The RESCUE-JAPAN LIMIT trial was presented at the International Stroke Conference by Shinichi Yoshimura, MD, Hyogo College of Medicine, Nishinomiya, Japan. The study was also published online in the New England Journal of Medicine to coincide with its presentation at the ISC meeting.
The trial showed that among patients with acute stroke and a large ischemic brain region, functional outcomes at 90 days were better with endovascular therapy and medical care than with medical care alone.
Patients who received endovascular therapy were more than twice as likely to have a good functional outcome, defined as a modified Rankin scale (mRS) score of 0-3 at 90 days, than those who received medical care alone.
While the rate of intracranial hemorrhage increased with endovascular therapy, authors of the study and outside commentators suggested that the benefit appeared to outweigh the risk. “Our results provide strong evidence that endovascular therapy improves patient outcomes when the infarct area is large,” Dr. Yoshimura concluded at the meeting, presented by the American Stroke Association, a division of the American Heart Association.
Commenting on the study at an ISC press conference, Tudor Jovin, MD, chair of neurology at Cooper University Hospital, Cherry Hill, New Jersey, said: “The question of strokes with a large core stroke being an exclusion criteria for endovascular therapy is arguably one of the hottest topics the field is facing at this time. There are several randomized trials ongoing aiming to answer this question.”
“The RESCUE-JAPAN trial is the first of these trials to report and shed some light on this issue,” Dr. Jovin added. “The results appear to show that these patients with large core infarcts have just as much benefit from endovascular therapy as patients with smaller infarcts.”
Dr. Jovin described these findings as encouraging but also surprising. “When these large core randomized trials were planned, there was a belief that there would be benefit at some level. But what is surprising to me is that in this trial the benefit was similar to that seen in trials in patients with moderate or small core infarcts. This begs the question of whether we should care about the size of the infarct when we are considering taking these patients for thrombectomy,” he said.
Confirmation needed
On whether this will change practice, Dr. Jovin cautioned that this was just one study with a relatively small number of patients. “I think it is important that all the other randomized trials ongoing should continue so that we have a definitive answer to this question,” he said.
In his presentation, Dr. Yoshimura explained that current guidelines recommended endovascular therapy for patients with large cerebral vessel occlusion and a small or moderate infarct size – an ASPECTS score (Alberta Stroke Program Early Computed Tomographic Score) of 6 or higher. The ASPECTS score has a scale of 1-10, with lower values indicating larger infarction.
The RESCUE-JAPAN LIMIT study included 203 patients with occlusion of large cerebral vessels and sizable strokes on imaging, as indicated by an ASPECTS score of 3 to 5.
Patients were randomly assigned to receive endovascular therapy with medical care (endovascular-therapy group) or medical therapy alone (medical-care group) within 6 hours after they were last known to be well or within 24 hours if there was no early change on fluid-attenuated inversion recovery images indicating that the infarction was recent.
The percentage of patients with a good outcome as defined by an mRS score of 0 to 3 at 90 days, the primary outcome, was 31.0% in the endovascular-therapy group and 12.7% in the medical-care group (relative risk, 2.43; 95% confidence interval, 1.35 to 4.37; P = .002).
Secondary outcomes were mRS scores of 0 to 2 and 0 to 1, an ordinal shift across the range of mRS scores toward a better outcome at 90 days, and an improvement of at least 8 points in the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score (range, 0 to 42, with higher scores indicating greater deficit) at 48 hours.
An mRS score of 0 to 2 was seen in 14% of patients in the endovascular-therapy group and 6.9% in the medical-care group (RR, 2.04; 95% CI, 0.86 to 4.84), and an mRS score of 0 to 1 was reported in 5% of the endovascular group versus 2.9% of the medical group (RR, 1.70; 95% CI, 0.42 to 6.93).
The ordinal shift across the range of mRS scores also favored endovascular therapy (common odds ratio, 2.42; 95% CI, 1.46 to 4.01).
An improvement of at least 8 points on the NIHSS score at 48 hours was observed in 31.0% of the patients in the endovascular-therapy group and 8.8% of those in the medical-care group (RR, 3.51; 95% CI, 1.76 to 7.00).
In terms of safety, any intracranial hemorrhage occurred in 58.0% of patients in the endovascular group and 31.4% of those in the medical therapy group (RR, 1.85; 95% CI, 1.33 to 2.58; P < .001).
There was also a trend toward an increase in symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage in the endovascular group (9% vs. 4.9%), but this did not reach significance (RR, 1.84; 95% CI, 0.64 to 5.29; P = .25).
In the NEJM paper, the authors pointed out that the ASPECTS value in most of the patients in this study was determined with the use of diffusion-weighted MRI, as MRI is widely used in Japan for the diagnosis of acute ischemic stroke. They noted that differences between ASPECTS values based on CT results and those based on diffusion-weighted MRI results should be considered in the interpretation of the results and that previous studies have suggested that an ASPECTS value determined with the use of diffusion-weighted MRI may be one level lower than that determined with the use of CT.
They also noted that there was a relatively low use of thrombolysis in the trial (27% to 29%), which may have altered the outcomes in both groups and disadvantaged the medical-care group. However, they add that most guidelines recommend against the use of thrombolysis when there is extensive ischemic change on imaging.