Dynamic Perviousness Has Predictive Value for Clot Fibrin Content in Acute Ischemic Stroke.
Vania AnagnostakouDaniel TothGergely BertalanSusanne MüllerRegina Rose ReimannMark EpshteinJawid MadjidyarPatrick ThurnerTilman SchubertSusanne WegenerZsolt KulcsarPublished in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
Dynamic perviousness is a novel imaging biomarker, with clot density measurements at multiple timepoints to allow longer contrast to thrombus interaction. We investigated the correlations between dynamic perviousness and clot composition in the setting of acute ischemic stroke. Thirty-nine patients with large vessel occlusion (LVO) undergoing mechanical thrombectomy (MT) were analyzed. Patients received a three-phase CT imaging pre-thrombectomy and histopathological analysis of retrieved clots. Clot densities for every phase and change in densities between phases were calculated, leading to four patterns of dynamic perviousness: no contrast uptake, early contrast uptake with and without washout and late uptake. Clots were categorized into three groups based on dominant histologic composition: red blood cell (RBC)-rich, fibrin/platelet-rich and mixed. Clot composition was correlated with dynamic perviousness using the Kruskal-Wallis test and Pearson's correlation analysis. The dynamic perviousness categories showed a significant difference between fibrin-rich clots when compared to RBC-rich plus mixed groups. The uptake without washout category had significantly fewer fibrin clots compared to the uptake with washout ( p = 0.036), and nearly significantly fewer fibrin clots when compared to the no uptake category ( p = 0.057). Contrast uptake with different patterns of contrast washout showed significant differences of the likelihood for fibrin-rich clots.