Abstract Background and aims Acute ischemic stroke patients with mild deficits (NIHSS 0-5) but confirmed large-vessel occlusions (LVO) present a clinical challenge for endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) decisions due to limited evidence and the absence of clear guidelines. Methods A Delphi consensus was conducted at the 2024 5T Think Tank conference with 40 international stroke experts. Following a systematic literature review, three iterative Delphi rounds were employed to explore EVT decision-making in strokes due to LVO with low NIHSS. Data were collected through surveys and in-person discussions, focusing on disability evaluation, imaging markers, procedural risk, and outcome scales. Results Consensus was achieved on key factors influencing EVT decisions. Experts emphasized the importance of symptom-specific disability (e.g., aphasia, vision loss) over NIHSS scores alone. Early neurological deterioration (END) was perceived as main concern in this patient population. Imaging markers such as proximal occlusion, poor collaterals, and large penumbra were expected to be predictors of END. The anticipated technical difficulty and patient-specific factors, such as independence and quality of life, also guided decisions. The PRISMS trial definition of disabling deficits and the 9-level mRS were favored as outcome measures for future studies. Conclusions EVT decisions for acute ischemic strokes with mild deficit but proven LVO require nuanced, individualized approaches beyond NIHSS thresholds. Disability assessment, imaging-based risk evaluation, and patient-centered discussions are critical for optimizing outcomes, emphasizing the need for further research and standardized guidelines. Conflict of interest All authors: nothing to disclose.
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Bosshart et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69fd7f65bfa21ec5bbf07e9d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/esj/aakag023.929
Salome Bosshart
Manon Kappelhof
Alexander Stebner
European Stroke Journal
University of California, Los Angeles
University of Calgary
University Hospital of Bern
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