Abstract
Background
During mechanical thrombectomy for large-vessel occlusions, a ledge effect makes navigating the aspiration catheters (ACs) to the occlusion difficult. New large-bore macrowires minimize this while ensuring flexibility and navigational control. We evaluated the technical feasibility of delivering large-bore ACs to posterior circulation occlusions.
Methods
This retrospective multicenter study evaluated patients treated for posterior circulation strokes with adjunct-free macrowire-only direct aspiration first-pass technique (MO-ADAPT) using 0.024- and 0.035-in macrowires between October 2022 and December 2024. Primary outcomes included successful catheter delivery, successful MO-ADAPT (i.e. adjunct-free catheter delivery and successful clot aspiration), and first-pass reperfusion (i.e. modified thrombolysis in cerebral infarction (mTICI) score ≥ 2b after one MO-ADAPT pass).
Results
Among 42 included patients (mean age 68.3 ± 15.4 years), adjunct-free delivery of ACs to the occlusion using macrowires only was successful in 95.2%. An MO-ADAPT primary approach achieved successful reperfusion in 81.0%, with first-pass reperfusion in 54.8%. Among patients with successful AC delivery, the aspiration success rate was 85.0%. Final mTICI scores of 3, 2c, and 2b after all procedures were seen in 78.6%, 14.3%, and 4.8%, respectively, regardless of thrombectomy method. No vascular complications were observed, and postprocedural intracranial hemorrhage and distal emboli occurred in 2.4% each. A favorable clinical outcome at 90 days was observed in 33.3% of cases. Multivariable analysis showed that underlying intracranial atherosclerotic disease was a negative predictor of both MO-ADAPT success and first-pass reperfusion; no factors predicted AC delivery success.
Conclusion
In this retrospective series, MO-ADAPT appeared to be technically feasible for treating posterior circulation strokes, with promising procedural results and a low complication rate. Observed failures were mainly associated with underlying intracranial atherosclerotic disease requiring stent retriever-assisted mechanical thrombectomy. Given the limited sample size and study design, further studies, ideally with larger cohorts and comparative designs, are necessary to clarify the relative safety, efficacy, and cost effectiveness of MO-ADAPT.
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