroke recurrence (hazard ratios HR, 0.25 95% CI, 0.08–0.75). No significant long-term findings were observed in the other two subgroups. Safety outcomes were comparable between the BAOS and standard therapy groups across all subgroups. CONCLUSIONS: In this secondary analysis of the ANGEL-REBOOT trial, BAOS was associated with improved 1-year outcomes in patients with successful recanalization (eTICI ≥2b) but residual severe stenosis (≥70%) after thrombectomy. Given the inherent limitations of this analysis, these findings should be interpreted as hypothesis-generating and warrant confirmation in future large-scale prospective trials.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Lei Li
Yingchun Wu
Chunqiang Xu
American Journal of Neuroradiology
Capital Medical University
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Li et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69df2c1de4eeef8a2a6b1106 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.a9341