Possible Influence of Ethnicity on CT Perfusion Parameter Thresholds in Acute Ischemic Stroke
Version 2 2024-06-14, 01:19Version 2 2024-06-14, 01:19
Version 1 2023-10-06, 04:26Version 1 2023-10-06, 04:26
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-14, 01:19authored byYohanna Kusuma, Ben ClissoldBen Clissold, Peter RileyPeter Riley, Paul Talman, Andrew Wong, Leonard Yeo Leong Litt, Mursyid Bustami, Lyna Soertidewi Kiemas, Indah Aprianti Putri, M Arief R Kemal, Reza A Arpandy, Melita Melita, Bernard Yan, Paul YielderPaul Yielder
Introduction
Tissue at risk, as estimated by CT perfusion utilizing Tmax+6, correlates with final infarct volume (FIV) in acute ischemic stroke (AIS) without reperfusion. Tmax thresholds are derived from Western ethnic populations but not from ethnic Asian populations. We aimed to investigate the influence of ethnicity on Tmax thresholds.
Methods
From a clinical-imaging registry of Australian and Indonesian stroke patients, we selected a participant subgroup with the following inclusion criteria: AIS under 24 hours and absence of reperfusion therapy. Clinical data included demographics, time metrics, stroke severity, premorbid, and 3-month Modified Rankin Score. Baseline CTP and MRI <72 hours were performed. Volumes of Tmax utilizing different thresholds and final infarct volumes (FIV) were calculated. Spearman correlation was used to evaluate relationship involving ordinal variables and calculate the optimal Tmax threshold against FIV in both populations.
Results
Two hundred patients were included in the study sample 100 in Jakarta and 100 in Geelong. The median National Institutes Health Stroke Scale (IQR) were 6(3-11) and 3(1-5), respectively. The median Tmax+6(IQR) was 0 (0-46.5) in Jakarta group and 0(0-7.5) in Geelong group. The median FIV(IQR) was 0 (0-30.5) and 0 (0-5.5). Tmax +8s in Jakarta population against FIV showed Spearman’s coefficient =0.72, representing the optimal Tmax threshold. Tmax+6s showed Spearman’s coefficient =0.51 against FIV in the Geelong population.
Conclusions
Tmax thresholds approximating FIV were possibly different in the Asian when compared with the non-Asian populations. Future studies are required to extend and confirm the validity of our findings.